Roy C. Whayne Supply Co. v. McGowan

280 S.W. 491, 213 Ky. 102, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 461
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 16, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 280 S.W. 491 (Roy C. Whayne Supply Co. v. McGowan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roy C. Whayne Supply Co. v. McGowan, 280 S.W. 491, 213 Ky. 102, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 461 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming.

Appellants, Eoy C. Whayne and Harry T. Whayne, doing business under the name and style of Eoy C. Whayne Supply Company, a partnership, instituted this action in the Jefferson circuit court against appellee, McGowan, to recover judgment for something more than $2,000.00 on the hypothesis that McGowan was the partner of one L. P. Kreiger, a highway contractor to whom appellants had sold supplies and from whom they had been unable to collect owing to the fact that he had become insolvent and had been adjudged a bankrupt. In support of appellant’s contention that appellee, McGowan, was' a partner of Kreiger they pleaded and relied upon a written contract of date June 20, 1921, entered into between Kreiger and appellee, McGowan, which reads:

“This agreement is to witness that whereas L. P. Kreiger, of Louisville, Ky., has entered into a contract with Euddell Construction Co. to do and perform certain work in connection with state project No. 10, section A, being the construction of about 5 7/10 miles of road in Muhlenberg county, Ky., and in order to do said work, it is necessary to employ about 12 to $15,000.00 of capital, said capital to he furnished by G. McGowan of Louisville, Ky. Said Kreiger is to furnish all necessary trucks and equipments to do the work, purchase rock and rock asphalt, employ labor and generally supervise the work to the best of his ability. All bills for labor, material, etc., to be examined and approved by him and sent to said McGowan for payment out of the *104 capital furnished, all payments on account of work done to be sent to said McGowan, same to be accounted for by him and used in the payment of bills for labor and material'until completion of the work, at which time he is to render an account of receipts and disbursements, and after deducting the amount of capital furnished by him, the net profit to be equally divided between said Kreiger and McGowan.
“It is further agreed that in the performance of the work it is contemplated that said Kreiger is to use and employ certain trucks and equipment now owned by him, and in the estimates of costs of labor, material, &c., there is included about $6,000.00 profit to said Kreiger on hauling on the use of his equipment, and in the event that there is a loss in the performance of this work said Kreiger agrees that before receiving the estimated $6,000.00, being his profit on hauling, said McGowan shall be entitled to receive the full amount of capital furnished by him, after which said Kreiger shall receive whatever portion of said hauling costs shall remain unpaid, but not exceeding the amount on hand, returning to said McGowan the money supplied by him.
“Said Kreiger agrees to use diligence in the performance of the work and to push the same to completion at the earliest practical date.
“Louisville, Ky., L. P. Kreiger..”
June 20/21.

Appellants say that the foregoing writing is conclusive evidence of the existence of a partnership between Kreiger and McGowan, and further that McGowan has so conducted himself by allowing himself to be held out and considered a partner with Kreiger as to be estopped from denying the existence of the partnership between them. Appellee, McGowan, asserts that he did not hold himself out as-a partner with Kreiger and that appellants produced no evidence at the trial indicating he had permitted himself to be held out or held'himself out as a partner of Kreiger. He further asserts that a participation in'the profits of a venture does not necessarily prove that the one so participating is a partner in the business, especially where no partnership was intended "by the parties, .and, further says that where profits are shared not as profits but as compéiisatibn 'for the use of • money or for services, no partiiérship is created for none *105 was intended by the parties; that the fundamental rule to be observed in determining the existence of a partnership is that regard must be paid to the true contract and intention of the parties as appears from all the facts of the case, and cites and relies upon the following cases: Stone v. Turfman’s Supply Co., 103 Ky. 325; Roberts v. Adams & Son Co., 33 K. L. R. 207; Hart v. Kelly, 83 Pa. St. 286; Meehan v. Valentine, 145 U. S. 611; Thillman v. Benton, 82 Md. 64; 33 Atl. 485; Boston Smelting Co. v. Smith, R. I. 27, page 34; Cadenasso v. Antonelle (Cal.), 59 Pac. 765; Richardson v. Hughitt, 74 N. Y. 55.

Quite a lot of evidence was taken by the parties in support of their several contentions. The witnesses were asked to and did file copies of correspondence between the parties, and a number of other exhibits throwing light upon the relations existing between appellants and Kreiger. The chancellor found there was no evidence that appellee, McGowan, had held himself out as' a partner of Kreiger or allowed or permitted Kreiger or other persons to so hold him out. After carefully considering the phraseology of" the written contract quoted above, the chancellor reached the conclusion that the terms of that instrument did not indicate an intention on the part of the parties thereto to enter into a partnership arrangement and did not, in fact, constitute appellee, McGowan, a partner of Kreiger. It is from that judgment that this appeal is prosecuted.

In reaching the conclusión above stated the learned chancellor, Lafon Allen, reviewed many Kentucky eases upon the subject and some foreign cases and in doing so observed:

“Nothing in the law is more confused and unsatisfactory than the definitions of partnership found in the books and the texts suggested for determining whether or not a partnership exists. It was formerly the law in England (before the decision in Cox v. Hickman, 8 H. L. C. 268) and in some of the United States that a sharing of profits made a partnership, at least as to creditors. But this is no longer the law in either country and it is established that a person may contract for a share of profits as compensation for the advance of money without making himself a partner. It is so in Kentucky. Donley v. Hall and Long, 5 Bush 549; Fuqua and Smith v. Massie and Sons, 95 Ky. 387; Stone v. Turf *106 man’s Supply Co., 103 Ky. 318; Boreing v. Wilson, 128 Ky. 570; Roberts v. Adams & Sons Co., 33 K. L. R. 207, 110 S. W. 314; Studebaker Corporation v. Dobbs & Runge, 161 Ky. 542.
“Various tests have been proposed and approved, subsequently qualified or rejected altogether. The profit sharing test was once justified on the ground that there is thus taken from creditors a part of their security, but this reasoning is now cast aside. Of course, profit-sharing is an invariable feature of partnership and its absence negatives partnership; but its presence does not necessarily prove it. Sharing losses as well as profits was once thought to show partnership, but is no longer reputed infallible, since one may be a partner without it. It is frequently said that a profit-sharer is a partner when he participates ‘as principal;’ that is, when he and his associate are principal and agent, each for the other.

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Bluebook (online)
280 S.W. 491, 213 Ky. 102, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roy-c-whayne-supply-co-v-mcgowan-kyctapphigh-1926.