Reiser v. Johnston

1917 OK 358, 166 P. 723, 65 Okla. 307, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 92
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 10, 1917
Docket6387
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1917 OK 358 (Reiser v. Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reiser v. Johnston, 1917 OK 358, 166 P. 723, 65 Okla. 307, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 92 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

WEST, C.

Jennie McDivitt filed a suit in the superior court of Pottawatomie county against J. L. Reiser, plaintiff in error, and Geo. McKinnis, to recover $8,500 and interest, the balance of the purchase price of a tract of land upon which $4,000 had been paid. Plaintiff in error, defendant in the original suit, answered that he had made the contract sued upon, but that the same was for' the use and benefit of himself. Geo. McKinnis, and one Willard Johnston, and attached to his answer a partnership agreement entered into between plaintiff in error, Geo. McKinnis, and Willard Johnston, relative to the purchase of the tract of land involved in the suit, which agreement disclosed that Johnston was to furnish the money to buy the tract of .land, and that Reiser, Mc-Kinnis, and Johnston were to share equally in the profits and losses in this particular real estate venture, and asked in his answer to have Johnston, whom he alleged was primarily liable, made a party defendant, and thereupon Johnston was made a party defendant.

Before answer day for Johnston, Johnston and McKinnis endeavored to have a meeting of the three defendants who were parties to the partnership agreement pleaded by the plaintiff in error, to adjust the suit against them by plaintiff, Jennie McDivitt. Reiser refused to attend these meetings, being notified first orally and next by written notice. Johnston and McKinnis determined to settle the suit brought by Jennie McDivitt 'by turning back to her. the land in controversy in consideration of the balance due thereon, agreeing to lose the $4,000, the initial payment. Thereupon Johnston filed answer and cross-petition, alleging in his answer the fact of the compromise of the original suit and in his cross-petition asked for judgment against J. L. Reiser, his codefendant, for his pro rata share of the loss incurred *308 in this real estate transaction, which was one-third of the $4,000, the initial cash payment, with interest thereon. To this cross-petition, J. L. Reiser, plaintiff in error, filed answer. The cause was then transferred to the district court of Pottawatomie county, where it went to trial to a jury. The answer of plaintiff in error to defendant’s cross-petition denied all liability to plaintiff, and further that plaintiff had failed to carry out the original agreement in making the deferred payment on the land, and on account thereof defendant was not liable, and further that defendant had not agreed to the settlement with Jennie MeDivitt, plaintiff in the original suit, and that the court was without jurisdiction to determine the controversy between plaintiff in error and defendant in error.

At the conclusion of the evidence offered by defendant in error, plaintiff in error interposed the following demurrer to the evidence :

“Mr. Howell: Comes now the defendant, J. L. Reiser, and demurs to the evdence of the plaintiff for the reason the evidence is insufficient and fails to show any cause or right of action in the said Willard Johnston against the defendant J. L. Reiser, and for the further reason if the said Johnston has any right of action the same has not accrued for the reason that no action has ever been filed to dissolve the partnership and no dissolution of said partnership has been had, and for the further reason that no agreement of all the parties to said partnership has ever been had as to the complete.and final determination of the equities and rights of the partners under the contract sufficient for the purpose of forming a basis of an action by one partner against another.”

Which demurrer was by the court overruled. Plaintiff in error excepted and elected to stand on his demurrer to the evidence, and thereupon the court instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of defendant in error, and the action of the trial court in refusing to sustain the demurrer to the evidence is brought here for review.

The issues being raised by a demurrer to the evidence, the demurrer admits all of the facts which the evidence tended to prove and every reasonable deduction that might be drawn therefrom considered in the light most favorable to defendant in error, and, if the evidence so considered is sufficient to sustain the judgment of defendant in error, then the demurrer was properly overruled. The evidence tended to show that the defendant in error was to furnish the money to pay for the MeDivitt land, that he did furnish the $4,000, which was the initial payment, but failed to make the second payment— $8,S00. The evidence tended to show further that the defendant in error had been released by all of his codefendants in the original suit, who were his partners in this real estate transaction, from making this payment; and that the plaintiff in error, Reiser, had failed and refused to meet with his copartners in their efforts to adjust the MeDivitt suit and that they eom|promised said suit in good faith and highly advantageous to the defendants in said suit.

The issues as presented and argued by plaintiff in error are as follows: First, can one partner maintain an action against another partner for his share of the profits and to compel another partner to make good his pro rata share of the losses of a sinble partnership transaction without the necessity of a formal accounting by a court of equity? Second, can a majority of the members of a partnership make disposition of the partnership property as was done in this case, and thus bind all of the partners to the partnership agreement? •

In case of Pettingill v. A. Jones, reported In 28 Kan. 749, the second paragraph of the syllabus is as follows:

“2. Partnership in a Single Transaction; —Practice.
“While an action of accounting is the ordinary one for settling the affairs of a partnership, yet where the partnership is simply a joint venture in a single transaction, and the petition alleges the partnership, its close, the profits of such venture, and that defendant has received and appropriated the entire amount thereof, and prays judgment for plaintiff’s share, and the answer denies generally, and claims that the transaction was not a partnership but an individual matter, and upon these pleadings the parties without objection go to trial before a jury, held, that the court did not err in refusing to instruct the jury that the plaintiff could not recover unless there had been an accounting between the parties.”

In the body of the opinion the court used the following language:

“Where there is but a single partnership transaction, one joint venture, which is fully closed, we think one partner may maintain an action against the other for his share of the profits of ■ that single transaction, and that in such a case there is no necessity of a formal accounting between parties. Sikes v. Work, 6 Gray (Mass.) 433; Wheeler v. Arnold, 30 Mich. 304.”

In 30 Cyc. p. 464, the following language is used:

“When a partnership is limited to a single venture not involving a partnership account, or when but a single item remains unadjust *309 ed, or when the parties have partitioned the firm property among them, an action of law will lie, and an accounting in equity is unnecessary.”

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Anderson v. Whitener
1927 OK 211 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1927)
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1918 OK 744 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 358, 166 P. 723, 65 Okla. 307, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reiser-v-johnston-okla-1917.