Schneider v. Newmark

224 S.W.2d 968, 359 Mo. 955, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 693
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 14, 1949
DocketNo. 41054.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 224 S.W.2d 968 (Schneider v. Newmark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schneider v. Newmark, 224 S.W.2d 968, 359 Mo. 955, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 693 (Mo. 1949).

Opinions

Action for dissolution of a partnership, and for an accounting. The trial chancellor dismissed the petition, and plaintiff has appealed. The amount plaintiff seeks to recover in accounting is greatly in excess of $7500.

The case treats with the effect of acts, words and conduct in modifying the contractual relations of two doctors who were, for a time, associated as partners in the practice of medicine and surgery.

Prior to the year 1940, defendant, who was in the general practice of medicine and who did no major surgery, had established a practice at Chester, Illinois. He was acquainted with plaintiff, a younger man, who was married to defendant's cousin. Plaintiff completed his professional training in 1940, having specialized in surgery; the parties became associated in the practice of medicine and surgery in Chester in July of that year. Plaintiff's association with defendant contemplated a hospital at Chester, and defendant had *Page 959 caused a hospital to be established. Plaintiff contributed $2500 toward acquiring a half interest in the instruments, equipment, drugs and supplies used by the parties in their practice.

Plaintiff received $3000 for his first year's work with defendant, it having been verbally [969] agreed that if defendant were satisfied with plaintiff's skill the association was to "automatically" become a full partnership at the end of such year, each of the parties to then receive half of the net income.

The parties are able and skillful practitioners of their profession. Their joint practice was successful and lucrative.

In August 1941 plaintiff received his "first check" for $350, being a monthly advance on his half of the partnership's net earnings. Thereafter, in December 1941 or January 1942, there was an accounting (and settlement) for the preceding six months' income, and another periodical accounting was had at the end of the second six-month period; but during the third six-month period (in October 1942) the plaintiff was called into military service. At that time there was a deduction of the $350 per month theretofore advanced, and plaintiff received approximately $2000 for "the half, from July until October, half of the net" then collected, after which plaintiff left for duty with the Armed Forces.

Since defendant was not a surgeon, the hospital was closed down and disposed of. Some of the hospital supplies were given away, and defendant continued to use some of the equipment. (The parties have agreed upon a settlement of the issues of a claim for a division of the "capital assets.")

When plaintiff departed for military service, there was no express agreement relating to the dissolution of the partnership, nor was there an express stipulation relating to the division of the income of the parties while plaintiff was in the Army. But defendant explained to plaintiff that plaintiff would get remittances "for the accrued accounts that had been earned prior to" his departure. Defendant did not say plaintiff would "get anything for future money that he (defendant) would earn." When defendant explained what plaintiff was "going to get," plaintiff did not "say anything."

Plaintiff served as a medical officer until February 6, 1946, when he returned to St. Louis. Fifteen months of his service was in India. While plaintiff was away, defendant remitted to plaintiff (or to plaintiff's wife) sums totaling $2913.39. Defendant testified (and plaintiff testified he was of the opinion) these sums were half of the accounts receivable for the parties' practice prior to October 1942, but thereafter paid by patients to defendant. Throughout the time plaintiff was in the service, he and defendant exchanged numerous friendly letters. Plaintiff thanked defendant for remittances received. The plaintiff's letters contained no request for an accounting of any share of the moneys collected for services rendered by defendant *Page 960 to patients after October 1942. Plaintiff testified he had intended to go back to Chester and resume his professional relationship with defendant under the "old terms."

While plaintiff was away (although the hospital at Chester had been discontinued) defendant's practice greatly increased. It seems defendant collected $50,000 in his practice in 1945. Several physicians within a radius of fifty miles of Chester had been called into the Armed Forces, and defendant worked very hard in answering the many calls for medical treatment.

After plaintiff's return, defendant was anxiously expecting plaintiff to resume the practice with defendant at Chester; but in early April 1946, plaintiff advised defendant that he, plaintiff, thought he should receive a third of what defendant had "netted while I (plaintiff) was gone." After some discussion over a period of several days defendant offered to pay plaintiff $25,000, and there was further conversation concerning the financing of another hospital at Chester. Defendant proposed to pay plaintiff $10,000 in cash and the balance, $15,000, "in the future." This seemed agreeable to plaintiff, but later, the "next day," plaintiff told defendant "it was off." Plaintiff entered the practice in St. Louis. At the trial plaintiff testified, "the fact I must receive the ten thousand dollars and possibly the rest of it in cash was enough for me to turn it down." The trial chancellor was of the apparent opinion the defendant's offer was only an inducement for and conditional upon plaintiff's return to Chester and his association with defendant [970] in the practice there. The evidence upon this question was in conflict and in this connection we defer to the chancellor's ruling. (There was some evidence various relatives of plaintiff were urging him to practice in St. Louis.)

While in the Army plaintiff received $3100 in pay for the first year of duty as a lieutenant, and thereafter $3800 per year as a captain. He rendered no account of his earnings as a medical officer.

Plaintiff-appellant contends. (1) the evidence established the formation of a partnership in July 1941 for an indefinite term and no express agreement for dissolution when plaintiff entered military service; there was no evidence of a ground for dissolution as for breach, or any denunciation or abandonment of the partnership, and in the circumstances there was a presumption the partnership continued. (2) Plaintiff's "incapacity" as a partner due to his entry into military service did not in itself effect a dissolution; such an incapacity on account of military service is a risk incidental to a partnership business, and one upon entry into wartime military service does not necessarily abandon civilian pursuits. (3) There was no evidence of an accounting or of a settlement of the partnership business in 1942; on the contrary the evidence established defendant had liquidated or used some of the partnership properties and did not undertake to account to plaintiff for the proceeds or use of the properties *Page 961 until in 1946. And (4), irrespective of whether there was a dissolution in October 1942, the fiduciary relationship between the partners and defendant's use of the partnership properties after October 1942 entitles plaintiff to share in the profits earned while plaintiff was away.

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W.2d 968, 359 Mo. 955, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-newmark-mo-1949.