Smith v. Smith

24 So. 618, 51 La. Ann. 72, 1898 La. LEXIS 567
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 5, 1898
DocketNo. 12,894
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 24 So. 618 (Smith v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Smith, 24 So. 618, 51 La. Ann. 72, 1898 La. LEXIS 567 (La. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Breaux, J.

The plaintiff, (relator here) personally and as tutrix, ■commenced suit on July 8, 1897, aginst Howard W. Smith, surviving partner of the firm of E. & PI. Smith.

The .late Eugene Smith was her husband and the father of the minor whom she represents as natural tutrix. He died on March 11th, 1898.

In her suit she complained of the charge made by the defendant, surviving partner, for services rendered; she claimed the profits of an insurance business carried on by PToward E. Smith, after the firm was •dissolved, and one-half of the price of the sale of the insurance business at one time carried on by the firm, and also interposed opposition do the fee of the attorney.

Her petition contained other demands which were sustained by the judge of the District Court, and which no longer present issues to be •determined.

The return of the judges to the order nisi, which was issued by this ■court, was, as relates to the facts, that the defendant was conducting •an insurance business for the partnership, and supervising their outside partnership affairs; that the earnings of the common labor of the partners, and the profits of their insurance, went into the partner■.ship.

[74]*74Under the advice of a family meeting, held in May, 1893, Howard Smith, surviving partner, assumed the charge of the partnership' affairs, (except the insurance business, the return shows), and conducted it for its liquidation.

In November, 1893 a second family meeting was held for the minor and in accordance with its recommendation, exchanged the farm owned by the partnership for the half interest of a commercial business.

This mercantile business was continued for 1894 and 1895 under the name of Smith and Gullet.

Ry agreement with the firm, Gullet’s services to the firm were to be equalled and compensated by defendant’s, Smith’s, service, thereto.

In November, 1895, another family meeting was held for the minor, under which a partition was made between plaintiff and defendant.

In September, 1896, a provisional account was filed by the tutrix, which was homologated in October, 1896, purposing to liquidate the affairs of the partnership of Smith and Gullet, and of the partnership ■ of E. & II. Smith.

The purpose of the suit brought by plaintiff in July, 1897, was to assail and to have declared null the various family meetings, and the provisional account of tutorship.

Wo proceed to take up for determination, the remaining questions-brought up in the application to have the judgment of the Oourt of Appeals and that of the District Court reversed.

Feb of Attorney.

The first complaint giving rise only to an issue of fact, as we appreciate it, is that relating to the fee of attorney. An amount, two hundred dollars, was charged to the minor alone, though plaintiff contends' she owed only one-fourth of the amount, and that the remainder was due by the partnership of E. & II. Smith.

We are informed by the court’s return, that the attorney’s fee was-moderate in amount, and that the services were rendered in the interest of the minor alone, and not to the firm of E. and II. Smith.

Wo have seen that in course of the settlement of the succession a number of family meetings were held and accounts for the minor were-filed.

The District Oourt, and the Oourt of Appeals having determined' [75]*75that the services were rendered to the minor alone, and that they were moderate, we would not be warranted in holding', that, as to this mere question of fact, there was error in the courts’ decision.

Claim roe tiie Good Will of the Partnership Carrying on an In-’ sueanoe Business.

It appears that the insurance business was bought for the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars; this amount was paid for tangible property transferred by the vendor, and for the business.

After the termination of the partnership, E. H. Smith, the defendant, gave notice to the insurance companies of his brother’s death, and the agencies were renewed with defendant.

We understand, as relates to this insurance business, that the' tangible property was divided.

Defendant continued, after the termination of the partnership, the-insurance business in his own name, until about December, 1898, when he sold the business and its “good will” for five hundred dollars,, and retired from the business.

The foregoing is in substance respondent’s statement of facts about the insurance business, and wo do not gather from the argument of counsel, that it is erroneous in any substantial particular.

Did the plaintiff have an interest in the “good will” of the business sold by defendant, some months after the dissolution of the partnership, is the question before us for decision.

We have seen that the partnership, at the time of the sale, had been terminated by the death of one of the partners, and the evidence discloses, that after his death, the surviving partner claimed the business, in his own name.

There can be no right to the “good will” of an insurance agency which has been for some time dissolved.

The firm was not in business, and could have no “good will” to' transfer.

The agency was one of trust and confidence on the part of the' companies represented, and success among those who secured insurance was dependent upon the individual industry of the agent.

The good will had no value, save the value which the agent gave it by his exertions.

At the termination of the partnership, as we appreciate the issues, [76]*76the companies represented by the late firm had the right to select .another agent.

Had the companies appointed another agent than the defendant, Be would not have been bound to any one for the good will of the late firm.

The appointment of the defendant, did not have the effect of giving .a property right to a business (or good will) which had no such right.

A definition ought to assist in considering the case.

“Good will” is the advantage or benefit which one has beyond the mere value of the capital or other property employed, which arises from the encouragement the establishment or firm receives on account •of its local position, reputation for skill, or from other circumstances.

Stoi’y on Partnership, Section 99.

In the case before us for decision, we do not discover that after its termination, there remained any of the values to which, in our view, the definition refers.

The business was not continued in behalf of the firm, or in its name.

As we gather from the facts, the business sold by the defendant was not in any way the business of the dissolved firm.

It was defendant’s business, built up by his own labor. For about •seven months, (i. e. from the date of his partner’s death), he had conducted the insurance business in his own name and for his account.

"We will not assume, in the absence of evidence, that the business sold seven months after the dissolution, was the business conducted by the dissolved firm, and therefore, the business which the defendant .sold for five hundred dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 618, 51 La. Ann. 72, 1898 La. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-smith-la-1898.