McKleroy v. Musgrove

84 So. 280, 203 Ala. 603, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 63
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 13, 1919
Docket6 Div. 516.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 84 So. 280 (McKleroy v. Musgrove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKleroy v. Musgrove, 84 So. 280, 203 Ala. 603, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 63 (Ala. 1919).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

Appellants, the widow and daughter of J. C. Musgrove, deceased, filed this bill for an accounting against appellee, L. B. Musgrove. In the early ’SO’s the Mus-groves, brothers, began business together in a partnership which seems never to have been limited or defined, except as limitation or definition may be inferred from the nature of the enterprises in which they engaged from time to time. Chiefly, however, they engaged in the purchase and sale of mineral lands, in the promotion and organization of land and mining companies, in the operation of a miners’ commissary at Corona, and in a general mercantile business at Jasper. In 1893 J. C. Musgrove went to reside in Birmingham, where for four years he was United States marshal for the Northern district of Alabama, and it may be that during that time and thereafter he gave not so much attention to the affairs of the partnership. In July, 1901, as the result of disease from which, no doubt, he had long suffered, he became violently insane, and on June 4, 1902, he was judicially declared to be non. compos, he was committed to the hospital for the insane, and appellee was appointed guardian of his estate. In July, 1904, he died, and thereafter appellee was appointed administrator of his estate. This bill, filed in 1907, sought to have appellee’s administration of the estate of his brother removed into the chancery court and a settlement there of the partnership, guardianship, and administration. Erom the decree confirming in the main the register’s report of the reference held by him under the direction of the court this appeal has been taken.

For aught appearing the partnership kept no books prior to 1893; the books kept after that time, and upon the meaning of which much of the contention for appellants is based, meagerly and confusedly reflect the business of the partnership. Numerous transcripts from the books, the testimony of the bookkeeper and of the expert accountant who examined them at the instance of appellee, the arguments of counsel and an agreement into which they entered at one point, all concur in showing a most unusual set of books. This appears to have been due, not to any incapacity or neglect on the part of the bookkeepers, but to the character of the information given to them from which to make their entries. They say—or one of them who testifies says—that he picked up such information as he could from any source, and that often entries were made without any definite knowledge of the transaction involved. Many transactions never appeared upon *607 the books, and it seems that the partners were indifferent whether the books showed an account as between themselves. The idea seems to have been to keep some sort of an account as between the firm and those with whom it had transactions, but even this was so done that no safe inferences can be drawn in respect to some of the transactions in which the firm engaged, and substantially this is conceded by appellants—affirmed, indeed—when they come to the argument of their claim of an interest in certain 100 shares of Jasper Land Company stock acquired by appellee from Ford & Musgrove, to which we shall refer again.

[1] There must have been some weakening of J. C. Musgrove’s faculties prior to the violent onset of July, 1901; but it cannot be affirmed, we think, that for any considerable time prior to that onset he was mentally incapacitated for business. The proof is that his associates consulted him about business matters until shortly before that time, and that he attended meetings of the constituent bodies of the corporations in which he was interested. Later on we shall refer to some other of the testimony on this point. In their original bill appellants seem to have proceeded upon the theory that the firm of Musgrove Bros, had been dissolved by the insanity of J. O. Musgrove; but at the hearing below, and now, it was and is contended that in disposing of a number of items, for which appellee claimed and was allowed* credit, the partnership should be treated as continuing down to his death. It is asserted, therefore, that during the period between J. C. Mus-grove’s adjudicated insanity and his death appellee had no right to engage on his own exclusive account in any enterprise or business of like character with those in which the firm had engaged, and that for every such enterprise or business venture he must account to the representatives of his deceased copartner. Generally, a partner who, without the consent of his copartners and in competition with the business of the partnership, conducts a separate business, must turn his profits into the partnership’s coffers. 1 Rowley, Mod. Law of Part. § 398, where the cases are cited. In Latta v. Kilbourn, 150 U. S. 524, 14 Sup. Ct. 201, 37 L. Ed. 1169, it is said that—

“The general principles * * * admit of no question—it being well settled that one partner cannot, directly or indirectly, use partnership assets for his own benefit; that he cannot, in conducting the business of a partnership, take any profit clandestinely for himself; * * * that he cannot carry on another business in competition or rivalry with that of the firm, thereby depriving it of the benefit of his time, skill, and fidelity, without being accountable to his copartners for any profit that may accrue to him therefrom.”

[2] This is the equivalent of that uberrima fides which our law exacts of partners in respect of the partnership business. Dikis v. Likis, 187 Ala. 218, 65 South. 398. But where there are no covenants—and there were none in this case—one may engage in as many outside businesses as- he pleases, provided he does not deprive the partnership of a portion of the skill, industry, or capital which he ought to devote to it according to the intention of the partners, to be inferred. Caldwell v. Leiber, 7 Paige (N. Y.) 483; 1 Rowley, §. 348. It may. now be said generally that what appellee did in the way of organizing or acquiring stock in corporations during this period bore no signs of clandestinity, and it may be seriously doubted that such engagements could in fact or in law be held to compete with the business carried on by the partnership. And this seems to have been the judgment of the partners, prior to the disability of J. O. Musgrove, for it is certain that each of them conducted business enterprises of sundry sorts, each for himself alone, and without any notion that they would be of common concern.

[3] But, aside from this, our judgment is that.the adjudicated insanity of J. O. Mus-grove and the appointment of a guardian for his estate, together, if not separately, operated to dissolve the partnership, and that the register correctly treated it as in effect dissolved on that date. Parsons, Part. (4th Ed.) §§ 303, 361, 362. The register did not, indeed, in terms hold that the partnership was dissolved on the date last referred to; but the register, noting appellants’ contention that in stating the account he should not charge either of the partners with any amounts received by or for them from the date of J. O. Musgrove’s adjudicated insanity to the date of his death—large sums had been paid out during that period for J. O. Musgrove and his family—which contention was influenced, of course, by the well-established custom of the partnership to allow either member of the firm to draw funds at pleasure which at intervals were charged off to the firm’s profit and loss account.

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Bluebook (online)
84 So. 280, 203 Ala. 603, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckleroy-v-musgrove-ala-1919.