Rider v. Hammell

66 P. 1026, 63 Kan. 733, 1901 Kan. LEXIS 219
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 7, 1901
DocketNo. 12,421
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 66 P. 1026 (Rider v. Hammell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rider v. Hammell, 66 P. 1026, 63 Kan. 733, 1901 Kan. LEXIS 219 (kan 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Greene, J. :

O. T. Hammell and D. F. McCarty, partners as Hammell & McCarty, commenced this [734]*734action in the district court of Bourbon county, against E. P. McCarty and S. W. Rider, as partners, to recover the sum of $145.48, alleged to be due said plaintiffs on account of certain coal furnished to the defendant E. P. McCarty, at Bronson, Kan., and by him used in operating a machine in boring for oil, coal, gas, etc.

It was alleged in the petition that S. W. Rider was a partner of McCarty in the work that was being carried on at Bronson, and therefore liable to plaintiffs for this debt. Upon the trial the following agreement was entered into:

“It is hereby conceded that Hammell & McCarty furnished the coal claimed to E. P. McCarty without the knowledge of defendant S. W. Rider, and also upon the individual credit of E. P. McCarty, with the understanding and belief that this machinery all belonged to E. P. McCarty, and that said understanding was not from any conduct or statement of Mr. Rider, but before the beginning of this suit plaintiffs discovered this contract between McCarty and Rider and bring this suit claiming that Mr. Rider was a partner of Mr. McCarty in this well-drill.”

It is further conceded by defendants that the amount of judgment in the court below against E. P. McCarty is correct so far as McCarty is concerned. Upon the trial below judgment was rendered for plaintiffs against Rider and McCarty, as partners, from which judgment Rider prosecuted error.

The following is the agreement between McCarty and Rider, by which it is claimed that they were partners :

* ‘ This contract is made and entered into this 16th ¡day of November, 1896, by and between S. W. Rider, |of Kansas City, Mo., party of the first part and E. P. McCarty, of La Cygne, Kan., party of the second part.
[735]*735“Said first party agrees to furnish to said second party the No. 5 Star drilling-machine, of Akron, Ohio, manufacture, now being operated near Paola, Kan., together with the tools, ropes and other appliances now in use with said machine for drilling oil, gas or water wells, and said first party is to receive for the use of said machine twenty-five cents per foot for each foot drilled with it during the life of this contract.
“Said second party hereby agrees to keep said machine in good repair and to turn over same to first party at the termination of this contract in as good condition as it now is, ordinary wear and tear excepted.
‘ ‘ Second party will furnish all the labor and supplies, including oils, coal and water necessary for moving and operating said machine and will hold said first party harmless from all liability for any accident that may occur by reason of the use of said machine. In case of loss of tools, second party is to use all possible means to recover them, and if unsuccessful, second party agrees to pay one-half the cost new tools, the other half to be borne by first party. If full payment is not received for any well because of lost tools, first party is to share in the reduction and be paid one-fourth of the amount received for drilling the well; and if no 'pay is received for any well because of lost tools, first party is to receive nothing for the use of the machine on that well. First party agrees to furnish new cables when needed.
“The twenty-five cents per foot is to be paid out of the proceeds of each well and is payable upon completion of each well.
“It is hereby mutually agreed that first and second party shall share equally in any right of development of the wells drilled, in case they shall produce sufficient oil to warrant their operation as oil-wells.
“Said second party shall not have outstanding at any one time contracts to drill more than two wells without the written consent of said first party.
“This contract may be terminated by either party by giving thirty days’ notice in writing of a wish to terminate it, and at the end of said thirty days it [736]*736shall terminate, unless said second party has outstanding uncompleted contracts for drilling which cannot be completed within said thirty days, in which event such uncompleted contracts are to be completed by second party without delay, and upon their completion this contract shall terminate. Signed in duplicate.
“Dated this 16th day of November, 1896.
S. W. Rider.
E. P. McCarty.”

The contract for boring the well at Bronson was ■made between McCarty and the Bronson Gas and Improvement Company, the material part of which is that McCarty agreed to bore an eight-inch hole 1000 feet for $1 per foot; for the next 250 feet he was to receive $1.25 per foot, and thereafter $1.50 per foot. There was some understanding about casings, etc., but nothing material to a full understanding of this case.

The agreement between Rider and E. P. McCarty, which was introduced in evidence, is plain and unambiguous, and whether it creates a partnership between these parties as to themselves is a question of law. (Boston etc. Smelting Co. v. Smith, 13 R. I. 27, 43 Am. Rep. 1; Nathaniel Webster v. John Clark, Son & Co., 34 Fla. 637, 16 South. 601, 27 L. R. A. 126, 43 Am. St. Rep. 217; Morgan v. Farrell, 58 Conn. 417, 20 Atl. 614, 18 Am. St. Rep. 282.) “A partnership is the contract relation subsisting between persons who have combined their property, labor and skill in ah enterprise or business, as principals, for the purpose of joint profit.” (Spaulding v. Stubbings, 86 Wis. 255, 56 N. W. 469, 39 Am. St. Rep. 888.)

If this agreement created a partnership between Rider and McCarty, Rider is liable to Hammell & McCarty for the coal furnished to McCarty, although they may not have known at the time that Rider was [737]*737a partner. Rider was the owner of a machine and,, •appliances used for boring for oil, coal, gas, etc. He agreed with McCarty to rent it to him, together with the tools, ropes and other appliances then used in operating said machine; to furnish new cables when needed, and pay one-half of the cost of certain tools which in the operation of boring wells were liable to be lost in a well. McCarty was to operate the machine at his own 'expense and pay Rider twenty-five cents per foot for all wells completed. It was also provided that if, in drilling a well, tools should get lost in the well, and by reason thereof the well could not be completed, Rider v^as to receive only his proportion of what should be collected, at the rate of twenty-five cents per foot; also, that Rider should share •equally in any right of development of wells drilled by McCarty in case any should be worth operating. This contract was to terminate on thirty days’ notice.

Does this agreement cpnstitute a partnership between these parties as to themselves? We do not think it does. In the first place, it does not provide that they shall have a joint interest in the business or the profits. Rider was not to receive any of the profits ; he was to get twenty-five cents per foot for all wells completed, regardless of profit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 P. 1026, 63 Kan. 733, 1901 Kan. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rider-v-hammell-kan-1901.