Sanderson v. Parsons

15 So. 2d 513, 195 Miss. 875, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 159
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1943
DocketNo. 35413.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 So. 2d 513 (Sanderson v. Parsons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanderson v. Parsons, 15 So. 2d 513, 195 Miss. 875, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 159 (Mich. 1943).

Opinions

We are to determine on this appeal (1) whether appellant, as executrix of and the sole beneficiary in the will of Dr. G.P. Sanderson, her deceased husband, is the owner of a one-third or a one-sixth interest in the assets of the Vicksburg Clinic, a partnership, of which Dr. Sanderson was a member at the time of his death October 30th, 1941; and (2) who, as between appellant and appellees, Drs. Knox and Parsons, is the owner of seventy-five shares of stock in the Vicksburg Hospital, Inc.

The chancellor decreed appellant to be the owner of a one-sixth interest in the Clinic and appellees to be the owners of the stock.

The guiding lights are rather dim. We must determine the questions from a construction of two contracts made between Dr. Sanderson and appellees, the circumstances surrounding their making and subsequent developments thereunder.

Does appellant own a one-third or a one-sixth interest in the Clinic? We limit the ownership to those alternative percentages because counsel for the parties so limit the question on this appeal; otherwise a one-fourth interest might enter into the question.

On March 1st, 1939, Drs. Sanderson, Knox and Parsons were all engaged in the practice of medicine in Vicksburg, *Page 884 Mississippi. The latter two were also surgeons. It is not clear whether Dr. Sanderson was also a surgeon. Drs. Knox and Parsons and one Dr. Robert operated the Vicksburg Clinic, a partnership, but all the assets appear to have been owned by Knox and Parsons. There were several other doctors employed by the Clinic, receiving designated monthly salaries for their services, but they were not partners therein. On that day Drs. Knox, Parsons and Robert, as first parties, entered into a lengthy written agreement with Dr. Sanderson, as second party, under which Dr. Sanderson became a partner in the Vicksburg Clinic. The contract provided for joint operation of the Clinic by these four doctors, and each was to give his entire time and services to the partnership, except such practice as he might do for his immediate family; each partner was to keep an accurate daily account of the services performed, and the fees and charges therefor, and that all fees and charges and money should be collected by, and handled through the books of, the Clinic, which books should be open to the partners at all times; that the equipment and accounts receivable of the parties would be "pooled," with some named exceptions. It then provides for the compensation of the parties to the contract and certain employees of the partnership, the provision here pertinent reading as follows: "18. That the compensation of the said Dr. G.P. Sanderson shall be computed and paid monthly in the following manner; On the first Three Thousand ($3000.00) Dollars net collected per month by the said Vicksburg Clinic, the said Dr. G.P. Sanderson shall receive one-sixth or 16 2/3 per cent and Dr. W.H. Parsons and Dr. I.C. Knox to share the remainder of the net proceeds collected from the said Clinic as may be mutually agreed between them, or as provided by any contract that may be in existence at the time of the execution of this partnership agreement providing for division of fees or other income derived from the said Clinic; of the next $1000.00 net collected, or fraction thereof, the said Dr. G.P. Sanderson is to receive *Page 885 twenty-five per cent and the said Dr. I.C. Knox and W.H. Parsons are to receive the remainder to be divided between them on the same basis as applied to the division of the balance of the first Three Thousand ($3000.00) Dollars; all net collections of the Vicksburg Clinic over and above Four Thousand ($4000.00) Dollars shall be divided equally between the said Dr. I.C. Knox, Dr. W.H. Parsons and Dr. G.P. Sanderson."

Dr. Robert later withdrew from the partnership and disappears therefrom and his relation thereto has no bearing on the question under consideration. The partnership, by express terms of the agreement, was to terminate December 31st, 1942.

Dr. Sanderson contributed to the partnership at the time of its formation accounts receivable in the sum of $5,593.58 and Drs. Knox and Parsons such accounts in the aggregate of $91,647.63. The respective actual values of these accounts is not shown. No other assets were contributed by either party.

The agreement was faithfully carried out by all parties until the death of Dr. Sanderson October 30th, 1941. It lasted thirty-two months, during which these three doctors were paid by the Clinic the total sum of $98,259.36. In eighteen months of this period the disbursements were more, and in fourteen months thereof were less, than $3,000, the monthly average for the thirty-two months being $3,070.60. Presumably, although the record does not show, the disbursements to the individuals were in accordance with the terms of the contract.

At the time of the death of Dr. Sanderson the only assets of the partnership were outstanding accounts receivable aggregating $108,163.58. These were valued by the appraisers at $28,889.47. Dr. Parsons was appointed administrator of the partnership assets on the death of Dr. Sanderson. During the fourteen months before the filing of this bill he had collected of these accounts a total of $20,025.07, during which time the monthly collections, except for one month, never exceeded $3,000. No point *Page 886 is here made on the excess over $3,000 for that one month. Of such total collections Dr. Parsons, as such administrator, has paid to appellant one-sixth, which she has accepted without prejudice to her rights herein. This leaves outstanding uncollected accounts of the Clinic of approximately $88,000, the estimated value of which is not shown in this record.

We have given careful consideration to the contentions made on this appeal by both parties, and, without undertaking to detail them, have concluded that appellant owns a one-sixth interest in this partnership. It is true, as appellant urges, the contract speaks of the relation as that of partners and says they are pooling the assets; that the parties had equality of control and management, yet these things, while persuasive, do not necessarily determine the respective ownership of the parties in the assets of the partnership. It is also a correct principle of law, as she contends, that "In the absence of competent evidence of an agreement to the contrary, partners are presumed to have equal interest in the firm . . .," 47 C.J. Sec. 222, pg 782; Randle v. Richardson, 53 Miss. 176, but it is also stated in that same section ". . . partnership contracts providing for unequal or particular interests will contol." We think the contract, supplemented by the acts of the parties, does that in this case. It provided that Dr. Sanderson should receive a smaller percentage of compensation than Drs. Knox and Parsons, under the method of making collections and doing business and contemplated by the parties. Had Dr. Sanderson lived, his compensation, based upon the monthly distributions made during his life, would never have amounted to an equal interest with that of Drs. Knox and Parsons. We do not think his death vested in his estate a greater interest than he himself would have received while living and contributing his services to the partnership. But supplementing this contract is the very important fact that Drs. Knox and Parsons contributed to the partnership accounts of the aggregate face value *Page 887 almost seventeen times greater than did Dr. Sanderson. The accounts receivable so placed in the partnership were all for services of these doctors in the same vicinity and we may fairly assume were of about equal average collectability.

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Sanderson v. Parsons
15 So. 2d 513 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1943)

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15 So. 2d 513, 195 Miss. 875, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanderson-v-parsons-miss-1943.