Scudder v. Ames

43 S.W. 659, 142 Mo. 187, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 381
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 43 S.W. 659 (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, 43 S.W. 659, 142 Mo. 187, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 381 (Mo. 1897).

Opinion

Beace, J.

On the fourteenth day of August, 1866, Henry Ames died, leaving a will by which his brother, Edgar Ames, was made executor; and in the event of his death, John A. and William H. Seudder were to become executors thereof. For many years prior thereto, the brothers, Henry and Edgar Ames, as equal partners, had been engaged in the pork packing and commission business in the city of St. Louis. The profits of their business were not divided, but invested in real estate, stocks, bonds and ventures of various kinds, all going into the partnership account. Among these ventures was that of buying cotton within the Confederate lines during the latter part of the civil war, in which they employed J. J. Garrard, Miles Sells and Alpheus Lewis, who were sent south to make purchases of cotton for them, under an arrangement whereby Ames & Company were to furnish all the money required to sustain all losses, and be entitled to one half of the profits; and the other parties were to receive the other half of the profits for their services. This business was carried on in Mississippi, Tennessee, and Louisiana, and the account thereof kept on the books of Ames & Company, in St. Louis, in the name of Garrard, Sells & Company. At the close of the war, in connection with this cotton buying business, they opened a store at Vicksburg, Mississippi, which was conducted by one of their clerks named Satterlee. This business was carried on, first, in the name of Geo. A. Satterlee & Company, and afterward in the name of J. J. Garrard & Company, and with each concern an account was separately kept on the books of Ames & Company.

[197]*197When Henry Ames died the account of Garrard, Sells & Company stood open on the books of the concern, showing, apparently, a large indebtedness from that concern to Henry Ames & Company, but repre-' senting in fact their own transactions in that firm name, and showing an immense loss. The account of Geo. A. Satterlee & Company had been transferred to the account of J. J. Garrard & Company, which also stood open on the books and was then the only active account representing actual assets in these Southern ventures. After the death of his brother, Edgar Ames conducted the business as before in the firm name on his own account. On the fourth of September, 1866, he qualified as executor of Henry Ames, and on the thirty-first of October, 1866, being the last day of the usual fiscal year of the partnership concern, he balanced the partnership books, made an inventory of the partnership assets on hand on the first of November, 1866, and filed the same' in the probate court on the seventh of November, 1866. On this inventory the balances shown by the books to be due from Garrard, Sells & Company, and from J. J. Garrard & Company, appeared as part of the assets of the partnership in his hands on the first of November, 1866; but no account was taken of the real assets of the partnership in the south, which the account of J. J. Garrard & Company represented. The amount of these accounts, thus inventoried, was as follows: Garrard, Sells & Company, $573,819.51; J. J. Garrard & Company, $16.980.58. Edgar Ames, as surviving partner, continued in the administration of the partnership estate from the first of November, 1866, until the ninth of December, 1867, when he died intestate, without having made any settlement as such surviving partner with the partnership estate. On the eighteenth of December, 1867, letters of administration on the estate of Edgar Ames [198]*198were granted to his widow, Lucy V. S. Ames, who gave bond and also took charge of the assets of Henry Ames & Company for final administration; and she • continued in the administration thereof, making annual settlements, until June 30, 1870, when she presented to the probate court her accounts for final settlement ; when for the first time the actual assets of the Southern venture, as shown by what is known in the case as the “Webb Exhibits,” filed therewith, were brought into the account. Among these assets were uncollected accounts due Satterlee & Company and J., J. Garrard & Company amounting to $69,365.39. These, with the other uncollected accounts of the estate, were afterward, on the twenty-ninth of August, 1869, sold at public sale in pursuance of an order of the probate court, and the administratrix became the purchaser thereof for the estate of her husband. On the filing of her report of this sale, John A. and William H. Scudder, as executors of the individual estate of Henry Ames, filed exceptions to so much thereof as related to the sale of these Southern uncollected accounts. The exceptions were sustained, and as to these accounts the sale was set aside. From this order of the probate court the administratrix appealed to the circuit court, and thence to the Supreme Court, where the decision of the probate court was affirmed at the March term, 1873, thereof (52 Mo. 290). Afterward, on the seventeenth of April, 1874, the administratrix filed an amended final settlement, in which the Southern assets, as shown by the “Webb Exhibits,” were omitted, showing a balance in her favor of $53,666.18. To this settlement exceptions were filed by the executors of Henry Ames, and from the judgment of the-probate court thereon an appeal was taken to the circuit court and thence to the Supreme Court, where, at the April term, 1884, of said court, the judgment of [199]*199the circuit court was reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court for new trial, without direction (89 Mo. 496). Whereupon it was sent to a referee, C. S. Hayden, Esq., upon exceptions to whose report the case was retried in the circuit court, and the final account between the administratrix and the partnership estate stated — showing a balance due said estate of $59,97L75. From the final order and judgment thereon entered' on the third of August, 1893, both parties appeal.

I. The matters complained of in this settlement on behalf of the administratrix are the following:

“First. That the court charged the administratrix with $39,508.22 on account of ‘Southern assets as .shown per Webb Exhibits,’ and with other amounts on account of collections on said assets made since the date of said exhibits, and refused to allow as a credit ■or reduction from these amounts the sum of $39,523.61 which the evidence clearly disclosed Edgar Ames, prior to his death, had fully accounted for and paid to the partnership estate on account of these ‘Southern assets.’
“Second. That the administratrix is charged with $833.33 on account of the ‘Dennis Fitzpatrick matter’ in excess of the amount she should be charged with on that account.
“'Third. That the administratrix is charged with $1,321.38 on account of collections from F. R. Turley in excess of the amount with which she should be charged on that account.
“Fourth. That the administratrix is charged with certain sums to which the partnership estate is not entitled, to wit: $2,074.41 on account of ‘Burney Indebtedness;’ $1,100 on account of indebtedness of GL W. Nichol & Company'; and $74.51 on account of indebtedness of J. & GL C. Porter.
[200]*200“Fifth. That the administratrix is charged contrary to law and the evidence with the sum of $10,-147.73, and with interest thereon amounting to $16,-296.16 for ‘amount withdrawn on October 31st, 1866, from partnership estate funds by Edgar Ames to equalize his account with that of Henry Ames.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 S.W. 659, 142 Mo. 187, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scudder-v-ames-mo-1897.