Scudder v. Ames

89 Mo. 496
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 89 Mo. 496 (Scudder v. Ames) 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
Scudder v. Ames, 89 Mo. 496 (Mo. 1886).

Opinion

Shebwood, J.

This cause comes nere from the St. Louis court of appeals, which court affirmed pro forma the judgment of the. circuit court. Both parties appealed from the judgment, as well as from the judgment of affirmance.

The cause originated in the probate court and the litigation grows out of exceptions filed by the executors of the will of Henry Ames, deceased, to the final settlement of Lucy Y. S. Ames, administratrix, settling the partnership estate of Henry Ames & Company. The probate court after hearing evidence on the numerous exceptions, found a balance against the administratrix of $42,554.43, and gave judgment against her in favor of the exceptors, for $21,277.43, that amount being the distributive share of the estate of Henry Ames, deceased. Prom this judgment the exceptors apijealed to the circuit court, and that court upon hearing the evidence, the record of which is very voluminous, and after sustaining several of the exceptions, made certain findings of fact and law, and rendered judgment against the administratrix for precisely the same amount as that rendered by the probate court. The correctness of these rulings of the circuit court is now to be determined.

I. Of the sale of the good-will of the firm of Henry Ames & Company, by the administratrix, it is needless to say more than this, that it is evident from the language of the proposal of Wm. H. Scudder and Mrs. [506]*506Catharine Ames, and of the bond they gave the administratrix that the good-will of the firm was not sold. This fact supersedes the necessity for the discussion of the point. If the exception made had instead been one as to whether Edgar Ames should have charged himself in his inventory with the good-will of the firm as an asset thereof, a different question might have been presented, the investigation of which now would be altogether superfluous.

II. Relative to the payment of the Lindell Hotel bonds, in oxxler to redeem the hotel property from the lien of the first mortgage, and relative to the payxnent of the bonus of five thousaixd dollars to the Boatman’s ■ Savings Bank to take up those boxxds prior to maturity, a majority of the court are of the opinion that that property was partixership property and that the act of the adxninistratrix in redeexning that property was a necessary act and beneficial to the partnex’ship estate, and that inasmuch as she subsequently obtained for that act the approval of the probate coxxrt, that such subsequent approval had a retroactive effect, making the prior act of the admixiistratrix of equal validity as if she had, in the fix’st ixxstance, obtained from the probate coux't an order to redeem the hotel property. And by reason of like considerations, they also hold that the Tyonus aforesaid, xxsed to take up the bonds before maturity, was validated by subsequent approval. The majority of .the coxxrt also hold that all commissions arising out of these matters claimed by the administratrix should be allowed her. Oxx these points I do xxot concur. I hold that the property in question was not partnership property, and even had it beeix, that axx order to redeem, an oxvler to take up the bonds should first have been obtained, and that the probate court xxot having been applied to as;reqixired by the statute, had no jurisdictioix to act ixx the premises, whether the property ixx question were individual or partnership property. There were xxo excep-[507]*507tions taken in the probate court only in relation to the commissions on the sums aforesaid, but as the consideration of the commissions on those sums necessarily involved the consideration of the other features of the cause which have been discussed, and as the case goes back for re-trial it has been thought best to discuss them.

III. The majority of the court, holding, as they do, that all tl}e real estate owned by the brothers,' Henry and Edgar, was partnership property, hold also, that in consequence thereof, the administratrix should be allowed all appropriate credits and commissions for repairs, taxes, insurances, etc., on all such real estate, whether situate within or without the state of Missouri. I do not subscribe to any such doctrine. I hold, that there is no room for doubt that the property was held by the brothers as tenants in common, and not otherwise, and that in any event, neither the duties nor the powers of the administratrix extended beyond the.limits of this state.

■IV. Edgar Ames, when making his inventory of the partnership estate, omitted to include a large stock of goods which his firm had also in Vicksburg, Mississippi. Of this stock he made no appraisement, but carried on the business on his own account, as if the property were his own. An inventory of this stock of goods, taken July 1, 1886, which was but about six weeks before Henry Ames’ death, showed that the stock was worth at cost price $78,300.68. Edgar Ames should have sold this stock of goods and should have accounted for the proceeds, and could not be allowed to take the goods at a valuation. His administratrix coming in, in 1870, with her final settlement of the partnership estate, was allowed to claim a large percentage for depreciation on this stock of goods. This claim for' depreciation -was allowed, upon the testimony of witnesses as to the estimated depreciation* years after the property was taken [508]*508and appropriated by Edgar Ames as his own, four years after the death of Henry Ames, and after the stock of goods had been destroyed by fire. The circuit court allowed this claim for depreciation to the extent of twenty per cent., stating in the opinion that such depreciation or discount was fixed by the surviving partner. There is no such evidence. My associates, however, concur with the lower court and allow the depreciation. I do not concur in this.

V. As to interest' on all claims the amounts of which the administratrix collected, but willfully omitted to account for in her settlements, she should, according to the opinion of a majority of this court, be charged only the lowest rate of simple interest from the time of her reception of the money. On this point I do not concur, thinking the rate should be greater, and that there should be annual, or at least frequent, rests. In relation to interest on any sums which she reported to the probate court as collected, the majority of the court are ■of opinion that she should not be charged any interest whatever, no matter how long the pioney.may have remained idle in her hands or in the bank, and no matter whether she could have loaned the same under the order of the probate court or not. The opinion of the majority on this item, as was the opinion of the lower court, is based on the fact that it does not appear that any interest was obtained by the administratrix on these sums, and that she kept the partnership funds in the bank separate from her own. I do not concur on this point.

VI. It had been the custom of the brothers, Henry •and Edgar, composing the firm of Henry Ames & Company to keep everything in common and whether one brother drew from the firm for his private expense more than the other, made no difference in the adjustment, as all these sums were charged to “expense” and settled in that way at the end of the year. This custom [509]*509had acquired the binding force of a contract supported too, by a valuable consideration, to-wit, that whereas one brother might draw out, in any one year, more than the other, the latter might do the like the next year; and this in all probability was the current of such events, and led to the adoption of the custom in question.

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Bluebook (online)
89 Mo. 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scudder-v-ames-mo-1886.