McNamara v. Gaylord

16 F. Cas. 317
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio
DecidedDecember 15, 1859
StatusPublished

This text of 16 F. Cas. 317 (McNamara v. Gaylord) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNamara v. Gaylord, 16 F. Cas. 317 (circtsdoh 1859).

Opinion

OPINION OF

THE COURT.

This is a bill in equity, prosecuted by Thomas McNamara, a citizen of the state of Pennsylvania, against Benjamin B. Gaylord and Thomas G. Gaylord, surviving partners of Thomas G. Gaylord & Co., and Thomas G. Gaylord and E. H. Pendleton, administrators of Thomas G. Gaylord, a former partner in said firm, now deceased. The bill avers, in substance, that in the spring of 1854, after some previous correspondence between the said Thomas G. Gaylord, deceased, and the plaintiff as to the purchase by the latter of an interest in the rolling mill and iron works of Portsmouth, in the state of Ohio, then owned and carried on by Thomas G. Gaylord & Co., on May 10, 1854, a written contract was entered into by which the said Thomas G. Gaylord, Sen., sold to the plaintiff an interest of one undivided eighth in the said mill and works for $15,000, of which $5,000 was to be paid on the 1st of July or October then next, and $2,500 annually thereafter with interest till the whole was paid; and it was also agreed that the plaintiff should take charge of the manufacturing department of the establishment, as manager, at a salary of $1,000 per annum. The plaintiff further avers, that on October 1, 1854, he took possession as a partner and manager, and that he continued as manager until October 1, 1855, and that at that time the profits for the year exceeded $70,000; that in consequence of his objections to certain improvements and additions to the works contemplated by the other parties, from October 1, 1855, he ceased to be the manager and took the place of a shipping clerk, and so continued till September 3, 1850, when he was notified that as he had not fulfilled his contract his connection with the concern must cease; that he left on said 3d of September, at which time the works were stopped to make repail's and improvements. He also avers, that from October 1, 1855, to the date of the stoppage of the works, the profits were $38,004, making an aggregate of profits from October 1, 1854, of upward of $110,000, of which he claims one eighth part, after deducting payments received by him. The plaintiff also alleges that he proposed to and requested of Gay-lord, on October 1, 1855, to settle with him, and that the $5,000, which he had agreed to pay, should be retained out of the profits to which he'was entitled, which was refused; and he avers that he has been unable to procure a settlement, etc., and he prays for a dissolution of the partnership, an account of profits, and a decree for one-eighth part of such profits.

The exhibits and evidence show that on and prior to October 1, 1854, Thomas G. Gaylord, Sen., was the owner of an interest of three-fourths in the mill and works, and [318]*318that Benjamin B. Gaylord owned the other fourth; and that, in the spring of 1835, Thomas G. Gaylord. Sen., sold and transferred to his son, Thomas G. Gaylord, one-half of his interest, to take effect from October 1, 1854. from which date he was therefore a partner. The entire interest was then estimated at $120,000. Benjamin B. Gaylord and Thomas G. Gaylord have filed their answers, as surviving partners; and the administrators of Thomas G. Gaylord, deceased, have also answered. In their answers the administrators refer to and adopt the answer of Thomas G. Gaylord, Sen., filed by him in a suit brought by McNamara in the court of common pleas of Scioto county, Ohio, which involved essentially the matters now in controversy. It is not necessary to notice in detail the numerous allegations of these answers. They deny explicitly that the plaintiff had an interest in the iron works, as a partner, and aver that he has no claim for an account of profits. They insist that the rights of the parties must be settled by the terms of the written contract of May 10, 1854; that the plaintiff failed to comply with his obligation to pay $5.000 on October 1, 1854, which was the condition on which the interest of one-eiglith was to vest in him; that he has not paid or offered to pay said sum, nor has he in any way been released from such payment; that he was at no time accepted or treated as a partnei, and had no connection with the concern except as manager under the contract, for the first year after its date, and subsequently as a shipping clerk, for which he has been fully paid according to the terms of the contract. There are also avex-ments in the answers to the effect that the plaintiff was incompetent for the discharge of the duties of a manager; and, also, that the contract of May 10, 1S54, was entered into by reason of the false and deceptive representations of the plaintiff as to his ability to pay the $5,000, and the other payments specified in the contract, and that he then was and for some time before had been insolvent and wholly unable to meet any iiecuniary liability, and therefore that said contract was fraudulent and void.

I do not propose to examine these points in the defense, as there are other grounds which I deem decisive of the merits of this case.

I will not notice the written contract between the plaintiff and Thomas G. Gaylord, premising that it is set forth in the plaintiff’s bill in connection with many collateral facts which seem to have no bearing on the merits of this controversy. It is, however, referred to in the bill, as the basis of the plaintiff's claim, as a partner, and his right to an account for profits. The contract is perspicuous and free from ambiguity in its terms, and must be viewed as the exponent of the intention of the parties to it. And as it can not be varied or contradicted by extrinsic evidence, there would seem to be no occasion to notice in this place the correspondence between the parties which preceded its execution. Such a correspondence had taken place, and Gaylord, in one of his letters. stated that the arrangement could not be consummated without the presence of the plaintiff at' Portsmouth. He came out, and after an examination of the works, the parties signed the contract. Without reciting it at length, I will state its essential provisions. Its date is May 10, 1854. Gaylord agreed to sell the plaintiff an undivided eighth of the rolling mill and iron works, including everything pertaining to them, except the land, and to give possession the 1st of July or October then next. He also obligated himself to keep a capital of $00,000 in the concern so long as it might be needed, on one-eighth of which the plaintiff was to pay in-tei’est and to have one-eighth of the profits, and to share in the same proportion in the losses. The plaintiff was to take charge of the works and manage and superintend the manufacture of iron and nails, for which he was to receive an annual salary of $1,-000. He agreed to pay for the intei’est of one-eighth the sum of $15,000, of which $5,-000 was to be paid on the said 1st of July or October, and the rest in annual payments of $2,500, until the whole was paid.

The first remark in relation to this contract is, that it is not by its terms, and does not purport to be, an agreement for a partnership. It is clear that Thomas G. Gaylord could not, by an agreement to sell a part of his interest, compel the other partners to accept the vendee as a member of the firm. It was doubtless intended to be preliminary to such an arrangement, but, per se, can have no such effect. Two objects were within the contemplation of the parties to the contract. It was. in the first place, a conditional sale by Gaylord of an interest of one-eighth in the iron works; and. in the second place, it provided for the employment of the plaintiff as a manager or superintendent at a fixed salary', payable without regard to profit or loss.

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Bluebook (online)
16 F. Cas. 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnamara-v-gaylord-circtsdoh-1859.