Mull v. Parrott Bros. Co.
This text of 218 F. 713 (Mull v. Parrott Bros. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Idaho primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
By the affidavit of O. J. Parrott, filed on behalf of the defendant, it is shown that the partnership operations of the plaintiff and defendant were limited to different jobs of construction work, aggregating in value an amount approximating $100,000. So far as appears, the partnership is not indebted to any person, nor is any person indebted to it; all contracts having been fully completed and paid for, and the indebtedness of the partnership having been discharged. Furthermore, it appears that the partnership owns no property, at least no property other than such claims as it may have against the defendant and the plaintiff for moneys received by one or both of them on account of partnership transactions for which they have not accounted.
Iii his complaint the plaintiff does not allege or intimate what amount he claims to be due from the defendant to the partnership or to him as one of the partners. The prayer is for an accounting and for judgment for such amount as may appear to be due. On the other hand, in the amended answer, which the defendant proposes to file, it is suggested that there may be something due from the plaintiff to the partnership, on account of two of the contracts which constituted a part of the partnership business. In an affidavit supporting his objection that the suit does not involve a dispute of the requisite value, the plaintiff definitely specifies the matters on account of which, and the amounts for which, he claims credit, and, according to the statement, there is due to him the sum of only $1,432.34. He claims no more. In the amended answer of the defendant, already referred to, the statement or suggestion that the plaintiff may be indebted to the defendant is of a very general character, and is of such an indefinite nature that I am inclined to think it can serve no useful function in the consideration of the motion to remand.
To sustain the jurisdiction of this court the defendant relies very largely upon the case of Rogers v. Lawton (C. C.) 162 Fed. 203, where, in a suit for a partnership accounting, a plea was filed to the jurisdiction, on the ground that the amount in controversy did not exceed $2,000. The following is all that the court said upon the subject:
“Assuming tlie plea to be true, it appears therefrom that the common personal property considerably exceeds $2,000, and I shall assume, without particular examination of the question, that the whole of the common property constitutes the amount in controversy, and that the court has Jurisdiction.”
By the plaintiff here it is suggested that there is no palpable fund, and hence the rule assumed to be correct in the Rogers-Lawton Case [715]*715has no application; but, if we put aside that distinction as not controlling, I am not convinced that reason would justify the general application of such a rule. If it appeared clearly to the court that them was a specific fund of the value of $5,000, and the plaintiff asserted ownership of one half thereof, and conceded ownership in the defendant of the other half, it is difficult to see how the dispute in such case could involve the whole fund, or how the matter in dispute could be deemed to be of a value of more than $2,500. It is true the dissolution of a partnership and the settlement of its affairs may involve incidental considerations distinguishing it from the supposed case; but here, as already suggested, it is not contended that the partnership owes anything or is owed anything, and the only question, therefore, is: How much is due from one partner to the other on account of the partnership transactions? The plaintiff comes into court and represents that on account of certain specific matters there is a balance due him of less than $1,500. The defendant might possibly claim that upon such an accounting there would be found to be due him, the defendant, a large sum, so that the differences between the parties might aggregate an amount in excess of $3,000. In such a suit it would not do to say that the amount which the plaintiff claims an accounting would show 'to be due him measures the value 6f the matter in dispute, but I see no reason, for holding that the value of the matter in dispute could exceed the aggregate of that claimed by the plaintiff to be due him and that claimed by the defendant to be due to it.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
218 F. 713, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mull-v-parrott-bros-co-idd-1914.