Raymond v. Vaughn

4 L.R.A. 440, 128 Ill. 256
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 4 L.R.A. 440 (Raymond v. Vaughn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond v. Vaughn, 4 L.R.A. 440, 128 Ill. 256 (Ill. 1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shops

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill filed by defendant in error, Vaughn, against Samuel B. Raymond, plaintiff in error, to compel an accounting in respect of partnership affairs alleged to exist between them. The answer of Raymond expressly admits the formation of the co-partnership as alleged in the bill, and its continuance from September 15,1874, to the 20th day of January, 1876, when the complainant, Vaughn, was adjudged insane. It will therefore be unnecessary to discuss the question of the partnership, further than may become important in illustrating other branches of the case.

It is insisted by counsel for plaintiff in error, if the partnership existed, first, that it was ipso facto dissolved by the adjudication of the insanity of Vaughn by the county court of Cook county, on the 20th day of January, 1876, and that plaintiff in error, as conservator of Vaughn, accounted for all the property of Vaughn, and all his rights and credits accruing from the co-partnership prior to said date, in settlement of Vaughn’s estate, in said court, and that, the partnership being dissolved, Vaughn has no claim, legal or equitable, to ihe proceeds of the partnership business after such dissolution; second, if this is not so, the partnership being determinable at the will of either party, Raymond elected to determine the partnership, and did terminate it at the date of the adjudication of insanity, and that such dissolution can be inferred from circumstances, and that the circumstances proved show such election by him; third, that the discharge by the county -court, of Raymond, as conservator of Vaughn, upon his final report as such conservator, is a bar to the relief sought by the bill in this ease, so. long as it remains unreversed; and fourth, that in any event, by a settlement made between the parties, in Philadelphia, in June, 1879, Vaughn received of Raymond •$2500 in full satisfaction and discharge of his interest in the business and .profits of such co-partnership.

The first contention presents questions of the most difficulty. It is said in Parsons on Contracts, 465 : “There are not wanting strong reasons and high authority for the conclusion that insanity, certain, complete and hopeless, of itself and at once dissolves the partnership; but we think the decided weight of .authority, in England and this country, opposes this conclusion, and holds that the partnership continues until it is dissolved by decree.”

Chancellor Kent (3 Kent’s Com. 58) says: “Insanity does not work a dissolution of partnership ipso facto. It depends upon circumstances, under the sound discretion of the court of chancery. But if lunacy be confirmed and duly ascertained, it may now be laid down as a general rule, notwithstanding the decision of Lord Talbot to the contrary, that as partners are, respectively, to contribute skill and industry, as well as capital, to the business of the concern, the inability of a partner, by reason of lunacy, is a sound and just cause for the interference of the courts of chancery to dissolve the partnership, and have the account taken and the property duly applied.” And the same author (2 Com. 645) says: “In cases of partnership it would at least require a decree in chancery to dissolve the partnership on the ground of lunacy.”

Story, in his work on Partnership, section 295, says : “The common law, * * * upon grounds of public policy or convenience, holds that insanity does not ordinarily, per ser amount to a positive dissolution of the partnership, but only to a good and sufficient cause for a court of equity to decree a dissolution.” This writer, however, adds: “We say ‘ordinarily/' for when the insanity has been positively ascertained under a, commission of lunacy, or by the regular judicial appointment of a guardian to the lunatic, it may deserve consideration, whether it does not ipso facto amount to a clear case of dissolution of the partnership by operation of law, since it immediately suspends the whole function and right of the party to-act personally.” Mr. Justice Pabkeb, in Davis v. Lane, 10 N. H. 161, makes the same suggestion. That case was, however, upon the effect of insanity in revoking the power of an agent to act for his principal. Mr. Parsons also seems to be of the opinion that the courts would hold that where the insanity was determined by due inquest, it would, per se, operate as a dissolution of the partnership. Both Story and Parsons-refer in support of this latter suggestion to the case of Isler v. Baker, 6 Humph. 85, alone, to sustain the text. That case holds the doctrine indicated by Mr. Parsons, but stands, so-far as we have been able to find, unsupported by any adjudicated case, and none are cited by the court in support of its conclusion. Collier on Partnership, (b. 2, chap. 3, sec. 3,) and Gow on Partnership, (chap. 5, sec! 1,) each lays down the rule that a decree of a court of chancery is necessary to a dissolution of the partnership, notwithstanding there has been an adjudication declaring one partner a lunatic.

In Besch v. Frolich, 1 Phil. Ch. 172, one of the partners had been adjudged insane upon commission of lunacy. Upon bill filed to dissolve the partnership, it was insisted that it should be decreed dissolved from the time of the incapacity of the insane partner. This the court (Lord Chancellor Cottenham delivering the opinion) held could not he done, and says, “that there are three considerations between partners—the share of each in the capital stock, the share of each in the good will, and the labor which each undertakes to devote to the business. Tour argument is, that because one of these considerations (and that, perhaps, the least valuable of the three,) fails, you are entitled from that time to take to yourself the whole benefit of the other two. * * * Whatever delay has occurred is imputable to the plaintiff himself. It was competent for him to have filed his bill at any moment since the time when his partner first became incapable of attending to business."

In Jones v. Noy, 2 M. & K. 125, the partners were solicitors. One of them (Hardston) became insane and incapable of attending to business, and died two or three years afterwards. Noy, the other partner, carried on the business one or two-years, and then sold it out. Hardston’s executors filed a bill to compel Noy to account in respect to the partnership business and the proceeds of the sale. Sir John Leach, M. R., in determining the cause, said: “It is clear, upon principle, that the complete incapacity of the parties to the agreement to perform that which was a condition of the agreement, is a ground for determining the contract. The insanity of a partner is ground for the dissolution of a partnership, because it-is immediate incapacity; but it may not in the result prove to be a ground of dissolution, for the partner may recover from his malady. When a partner, therefore, is affected with insanity, the continuing partner may, if he thinks fit, make it a ground of dissolution; but in that case I consider, with Lord Kenyon, that in order to make it a ground for dissolution he must obtain á decree of the court. If he does not apply to the-court for a decree of dissolution, it is to be considered that he is willing to wait to see whether the incapacity of his partner may not prove merely temporary. If he carry on the partnership business in the .expectation that his partner may recover from his insanity, so long as he continues the business with that expectation or hope there can be no dissolution.” See, also, Griswold v. Waddington, 16 Johns. 57; Bagshaw v.

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Bluebook (online)
4 L.R.A. 440, 128 Ill. 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-v-vaughn-ill-1889.