Meguiar v. Helm

14 S.W. 949, 91 Ky. 19, 1890 Ky. LEXIS 147
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 11, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 S.W. 949 (Meguiar v. Helm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meguiar v. Helm, 14 S.W. 949, 91 Ky. 19, 1890 Ky. LEXIS 147 (Ky. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion oe the court.

In tlie month, of January, in the year 1877, the appellant, P. Meguiar, and the appellee, John L. Helm, together with W. M. Wilson, entered into a verbal agreement by which they became partners, under the style of Meguiar, Helm & Co., in the operation of a tobacco warehouse in the city of Louisville for the sale of tobacco. Helm and Wilson had, previous to this agreement, been engaged in the same business with a firm called Ronald, Webb & Co., that firm composed of Ronald, Webb, Helm and Wilson. This last firm was unfortunate in business, and its property had been turned over to the appellant, Meguiar, as the trustee, for the benefit of creditors. It seems that Helm and Wilson, who were connected or had been members of the insolvent firm, being desirous of continuing the business, and having worked up, as it is termed, a large trade for the house, proposed to the appellant, who was a man of means and credit, to go into partnership with them, and upon the first suggestion the preliminaries of the partnership were agreed upon, and the firm of Meguiar, Helm & Co. formed. The settlement of this partnership, it having been dissolved, is the subject-matter of the present controversy.

The terms of the partnership were as follows: They were to share equally in the profits with this ex[22]*22ception: Meguiar, who was the only member of the firm having at that time money and credit, was to furnish the capital agreed on, and was to have for this responsibility or expenditure on his part the benefit of the warehouse interest account. The partnership was to last for one year, and to continue from year to year as might be agreed upon by the parties. It was a partnership from year to year, as is manifest from the testimony of Meguiar, Wilson and Tillman. The appellee, Helm, regarded it as a partnership for an indefinite period, and while he, no doubt, understood it in that way, the decided weight of the testimony is, that at the end of each year the partners, or either of them, could continue or dissolve it, as might be deemed best, that discretion being with one or all of the firm. Still, we do not think, in view of the questions raised, that such a construction of the agreement would control the decision of the main question. The parties to the appeal differ as to the meaning of the warehouse interest account, the appellant insisting that he was entitled to all the interest credited to that account, whether paid to the firm or not, and the appellee maintaining that it was only the profit realized from the account that Meguiar was to receive. It is insisted by the appellant that the appellee is estopped from now asserting any such claim as to the wrongful credit to Meguiar of this interest unpaid, because the entries upon the books of the firm for the period of near eight years, with monthly balances and yearly settlements, showing the interest of each member of the firm, with the amount of profit or loss, is conclusive as to the right of Me~ [23]*23guiar as to the interest account, and as to the meaning to be given that part of the agreement.

This action was not instituted until ten years after the formation of the partnership. In the month of September, in the year 1884, more than seven years after the firm had begun business, Meguiar, the appellant, and Helm, the appellee, purchased out the interest of Wilson in all the firm assets, and formed a new firm, bringing into it new partners. This new firm continued for over two years, when the appellee, Helm, ceased to be a member, and, a short time after that, discovered the manner in which the interest account had been kept, and that Meguiar had received credits, in the way of interest, to which he was not entitled.

It appeal's that the books of the firm were regularly kept; balance sheets made out monthly and examined by each member, and that there was no pretense of concealment or fraud on the part of Meguiar, or any one connected with the firm’s business. The clerk seems, during this entire period, to have construed the meaning of the contract without even the suggestion of any of the partners, and to have given Meguiar the benefit of the interest account, whether collected or not. The books must have been examined or the assets ascertained when Wilson sold out in the year 1884. This interest account had been credited to Meguiar up to the date of the dissolution, and there had been no complaint. The appellee says that he was not familiar with book-keeping, and that his business and that of Wilson was to travel through the country and work up the trade for the [24]*24house, while Meguiar was the financier and manager of the warehouse; that he was at the warehouse for two years prior to the dissolution, but his attention was not called to the manner in which the books had been kept with reference to the interest account. Wilson seems never to have discovered any error, and for the reason, as he says, no examination was made of the books by him or any one for him, and besides he was not an experienced book-keeper.

It is insisted by the counsel for the appellants that the partners, having construed the contract for themselves by the repeated entries on the books from January, 1877, those entries being continually made from month to month and from year to year until the year 1884, they ought not now be allowed to open the accounts and have a readjustment of balances that contradicts that construction of the contract placed upon it by the partners, as evidenced by those entries. There is no mistake or error shown to have been made by the clerk, but an allegation, after the lapse of ten years from the formation of the partnership, that one of the partners had obtained more than his share of the firm assets by reason of the action of the clerk who made the entries, or the partner causing the entries to be made, placing a different construction upon the contract from that placed upon it by the plaintiff.

It is said in section 981, 2 Bates on Partnership, that its terms, or any alteration therein, or construction put upon them, may be proved by the nature of the charges or entries in the books as conclusively as by any other writing. The entries are prima facie correct, and the presumption is, that they [25]*25were made by the consent of all the partners, and this assent, says the same author, “is founded on the duty of each partner to avail himself of the oppor: tunity of inspection and the right of access, and see that the books are correctly kept.” (Section 978.) Again it is said: “In case of ambiguity in the articles, or want of explicitness, the interpretation of the parties, as shown by their subsequent conduct, will be accepted as the true construction, and in aid of the intent.” (Section 215.)

In Moore v. Trieber, 31 Ark., 113, parties had a grocery and dry goods business. A third person furnished the dry goods, and was to have half the profits of that business. The firm was in the habit of advancing money to farmers, and, when paid back, it was first applied to the advances, second to payment for the groceries, and third to the dry goods. As the partner in the dry goods part of the firm never objected to this, when it had béen done through a series of years, the court presumed she assented to it, and refused to disturb the mode of settlement.

All the partners had access to the books of the firm. The warehouse interest account is not shown to have been kept in a manner different from such accounts kept in like warehouses.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lanham v. State
194 N.E. 625 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1935)
City of Louisville v. Tatum, Embry & Co.
64 S.W. 836 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 S.W. 949, 91 Ky. 19, 1890 Ky. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meguiar-v-helm-kyctapp-1890.