Southwestern Surety Co. v. Mitchell-Borne Const. Co.

82 So. 377, 145 La. 379, 1919 La. LEXIS 1728
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 2, 1919
DocketNos. 22748, 22751, 22752, and 22756.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 82 So. 377 (Southwestern Surety Co. v. Mitchell-Borne Const. Co.) 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
Southwestern Surety Co. v. Mitchell-Borne Const. Co., 82 So. 377, 145 La. 379, 1919 La. LEXIS 1728 (La. 1919).

Opinion

DAWKINS, J.

These consolidated cases embrace appeals by certain members of the firm of Mitchell-Borne Construction Company, and by certain creditors of the partnership, from a judgment of the lower court dismissing their oppositions to the final account of the receiver or liquidator of that concern; also, the appeal of the plaintiff in the case of Southwestern Surety Company against the said partnership in liquidation, in which the said surety company brought a direct action for the recognition of its claims.

Mitchell-Borne Construction Company was an ordinary and particular partnership, composed of Michael Mitchell, Benjamin W. Borne, John O. Chisholm, and William F. Kelly, formed early in January, 1913, by oral agreement, for the specific purpose of undertaking the performance of a certain contract, known as No. 50-D, with the sewerage and water board of the city of New Orleans, covering the construction of a canal on Broad street from the lower side of St. Bernard avenue, to a point near Carondelet walk, and also a branch canal and pipe line in Lapey *383 rouse and Mauperas streets and Esplenade avenue, and a siphon under the Carondelet Navigation Canal, together with approaches, etc., and for a contract price of $541,188.83. To the original working capital, the partners contributed as follows: Mitchell, $10,908.47; Borne, $10,947.23; and Chisholm, $4,270.15. Kelly put up no cash, but agreed to contribute his time, skill, and experience, and the profits were to be divided equally among all the partners. In order to insure faithful performance of the contract, the sewerage and water board exacted bond of Mitchell-Borne Construction Company (hereinafter called the contractor) in the sum of $125,000, which was furnished with the Southwestern Surety Insurance Company (subsequently succeeded by Southern Surety Company thereinafter referred to as the surety), as surety.

Work was begun, and, before it had progressed as much as 5 per cent, towards completion, a disaster, in the shape of a collapsed cofferdam, occurred, in which one of the partners, Borne, and several of the employes, lost their lives. Thereupon a receiver or liquidator was appointed to the partnership, in the person of one T. Walter Danziger, who was authorized by the lower court to proceed with the contract. Work was resumed, and, after some months’ operations under his management, Danziger absconded, and investigation revealed that he was short more than $26,000, in his accounts. The court then appointed Miehael Mitchell, one of the former partners, receiver in his stead. The work was again resumed and finally completed after nearly four years, when the contract had provided for its performance in 18 months.

On November 16, 1916, the receiver, Michael Mitchell, filed what was termed his “final account,” showing a balance on hand of $37,751.84, which he proposed to distribute as follows:

Preferred Charges.
Dinfcelspeil, Hart & Davey, John P. Sullivan and Arthur Landry, and N. E. Humphrey, attorneys at law, for professional services rendered herein...................$19,000 00
John P. Sullivan, costs of court advanced.. 43 97
John' P. Sullivan, amount paid recorder of mortgages for the parish of Orleans, for cancellation of inscriptions................ 45 00
Amount reserved for filing this account, publishing same, future costs and discharge of receiver.......................... 500 00
American Surety Company of New York, receiver’s bond up to October 12, 1916____ 66 00
H. Bodenheimer & Sons, insurance under surety bond, for construction of canal under contract............................. 1,763 50
Total privileged claims...................$21,418 47
Amount in bank...........................;..$37,751 84
Privileged claims......-......................21,418 47
Balance ...................................$16,333 37

Inasmuch as there were no profits resulting from the enterprise, the receiver, therefore, proposed to return to and distribute, among the three partners who had contributed the cash capital, the sum remaining in his' hands in the proportions which might appear correct upon an accounting between the partners.

Thereafter, on November 18,1916, a supplemental account was filed, in which it was set out that through error the claim of one Elkin Moses, appointed by the lower court as expert accountant and auditor, had been omitted, and the receiver asked to include thereon a fee of $2,000 for this service, and that the same be paid as a privileged claim. This, of course, reduced the net amount for distribution to the sum of $14,333.37.

In due season, oppositions to the said account were filed as follows: ■

(1) New Orleans Railway & Light Company, claiming to be a creditor in the sum of $630.15, and, in which opposition, the account was attacked on the grounds that it did not set forth the assets and liabilities of the partnership, did not show how the assets had been disposed of, nor in what manner the sum proposed for distribution had *385 been arrived at. In the alternative, it opposed all items on the liability side of the account, and particularly the attorney’s fees, as well as the proposed distribution of the residue among the partners. It further complained that it had not been placed upon the account as a creditor for the amount claimed.

(2) The opposition of William E. Kelly, one of the partners, on the ground that he was a creditor and entitled to one-fourth of the remaining assets by virtue of his having been one of the partners in the original undertaking. . He also opposed the attorney’s fees as being excessive, and averred that the sum of $3,000 would be sufficient to justly compensate for the services rendered; that the claim of Elkin Moses, public accountant, was excessive, because of the fact that the receiver had in his employ a regular bookkeeper and accountant, in addition to Moses, who kept the books and accounts.

(3) The opposition of John O. Chisholm, another partner, whose objection was mainly to the item of attorney’s fees, which he claimed should be reduced to the sum of $3,000.

(4) Opposition of the Southern Surety Company, because of its having been placed on the account for the sum of only $1,763.50, whgn, as it claimed, it was due the additional amount of $6,002.74, or a total of $7,766.24.

(5) Opposition of Mrs. E. D. Borne, widow and administratrix of the estate of Benj. W. Borne, on the ground that the account was not such as is required by law; that it fails to charge each of the partners with an equal proportion of the losses; and that she was a creditor in the sum of $10,947.23, entitled to be paid in full. She asked that the account be ordered recast, and that she be recognized as a creditor for the amount claimed.

On December 18, 1916, the lower court homologated and approved the final account “so far as not opposed.”

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Bluebook (online)
82 So. 377, 145 La. 379, 1919 La. LEXIS 1728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-surety-co-v-mitchell-borne-const-co-la-1919.