Smith v. . Bodine

74 N.Y. 30, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 701
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 74 N.Y. 30 (Smith v. . Bodine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. . Bodine, 74 N.Y. 30, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 701 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The action was brought to recover for services rendered by the plaintiff as a salesman of the defendants, for which the plaintiff was to receive a certain percentage of the profits realized from the business. The complaint embraces services for the years 1865, 1866 and 1867, but upon the trial, as will hereafter appear, the recovery was restricted to the accounts during the years 1865 and 1866.

The counsel for the appellants claims that the referee erred upon the trial in allowing an accounting to proceed between the parties. I think that the decision of the referee, and the proof introduced, did not constitute a variance from the pleadings, or change the cause of action, and that there was no error in this respect. The complaint was for a specific-amount due the plaintiff upon contract. The defendants interposed by their answer a set-off of demands' for moneys paid on account of the plaintiff’s services, and for over-drafts of the plaintiff. This necessarily involved an examination of the accounts between the parties, for the purpose of determining the amount due the plaintiff for the salary claimed by him. In no other mode could the amount due the plaintiff have been ascertained, or the plaintiff establish his case. If the plaintiff had been a partner, then the action might properly have been brought in equity, for an accounting ; but we think that the plaintiff* was not a partner, and the claim that he shared the profits and losses, and hence the *33 parties having this community of interest inter sese were partners, is not well founded. To constitute a partnership it is generally necessary that the parties should share in the profits and loss. (3 Kent, 23; Pattison v. Blanchard, 1 Seld., 186.) An agreement for sharing in the profits of a business is sufficient, m some cases, to establish a partnership, as to third persons. (The Manhattan Brass and Manufacturing Co. v. Sears, 45 N. Y., 797.) But the rule last stated does not apply where one is interested in the profits of the business as a means of compensation for services. (Leggett et al. v. Hyde, 58 N. Y., 272.) As stated in the last case cited, the exception to the general rule relates to any person who has no interest in the capital or business, and is to be remunerated for his services by a compensation from the profits or measured by the profits. It may also be remarked that the rule referred to only applies to third persons, and not to parties who, among themselves, are interested in the profits. In the case at bar, as the proof shows, the plaintiff’s services were rendered under a special agreement, by which he was to receive for his services a certain percentage on the net profits, after deducting all expenses and interest on capital, whatever money might be due either of the partners at the end of the years, and all doubtful debts. As the plaintiff did- not occupy the position of a partner, he was not bound to show an express promise, or a balance struck, or a liquidation of accounts, in order to maintain the action. His claim arose upon a contract for a specific percentage of the profits to be paid for his services. The fact that a statement of an account between him and the defendants was necessary to establish his claim did not require an equitable action, and the nature of the action was in no wise changed by the introduction of evidence showing how the accounts stood. The case of Arnold v. Angell (62 N. Y., 508), which was an action for an accounting,'as between partners, where the plaintiff recovered, upon the trial, for a balance of loans and interest, it being found that no partnership existed and the judgment was reversed, has no application to the case at bar.

*34 It was absolutely necessary, in order to prove the plaintiff’s claim, to examine the partnership accounts, and not being a partner, the plaintiff could not institute an action in equity. The amount due the plaintiff could only be determined after showing the amount of profits, and deducting payments made. It may also be remarked that the answer of the defendants presented this very question, and it being a direct issue made by the pleadings, no amendment was required to justify the action of the referee.

It is also insisted that even if the referee had a right to proceed to an accounting, he was not authorized to allow any item therein not included in the complaint and not recoverable in the same action. This objection covers the amount loaned to the defendants during the years 1865 and 1866. It is a sufficient answer to this objection to say that the case does not show that this point was taken upon the trial, and hence it cannot be urged upon this appeal. Had the question been raised, the plaintiff might have asked leave to amend the complaint or to conform the pleadings to the proofs, and if such an application had been granted, the objection would have been entirely obviated.

A question is also made as to the accounts for the year 1867. The complaint embraced claims for services rendered by the plaintiff for the defendants during the years 1865, 1866 and 1867. The answer set up that John Bodine retired from the firm on the 1st day of January, 1867, and has not since been a member thereof. If John Bodine was not a partner in the year 1867, and the account of that year between the parties was not embraced in the action, and could not properly be ascertained and settled, the plaintiff could not claim for his services, nor were the defendants in a position to insist upon any counter-claim arising during the period last named. It appears, however, that during the progress of the trial before the referee an entry was made in the minutes in these words : “It was agreed by the parties that the account of 1867 shall be embraced in this matter, but in no event to go beyond the commencement of this *35 action.” And subsequently evidence was given, without objection, as to the accounts during the year 1867, and it is claimed by the defendants’ counsel that the business of that year resulted in a loss, and that such loss was a proper set-off to the plaintiff’s demand. About the close of the testimony the defendants’ counsel moved to amend the answer by inserting an allegation that for the year 1867 it was verbally agreed between all the parties to this action that the business should be conducted for that year in the name of two of the members of the old firm, as general partners, and that John Bodine and the plaintiff were to have a certain interest in the profits and losses, and to conform the pleadings to the proofs. This amendment was denied by the referee. A motion was then made to the court to amend the answer, as above stated, and the affidavits are conflicting as to what took place when the entry was made in the minutes to which reference has been had; but the motion was denied, with leave to the plaintiff to withdraw his claim for the year 1867, which the referee’s report shows was done accordingly. It will be seen that the amendment referred to would vary the agreement, as alleged in the complaint; as proved by some of the testimony, and make the plaintiff liable for a proportional share of the losses during the year 1867, and thus introduce an entirely new issue in the case. Whether this should be done, under the circumstances, was a matter which depended upon the facts presented, and was clearly discretionary.

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Bluebook (online)
74 N.Y. 30, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-bodine-ny-1878.