Succession of Conway

41 So. 2d 729, 215 La. 819, 1949 La. LEXIS 999
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 31, 1949
DocketNo. 38499.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 41 So. 2d 729 (Succession of Conway) 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
Succession of Conway, 41 So. 2d 729, 215 La. 819, 1949 La. LEXIS 999 (La. 1949).

Opinion

HAWTHORNE, Justice.

On November 30, 1942, Edward J. Conway, Miss Edna B. Condon, and John George Miller formed the partnership of Edward J. Conway Company, in which Edward J. Conway received a five-sixths interest and Miss Condon and Miller the other undivided one-sixth interest, or two-thirtieths to Miller and three-thirtieths to Miss Condon. The partnership agreement provided that the partnership was to continue for a term of 10 years. This *823 partnership was formed for the purpose of continuing the business which had belonged to Mr. Conway’s brother, Albert Conway, and which Mr. Conway had been operating since shortly after his brother’s death. This business was, in general, that of salvaging, reconditioning, and warehousing all classes of goods and other commodities damaged in rail or water traffic.

Article 9 of the articles of partnership reads as follows: “In the event of death of any partner, an account and statement shall be taken and made out of his or her share of the capital and effects of the partnership, and all unpaid interest and profits belonging to him or her at the time of death, a valuation shall be made of any of said assets or effects requiring valuation, and the amount so ascertained to be due and owing to the deceased partner shall be paid by the surviving partners to his or her representatives within six (6) calendar months from the date of death of said partner, with interest thereon from his or her decease until payment at the rate of five per centum (5%) per annum; and on such payment the shares of the deceased partner in the partnership property and effects shall go and belong to the surviving partners, in the proportion in which they shall have contributed to the purchase thereof.”

On December 22, 1944, Edward J. Conway, who was the general manager of the partnership, died, and the surviving partners, Miss Condon and Miller, continued the business under the same name and at. the same location, using all its property,, assets, books, and records. Although the-name-of the business was changed in June,. 1945, from Edward J. Conway Company to. Miller-Condon Company, the business was. carried on after Conway’s death as it had. been prior thereto.

In due course the succession of Edward: J. Conway was opened in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, and Mrs.. Vivian Clara Miller Ragan was appointed testamentary executrix. In an inventory-made in the succession proceedings, the interest of the decedent in the partnership of Edward J. Conway Company was appraised at the sum of $6,655.77, according' to the valuation determined by a certified public accountant who made an audit of' the partnership business under an order of court. The surviving partners, Miller and Miss Condon, filed a motion in the succession proceedings within six months from, the date of Mr. Conway’s death, alleging that the executrix and the surviving spouse ■ were unwilling to- accept the appraised valuation, and seeking, under Article 9, to purchase the deceased’s interest in the partnership by depositing in the registry of the-court the amount of the appraised valuation. This order was granted, and they deposited in the registry of the court as. the purchase price of decedent’s interest the sum set out above, plus 5 per cent per annum interest, less a debit for income tax •paid by the partnership, pending such fur *825 ther orders as the court might render in the premises.

Both the executrix and the widow in community, by proceedings filed in the succession, contended, among other things, that the amount so deposited for the interest of the deceased partner was incorrect in that the value of the good will of the business was not taken into account in computing the valuation. The trial court was of the opinion that the good will should have been taken into account, and rendered judgment fixing the valuation of the good will of the partnership of Edward J. Conway Company, as of the date of decedent’s death, at $6,000, and fixing the interest therein of the deceased or his succession at five-sixth thereof, or $5,000, and ordering the deposit of this additional amount in the registry of the court. From this judgment all parties have appealed.

John George Miller and Miss Edna B. Condon ta*ke the position in this court that, under Article 9 of the partnership agreement itself, it was never intended that good will, as such, was to be included in a valuation of a deceased partner’s interest in the purchase thereof by his surviving partners, and that by its very terms the agreement did not include any consideration for good will as among the partners as distinguished from a sale to a third person, but intended payment by the surviving partners for the interest of the deceased to be based on book value and physical “effects” and not on all the assets of the partnership; that, unless good will is expressly included as a factor to be considered in arriving at the deceased partner’s interest, under the jurisprudence of this state it is to be excluded. In the alternative they contend that, if this court should find that the surviving partners have to account to the surviving spouse and the representatives of the decedent for the item of good will in computing the valuation of the decedent’s interest in the partnership, then, due to the particular nature of this business, good will as such has no value insofar as a transfer to the surviving partners is concerned.

The executrix contends that, under the provisions of Article 9 of the partnership agreement, good will must be included in fixing the valuation of the partnership, and she and the surviving spouse contend that the valuation of good will fixed by the lower court at $6,000 is incorrect, and that under the evidence such valuation should be increased. The surviving spouse, in brief filed in this court, does not question the right of the partners to have entered into this agreement for a term of 10 years and to have stipulated that the shares of a deceased partner should go and belong to the surviving partners upon the payment to the representatives of the deceased of the amount ascertained to be due and owing, but denies “that the surviving partners had the right to use the property of the widow in community for a period of six months after the death of her husband *827 without having to account to her for the .amount of profit her shares earned during this period”; for she contends that, if such agreement is construed otherwise, it is vi-olative of her vested rights in her share of the community which existed between her and her deceased husband.

Article 9 of the partnership agreement provides that, in the event of death of any partner, an accounting and statement shall be taken and made of his or her share of the capital and effects of the partnership; that a valuation shall be made of any of said assets or effects requiring valuation, and that upon payment of this amount by the surviving partners the share of the ■deceased partner in the partnership property and effects shall go and belong to the .surviving partners in the proportion in which they shall have contributed to the purchase thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
41 So. 2d 729, 215 La. 819, 1949 La. LEXIS 999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-conway-la-1949.