Stuerken v. Roth

3 Balt. C. Rep. 372
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Balt. C. Rep. 372 (Stuerken v. Roth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stuerken v. Roth, 3 Balt. C. Rep. 372 (Md. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

HEUISLER, J.—

In the case oí Roth vs. Stuerken, 124 Md., 409, the Court in commenting upon the Bill of Complaint, which is the inquiry in this case, states that “the fountain head of the entire bill is the agreement,” and that the “entire question to be determined is whether or not the agreement, entered into by all the parties, has been broken and violated by the two defendants; one in one manner and the other in another.” This statement reduces the present inquiry to the following findings :

a. Was there an agreement.
b. Was it entered into by all the parties.
c. Was it broken by defendant, John C. Roth.
d. Was it broken by defendant, Henry Hertel; and
e. What relief follows the affirmative finding of above propositions.

The testimony is voluminous, but being carefully examined and considered, the conclusion of the Court Is from the evidence necessarily as follows :

1. The fact of the agreement is fully established that agreement can be characterized, from the substance of the testimony, as an undertaking, promotion, scheme or enterprise for the formation of a corporation for the purpose of carrying on the sand and gravel business; and the associates were to do all that they could for the enterprise and were to share in the enterprise such profits as arose from it.

2. This enterprise or scheme was specifically entered into and its terms agreed upon by all of the plaintiffs and the defendant Hertel; and it was adopted, accepted and approved by the defendant, Roth, at many admitted conferences held between the parties at which he was present; it was not questioned or denied in the answer filed by the defendant Roth; and' in the story of the enterprise as evidenced by prospectus, records of promoters’ meetings, and of incorporators’ meetings, he signed and joined in the issuance of the prospectus and attended and approved the meetings. Under this agreement, the parties thereto, as appears from the evidence, specifically agreed upon an equal division of the profits and losses. However, had not this specific agreement appeared so evident in the testimony, it would have followed as matter of law unless it had been changed by express stipulation of the parties. A partnership (and this proven agreement is a partnership for a specific adventure) imparts a communion of profits and losses among its several members; but the partners may agree among themselves upon a disproportionate interest as to such profits and losses. The rule of law is that partners share equally in profits and losses; but this presumption is not irresistible. It is a question of intention and can be controlled b3T stipulation between the parties.

Welch vs. Canfield 64 Md. 474.

Fleischman vs. Gottschalk 70 Md. 524.

These profits of partnership must be equally divided between the partners, however unequal may be their respective contribution of capital or services, in the absence of agreement expressed or implied to the contrary.

30 Cyc., 451, and cases cited.

There is no evidence in the record at all of any agreement or stipulation between the parties by which this rule of law is either expressly or impliedly changed or avoided.

3. This agreement and the terms thereof have been broken and disregarded by the defendant, Roth, in his dealings with all of the plaintiffs. The record shows that the corporation, as contemplated, was effected; that unsuccessful efforts were made to prolong corporate life by subscriptions to capital stock; that certain options were by agreement of all the parties sold and disposed of by the defendant, Roth, and that he has remaining in his hands a certain sum of money after the repayment to him of certain cash advances made in promotion of the scheme or enterprise, which sum he attempts to dispose of in an arbitrary manner, in disregard of the legal rights of his associates.

4. This agreement and the terms thereof have been broken and disregarded by the defendant, Henry Her-tel. (The record shows that since the close of the transaction and the insti[374]*374tution of these proceedings the said defendant has departed this life, and that his personal representatives is now made party defendant.) In Hambleton vs. Rhind, 84'Md., at page 487, it is stated that as respects persons composing a syndicate, which is an association of individuals formed for the purpose of conducting and carrying on some particular business transaction, ordinarily of a financial character, in which the members are mutually interested, “it is a partnership and in so far as these same persons are concerned the legal obligations assumed by them are, as between themselves, substantially the same as those which the law imposes on the members of an ordinary partnership. Scrupulous good faith is naturally, if not necessarily, implied from the very nature and character of the relation of partnership; and consequently, intrigues by one member for a private benefit to himself are clearly offenses against the partnership at large and as such are relievable in a Court of Equity.” The defendant, Hertel, while a member of the Syndicate, received the sum of $1,871.25 as commissions from the Rayner and Mason Estates, the same estates from which the options were had for the benefit of his partners and associates in said syndicate, and applied said sum to his personal use in violation of his legal duties as a member of said syndicate, and he or his estate must be held to account for the same.

5. In view of the above findings, the Court is of opinion that the defendant, Roth, must equally account to his associates for their respective and proper shares of the profits remaining in his hands from the sale of the options mentioned in the evidence; that these must be included in said accounting of profits the sum of $2,100, paid by him on December 26, 1912, by his check No. 3508, to Henry Hertel for commissions, there being no evidence in the ease of any authority for such payment out of said profits; and that the estate of the deceased defendant, Henry Hertel, must account for and return to this case for its proper distribution the aforesaid sum of $1,-871.25 received by the said Henry Her-tel in his lifetime. It is shown by the evidence that the defendant, John C. Roth, advanced in cash for the benefit of the enterprise the following sums:

January 29, 1912.............$2,500.00
June 1, 1912................ 1,700.00
June 1, 1912................. 500.00
June 10, 1912............... 175.00
July 30, 1912................ 500.00
August 1, 1912............... 1,000.00
September 28, 1912.......... 1,000.00
October 1, 1912.............. 1,500.00
November 1, 1912............ 1,000.00
A total of.................$9,875.00

for account of options and incorporation costs, and in addition the sum of $640, to the Mason Estate for interest, and the respective sums of $20 and $25 for surveys, making a total payment, outside of any payments made by him to his associates, of $10,550.

The defendant, Roth, received from Messrs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Roth v. Stuerken
92 A. 808 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Balt. C. Rep. 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stuerken-v-roth-mdcirctctbalt-1915.