Miles v. Miles

282 P. 37, 86 Mont. 19, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 8
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1929
DocketNo. 6,480.
StatusPublished

This text of 282 P. 37 (Miles v. Miles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miles v. Miles, 282 P. 37, 86 Mont. 19, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 8 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE GALEN

delivered the opinion of the court.

By decree the existence of a partnership between the plaintiff and the defendant in the conduct of sheep raising having been determined (Miles v. Miles, 76 Mont. 375, 247 Pac. 328) on the basis of a two-fifths interest in the plaintiff and a three-fifths interest in the defendant, the matter of an accounting between the partners was referred to a referee appointed by the court. The partnership continued for more than two years, but was dissolved on January 6, 1923, the defendant then assuming exclusive possession and control of all of the sheep. After hearing evidence the referee made and filed his report. Exceptions were taken to the findings of the referee by both the plaintiff and defendant, and later the *22 court made its own findings of fact and conclusions of law upon which judgment was entered in the plaintiff’s favor for the sum of $1,156.23. The plaintiff has appealed from the judgment, and his several assignments of error all relate to mistakes in accounting. Each will be considered in the order presented.

We enter upon a consideration of this appeal bearing in mind the basic principles of law applicable, viz., that “each member of a partnership must account to it for everything that he receives on account thereof, and is entitled to reimbursement therefrom for everything that he properly expends for the benefit thereof, and to be indemnified thereby for all losses and risks which he necessarily incurs on its behalf.” (Sec. 7991, Rev. Codes 1921.) And “in the absence of special agreement on the subject, the profits of the firm upon its dissolution are the balance remaining after the payment of all its debts, including the liabilities to its members for advances and for capital.” (47 C. J., p. 75.)

The ’district court in its finding No. 1, upon which the final judgment herein is predicated, found “that at the beginning of the partnership, the property consisted of 955 ewe lambs, 250 old ewes and 9 bucks,- or a total of 1214 head of sheep; that included in the number of 955 ewe lambs were 475 ewe lambs purchased from Robert Eccles; that as found by the jury the plaintiff owned two-fifths of said property and the defendant three-fifths of said property.” The plaintiff asserts that he “accepts the finding as conclusive,” and therefore confines his argument on this appeal to transactions arising during the course of the partnership. The defendant also admits that this finding is controlling.

1. The plaintiff asserts that the court was in error in overruling his exception to the court’s finding of fact No. 6 for the reason “that there is no legal, competent or sufficient evidence at all that the value of the ewe sheep belonging to the partnership on hand at the time of the dissolution was $10.50 per head; that it appears from the record that the sheep in question were breeding ewes and of a greater value than *23 ewes placed on tbe stock market, and that the referee in his report found, basing his finding upon conflicting evidence, that the value of said sheep was $15.00 per head.” Accordingly, he argues that this finding should be amended by striking therefrom the valuation of $10.50 per head and inserting in lieu thereof the valuation of $15 per head. As indicated by the objection the referee had found the value of the sheep to be $15 per head, which value was by the court reduced to $10.50 per head.

Generally when a reference of a case is made to a referee to report the facts, his findings have the effect of a special verdict of a jury (sec. 9385, Rev. Codes 1921; In re Lunke, 56 Mont. 226, 182 Pac. 126; 23 R. C. L., p. 299); however, where, as in this case, the order of reference provides that the referee shall take testimony and state an account between the parties, but does not authorize him to hear and determine the issues, his findings cannot be given the effect of a special verdict, since the force to be given to the report of a referee depends not only upon the nature of the action but upon the order of reference (Murphy v. Patterson, 24 Mont. 575, 63 Pac. 375). The rule is that the terms of an order of reference determine the scope of the referee’s authority; and a referee who is appointed to state an account between parties has no authority to determine the whole issue; and the court may disregard the findings of the referee allowing or disallowing specific items in an account. (Bradshaw v. Morse, 20 Mont. 214, 50 Pac. 554.)

In this ease the referee was by the order of reference required to hear the evidence relating to the accounting between the plaintiff and the defendant and to ascertain all facts necessary to enable the court to make determination. Therefore, under the terms of the order, the findings made by the referee were, at most, advisory. (Bradshaw v. Morse, supra.) It now devolves upon us to find in the record, if possible, evidence to sustain the finding as to the valuation of the sheep made by the court; for the rule is that a finding by the trial court unsupported by evidence, or which is based on specula *24 tion ratber than positive testimony, cannot be upheld. (Tuttle v. Pacific Mutual Life Ins. Co., 58 Mont. 121, 16 A. L. R. 601, 190 Pac. 993; Ryan v. Quinlan, 45 Mont. 521, 124 Pac. 512.)

The plaintiff estimated the valne of the ewes at “about $15” per head. He testified that they were more valuable in January than the previous September; that at the time they were practically wintered and in good shape, and that he would not have taken $20 per head for his portion thereof. The defendant testified that he did not believe that the sheep would have sold for as much as $8.50 per head; and Shirley Wright, an experienced sheep man in the community, who was possessed of an intimate knowledge of the sheep in question, estimated their value at “somewhere around $9.00 and $10.00” per head. He testified that they were “good ewes,” but at that time he was of opinion that “a man could have picked the country for nine or ten dollars.” Evidence of stock market quotations from leading stock markets as of date January 6, 1923, was by stipulation provided the court for its information after the referee’s report had been made and filed; but in the condition of the record the same was of no evidentiary value in determining the value of the sheep in question. To arrive at a valuation of $10.50 per head the court was required to enter into the realm of' speculation as to the market value of the sheep, which was by witnesses fixed at from $8.50 to $20 per head, notwithstanding the fact that the court had before it the finding of the referee, who saw and heard the witnesses, fixing the value of the sheep upon definite proof at $15 per head. Here the court, in arriving at a valuation of $10.50 per head for the sheep, must have indulged in guesswork as to their probable fair market value based upon its general knowledge, market reports, and testimony estimating their value at from $8.50 to $20 per head, as there is no definite evidence to sustain a finding that the sheep had a market value of $10.50 per head. There was no witness who so testified, nor is it possible upon reference to the market reports to find a basis for such specific finding as to value.

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Related

Miles v. Miles
247 P. 328 (Montana Supreme Court, 1926)
Bradshaw v. Morse
50 P. 554 (Montana Supreme Court, 1897)
Murphy v. Patterson
63 P. 375 (Montana Supreme Court, 1901)
Ryan v. Quinlan
124 P. 512 (Montana Supreme Court, 1912)
In re Lunke
182 P. 126 (Montana Supreme Court, 1919)
Tuttle v. Pacific Mutual Life Insurance
190 P. 993 (Montana Supreme Court, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
282 P. 37, 86 Mont. 19, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miles-v-miles-mont-1929.