Schmidt v. Archer

14 N.E. 543, 113 Ind. 365, 1887 Ind. LEXIS 334
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1887
DocketNo. 13,044
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 14 N.E. 543 (Schmidt v. Archer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmidt v. Archer, 14 N.E. 543, 113 Ind. 365, 1887 Ind. LEXIS 334 (Ind. 1887).

Opinion

Niblack, J.

This action was commenced in the superior court of Vanderburgh county, and was afterwards, on a change of venue, sent to the Warrick Circuit Court, where it was tried.

The complaint was in two paragraphs. The first charged that the plaintiff, Samuel M. Archer, did business in the name of Archer & Co., and that the defendants, John K. Brouneller, E. Kane Grayville, Frederick Kiechle, Sarah R. Braun and Peter Braun, composed the firm of Brouneller, Grayville & Co.; that, on the 8th day of June, 1882, Grayville in his individual capacity, and the firm of Brouneller, Grayville & Co., together with August Schmidt, the appellant here, executed to the plaintiff, Archer, by the name and stylo of Archer & Co., their promissory note for the sum of $250, with five per cent, attorney’s fees, payable one Hundred days after date, which remained unpaid. The second alleged that the said firm of Brouneller, Grayville & Co., and the said August Schmidt, on the 12th day of December, 1883, executed their promissory note for the sum of $100, with five per cent, attorney’s fees, payable to the order of the said Schmidt ninety days after date; that Schmidt had, by his endorsement thereon, assigned and transferred said note to the plaintiff, and that this note, also, remained unpaid.

Kiechle, for himself as well as for the firm of Brouneller, Grayville & Co., denied under oath the execution of both of the notes described in the complaint.

Schmidt answered in several paragraphs the first paragraph of the complaint. A demurrer was sustained to the third paragraph of his answer, and issues were formed upon the others.

The court tried the cause without a jury, and made a special finding of facts adjudged to be established by the evidence. This finding was to the effect, that, prior to the 11th [367]*367day pf November, 1876, one. Frederick Brouneller and the defendants Grayville and Kiechle composed the firm of Brouneller, Grayville & Co.; that, on that day, the said Frederick Brouneller died testate, leaving the defendants John K. Brouneller and Sarah R. Braun, as his only children, heirs at law and legatees surviving him; that, at the time of the death of Frederick Brouneller, the capital stock of the firm amounted to about $23,000; that of that amount he had contributed $11,000, and Grayville $5,000 and Kiechle $7,000; that the decedent, Brouneller, directed by his last will and testament that after his death the firm should continue the same as it had been, and that his said children should not withdraw their proportions of the capital stock until after the expiration of three years from the time of his death; that, conformably to this direction, it was agreed that the business of the firm should be continued as it had been previously, for an indefinite period of time; that, as the- decedent, Brouneller, left no individual indebtedness, his estate was never administered upon and settled in the usual way; that previous to the death of Frederick Brouneller each partner in the firm received one-third of the profits earned by it after deducting all expenses, which included a salary of $1,200 to each one of the partners; that, under the new arrangement, each surviving partner continued to receive a salary of $1,200, and the defendant John K. Brouneller was employed as book-keeper for the firm at a like salary of $1,200 per year, he having, at the same time, charge of his sister’s interests in the business of the establishment, which consisted of the manufacturing of stoves and hollow-ware ; that, after the death of Frederick Brouneller, no new capital was added, except such as resulted from the accumulation of profits; that previous to his, the said Brouneller’s, death, Grayville was the business and the financial manager, and Kiechle was' the foreman or superintendent of the foundry; that, after his father’s death, John K. Brouneller was entrusted with much of the financial management of the firm, and this was [368]*368■especially so in the absence of Grayville, who spent more than half his time travelling for the firm; that Mrs. Braun received about $300 per year out of the earnings of the firm, which was paid to her as interest on her share in its capital stock; that, in October, 1883, the firm name was changed to that of Brouneller, Kiechle & Grayville; that John K. Brouneller never held himself out, as a member of the old firm, nor did Mrs. Braun ever do so; that, at the time of the change of the firm name, the firm had become embarrassed, and it was agreed that thereafter no note or draft should be executed or endorsement made by the firm, or any one connected with it, except in its legitimate and exclusive business, and that only John K. Brouneller should sign the name of the firm to, any note, draft, bill, check or other contract, and he only in carrying on the firm’s business ; that Edward Kiechle, son of the defendant Kiechle, was to be the book-keeper of the firm, to be assisted by John K. Brouneller, and that a more careful method of managing the financial business of the firm should be thereafter observed; that, on the 8th day of June, 1882, Grayville executed to the plaintiff the note described in the first paragraph of the complaint, as the principal obligor therein, which was also signed by Brouneller, Grayville & Co. and the defendant Schmidt as his sureties; that the note was given for the individual debt of Grayville, which was known to the plaintiff; that the name of the firm was signed to the note by Grayville, or by his direction, but without the knowledge or consent of the defendant Kiechle; that, on the 12th day of December, 1883, the firm of Brouneller, Kiechle & Grayville executed to the plaintiff the note counted upon in the second paragraph of the complaint, and that the defendant Schmidt signed said note as surety for the firm; that such note was given for money borrowed from the plaintiff by the firm in due course of business; that the sum of $100, being the principal due on said note, had been paid since the commencement of this suit; that in executing [369]*369the note described in the first paragraph of the complaint, Schmidt signed the same as surety for Grayville and as co-surety with the firm of Brouneller, Grayville & Co.

• Upon these facts the court stated the following conclusions of law:

First. That by the death of Frederick Brouneller thepartnership theretofore existing between him and Grayville and Kiechle was dissolved by operation of law.

Second. That afterwards a new partnership was formed in the same business and with the same assets between Grayville and Kiechle.

Third. That John K. Brouneller and Sarah R. Braun were only interested in this new partnership to the extent of their ownership of its assets as bequeathed to them b'y their father, and were not liable as partners.

Fourth. That Kiechle was not liable on the note sued on by the first paragraph of the complaint, because he never executed it, and because it was not given for anything connected with the partnership business.

Fifth. That Kiechle was liable for interest and attorney’s fees which had accrued on the note upon which the second paragraph of complaint was based.

Sixth. That Grayville and Schmidt were each liable on both paragraphs of the complaint, and that Kiechle was also liable on the second paragraph of that pleading.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 N.E. 543, 113 Ind. 365, 1887 Ind. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmidt-v-archer-ind-1887.