Partridge v. Pidgeon

166 Ohio St. (N.S.) 496
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1957
DocketNos. 35020, 35021 and 35022
StatusPublished

This text of 166 Ohio St. (N.S.) 496 (Partridge v. Pidgeon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Partridge v. Pidgeon, 166 Ohio St. (N.S.) 496 (Ohio 1957).

Opinions

Stewabt, J.

In the declaratory judgment causes, appellant Joseph A. Pidgeon assigns as error the affirmance by the Court of Appeals of the trial court’s holding that the surviving partners have a right and obligation to purchase shares of the deceased partner’s interest in amounts disproportionate to percentages of interests already owned by such surviving partners; and the affirmance by the Court of Appeals of the trial court’s holding that, in the event the executors elect that the interest of the deceased partner should remain in the business, such executors shall have all the voting rights that the father had during his lifetime.

The executors, having filed cross-appeals in this court, assign as error the affirmance by the Court of Appeals of the [503]*503Probate Court’s bolding that the executors have no option, under the partnership agreement, to refuse to elect to have their decedent’s interest in the business remain in the partnership and to transfer it under the decedent’s will.

We are of the opinion that the assignments of error of appellant Joseph A. Pidgeon are well taken.

Prom the time they came into the business, the sons gave all their time and attention to it. They received no salaries but were only rewarded by the distributive share of the profits. It is true that their share of the profits was out of proportion to their share of the ownership of the business, but that was the reward for their continuous efforts. On the other hand, the daughter had only a two per cent interest. Her share of the profits was limited to the two per cent, and, as between the partners, she was liable for only two per cent of the losses. She had little to do with the business, except for a few months as an employee on a salary.

Although no mention is made in the partnership agreement as to the proportionate amounts of a decedent’s interest the surviving partners may purchase, it seems inconceivable that it could have been the intention in the agreement to give the daughter a right to purchase an equal amount with the sons, in the light of the fact that her interest came to her by inheritance from her mother, with a trifle added to make it an even two per cent, whereas the sons acquired most of their interests by purchase and by their lifetime efforts contributed so greatly to making the business a success.

It is true that under the partnership agreement the daughter had an equal vote with each of the other partners in the important affairs of the company, but it seems to us that such fact would not outweigh the greatly superior equities in the sons to have the privilege of keeping all the remaining interests in the partnership in the same proportion as they had been prior to the father’s death.

With reference to the voting rights of the executors, there is nothing in the partnership agreement concerning them, and, in our opinion, without express authority the executors do not have such rights.

The agreement provides that upon the death of a partner [504]*504his interest may, at the option of his executor, remain in the partnership for a period not exceeding five years from the date of the death of the deceased partner, during which time his estate shall be entitled to receive the same share of the profits as the deceased would have received had he been living. If the executor chooses, or at the end of five years after the death, the interest of the deceased partner must be taken over by the surviving partners at book value, plus 25 per cent. There is nothing in the agreement which even hints at the executors being allowed to manage, control, or have a voice in the business of the partnership.

As to the assignment of error of the executors in their cross-appeals, it is their claim that under the partnership agreement they have an option to remain in the partnership or not to remain, and that they have a right to exercise the option not to remain, in which event the surviving partners have no right to purchase the decedent’s interest, and such interest passes under the will of the father.

We do not so interpret the partnership agreement.

Where it says that the decedent’s interest may, at the option of his executors, remain in the partnership for the five-year period, but upon the request of the executors, or at the end of five years, the interest must be taken over by the surviving partners, it conveys the meaning that the interest is in the partnership at the decedent’s death, that it stays there for five years unless the executors exercise their option to require the surviving partners to purchase the interest under the terms of the contract, which must be purchased, in any event, after the expiration of the five years if the executors have not exercised the option to require the purchase prior to that time. The interest is already in the business. It remains there for five years if nothing is done, and the option refers to the right of the executors to require a purchase of the interest prior to the end of the five-year period.

In the will construction cause, the appellant Joseph A. Pidgeon claims that the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the trial court’s holding that the accrued distributive earnings from the interest owned by the father from July 1, 1953, to his death on February 2, 1954, less his withdrawals, are a part of the [505]*505residue of the father’s estate; that such court erred in affirming the trial court’s holding that, in the event the executors participate in the partnership business for a period of time and then later elect to sell the father’s interest to the surviving partners, all moneys earned by the father’s share from such participation shall be disposed of in accordance with the residuary clause of the father’s will; that the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the trial court’s holding that, if the father’s interest in the partnership is sold, without the executors electing to remain in such partnership, such share shall revert in its legal effect to the date of the death of the father, and all moneys earned by the interest, from the date of his death, shall be as if such interest had come into the possession of the buyer on February 2, 1954, the date of the death; that the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the trial court’s holding that the earnings, after the purchase of the father’s interest by surviving partners, shall be divided in accordance with the proportional interest each surviving partner shall purchase; and that the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the trial court’s holding that a transfer of the father’s interest in the partnership to the beneficiaries, under item VI of the father’s will, would be subject to the right of the daughter to purchase not less than one-third of such interest at book value, plus 25 per cent.

The executors, in their cross-appeals, claim that the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the holding of the Probate Court that the bequest of the father’s interest in the partnership is subject to the rights and duties in the father’s surviving partners, as evidenced by the partnership agreement, as such rights and duties were determined in the declaratory judgment causes.

The daughter filed assignments of error to the effect that the court erred in holding that the sons have the right to receive and retain the purchase price or consideration to be given for the father’s partnership interest.

Motions were filed to strike such assignments of error, for the reason that the daughter had not filed a notice of appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
166 Ohio St. (N.S.) 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/partridge-v-pidgeon-ohio-1957.