Phillips v. Ruhl

1 Balt. C. Rep. 676
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Balt. C. Rep. 676 (Phillips v. Ruhl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Ruhl, 1 Balt. C. Rep. 676 (Md. Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

STOCKBRIDGE, J.

On the4 22nd day of May, 1891, William L. Ashburn, Kirwin P. Phillips and Henry Ruhl, entered into an agreement “to engage in the business of planting oyster shells in the State of Virginia and elsewhere.” By the terms of this agreement, it was provided that Phillips and Ruhl were to furnish all the shells required in the business, to pay the expenses and costs in laying out such shells, and that each of them should bear one-third of the expense of a watchman, of taking up oysters from [677]*677the beds, and “all legal expenses.” Mr. Ashbnrn was to pay the taxes which might be imposed by the State of Virginia, where it was contemplated that the business would be carried on, and also “to furnish the ground for planting shells, to superintend the laying out of the shells,” and to pay his one-third of the expenses above referred to. Each of the three parties to the agreement were to share equally in the profits to be derived from “said business.”

On the 13th of March, 1895, for a valuable consideration, Mr. Ashburn transferred all his interest in the agreement thus entered into to Messrs. Phillips and Buhl.

The business so undertaken proved unprofitable, beyond all possibility of dispute, and on the 31st day of March, 1897, the bill of complaint was filed in this case, praying for an accounting for the proceeds of sales of oysters taken from the bed so planted by the parties hereto, and of the earnings of a schooner called the “Holland Point” and other boals, namely, two skiffs owned by the parties to this suit, and that the property so held jointly might be ordered to be sold, and the proceeds distributed among the parties according to their respective rights, and that an accounting might be had of the amount, actually clue by the plaintiff, Phillips, to the defendant, Buhl, arising from their joint dealings in relation to the property.

The first point to be determined is what were the relations of the parties to this suit to one another; were they tenants in common of the property in question, or did tile relation of partners exist between them. It is true that the agreement which was signed nowhere uses the word “partnership,” and it is further true that the bill of sale of the Schooner Holland Point is not to the parties to this suit as partners, but conveying a one-half interest to each. At the same time it is to be noted that the written agreement nowhere mentions or even suggests that the parties to it were to purchase a vessel of any sort, or that a vessel was in any way essential to or proper for the carrying on of their business, to wit: the planting of oyster shells, and the form of the ownership of the Schooner Holland Point, therefore, in no way determines the relations of the parties.

It is not necessary to constitute a partnership that the term partnership should be used in the agreement; what is necessary is that the mutual undertakings of the parties and their acts should be of such character as to constitute in law the relation of partners.

It is true also that the mere right to share in the profits of a business does not of itself constitute a. partnership, though it is a strong indication of such a relation. While tlio perfect definition of a partnership has probably not yet been formulated, it may, for the purposes of this case, be said to be “a contract of some kind involving mutual consent of the iiarties, and when such contract is entered into between two or more persons for the purpose of carrying on a trade or business with the right to participate in the profit of such business, then such contract constitutes a partnership, unless there be other fact and circumstances which show that some other relation existed.” Such was the definition adopted in the case of Thillman vs. Benton, 82 Md. 73, and it is one which seems entirely applicable to the present case. There was in this case the agreement of the 22nd of May, 1891, which involved the mutual consent of the parties to it, entered into and signed by them for (he purpose expressed upon its face of engaging in the business of planting oyster shells, and with the right to the parlies signing the. agreement to participate in the profits, and there does not appear in all the dealings of the parties from the time when their agreement was entered into down to the time of the bringing of the suit any fact or circumstance to show any different relation, unless it be the purchase and ownership of the schooner “Holland Point.” But, as already pointed out, the ownership of this schooner was neither mentioned or provided for in the agreement between the parties, and was not essential or a necessary incident to the carrying out of that agreement, nor is (here any proof that she was ever used in or in connection with the shell-planting business. She was purchased after the agreement had been enlered into by two only of the three parties to the agreement, and their rights in her were defined in the bill of sale. Oapt. Ash-burn was still an interested party under the contract, and the ownership of the “Holland Point,” therefore, is neither conclusive upon the relations of [678]*678the parties to the agreement, or calculated. to throw much light upon it. The case, therefore, is in its facts materially different from both the cases of Thillman vs. Benton already referred to, and the case of Waring vs. The National Marine Bank, 74 Md. 279, in each of which cases there were a number of facts tending directly to negative the idea of a partnership. I am constrained therefore to hold that in so far as the business for which the agreement in question was entered into is concerned, the parties to this suit were partners, and being partners, a sale of that partnership business could not be decreed in the present form of this proceeding; nor would the case be different upon the theory that they were tenants in common; because a sale will never be decreed by a Court of Equity unless it clearly appears that there is a property or estate which can form the subject matter of a sale.

Downin vs. Sprecher, 35 Md. 474.

In the present case there is nothing to show that there is or ever was any title whatever of any sort, shape or description in and to the oyster beds which they planted, vested in either of the parties to this cause. The testimony is first, the terms of the agreement by which Capt. Ashburn was to furnish the ground for the planting of the shells, and second, that a large amount of shells were scattered on the bottom in sundry creeks, running into the Rappahannock River; but it nowhere appears by affirmative proof, that Capt. Ashburn ever obtained any lease or license from the State of Virginia for any exclusive occupancy of any of the beds on which the shells were scattered, of that even if it be assumed that he did obtain it, he transferred it to the parties to this suit, if he could legally so transfer it. The agreement that was entered into, nowhere provides for the obtaining by the parties to it of leases or licenses for the planting of oyster beds with exclusive ownership over them, nor could they legally have so obtained them under the Statutes of Virginia. What Capt. Ashburn transferred to the parties to this suit was his interest in that particular agreement, not matters foreign thereto, and no estate or property right is apparent therefor which could form a subject matter of salé under a decree of this Court, and where such a condition exists no decree for a sale will be entered.

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

Related

Downin v. Sprecher
35 Md. 474 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1872)
McKaig v. Hebb
42 Md. 227 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1875)
Brendel v. Klopp
13 A. 589 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1888)
Thillman v. Benton
33 A. 485 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Balt. C. Rep. 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-ruhl-mdcirctctbalt-1897.