Towle v. Hammond

99 F. 510, 40 C.C.A. 498, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4160
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 6, 1900
DocketNo. 660
StatusPublished

This text of 99 F. 510 (Towle v. Hammond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Towle v. Hammond, 99 F. 510, 40 C.C.A. 498, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4160 (6th Cir. 1900).

Opinion

TAFT, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). Serious questions as to the admissibility of material evidence upon which the complainant relies, as to the statute of limitations, and as to laches were considered by the circuit court, and decided adversely to the complainant. We do not find it necessary to consider any of them, for the reason that upon the record, and all the evidence as it is presented to the court, titis seems to be a very plain case for the defendant. The main controversy turns on the terms of the contract of partnership entered into between Hammond and Towle in the spring of 1877, after Ives, by reason of his failure, assignment, and bankruptcy, caused a dissolution of the partnership then existing between him, Hammond, and Towle. Towle testifies that he met Hammond upon the train between Chicago and Detroit by appointment; that Hammond told him that they would be able to continue the business without Ives; and that, when Towle inquired what became of Ives’ interest, Hammond replied, “We take it.” Hammond then had a chattel mortgage upon Ives’ interest for $66,000, and Ives’ interest did not at that time on the books amount to more than that sum. On the 1st of January, 1878, the amount to Ives’ credit in the partnership was $82,000, and Hammond then directed that Ives’ interest should be transferred to his credit. Hammond had ,meantime paid out of his own pocket the $66,000, with interest, due from him as an accommodation indorser for Ives. Then ensued the litigation which in June, 1880, resulted in an assignment by the assignee in bankruptcy of Ives’ interest to Hammond. In August of 1880, in January of 1881, in July of 1881, balances were struck and profits divided between Hammond and Towle on a basis of four-fifths interest in Hammond and one-fifth interest in Towle. In October, 1881, Hammond invited Towle [515]*515to subscribe to the corporation which was to succeed the firm, and to take therein one-fifth of the capital stock. Towle demurred to this, on the supposition that he had a larger interest, and inquired what became of Ives’ interest. Hammond replied that he has purchased Ives’ interest with his own money. Towle, on the faith of this statement, consented to receive a one-fifth interest in the new corporation. If Hammond said to Towle, in 1877, that he and Towle would buy Ives’ interest, and Hammond did then buy lYes’ interest, and take it to himself, Hammond would hold Ives’ interest for the benefit of both of them. But Towle’s acquiescence in Hammond’s statement in 1881, that he had bought Ives’ interest and paid for it with his own money, and Towle’s acceptance of one-fifth interest in reliance upon that statement, and his failure to object to the new arrangement for more than ten years, and until nearly six years after Hammond’s death, make it very clear to our minds that Hammond did not tell Towle, at the time that Towle met Hammond on the train, that they would both take Ives’ interest. Towle’s conduct is utterly at variance with such a state of fact. The bill makes no such averment, and Towle did not so testify until his cross-examination. The statement is not corroborated by any direct evidence as to the interview between the two men, because no one else appears to have been present. It is attempted to corroborate this, however, by alleged statements made by Hammond at other times, — one testified to by a witness (Mason) as made in June, 1880, and another by a witness (Davis) as made in September, 1880. These witnesses say that Hammond, in effect, told them that Towle then had one-third of the business, because he and Towle had bought Ives out. Mason was a former employé of Hammond’s, whose services Hammond had dispensed with because of a new arrangement he was obliged to make with the railroad companies, and who subsequently became a confidential agent of Towle. Davis was engaged in litigation -with Hammond, and seems to have been one of those instigating Towle to bring the present suit. The statements were made at a time when it is altogether unlikely that Hammond could or ■would have made them, for they were made after Ives’ share had been assigned to Hammond under an order of the court, and they were made at a time when the profits were being divided, one-fifth to Towle and four-fifths to Hammond. The evidence relied on was of casual conversations, held 10 years before the testimony was given, by witnesses who were naturally hostile to Hammond and friendly to the suit against him. The truth is, moreover, that the evidence of the complainant himself does not seem to the court to be worthy of the utmost credit; for in this very bill, filed in 1892, he permitted himself, on his oath, to charge his dead partner with false entries against him of more than $100,000, and with the appropriation and embezzlement of other sums, when it is made satisfactorily to appear that he was fully aware of the system of bookkeeping under which such charges were properly made, and were duly offset by proper credits on the other side of the ledger. Not only were these averments made in the bill by complainant, but his early testimony tended to support them, and it was not until a rigid [516]*516cross-examination and a production of the account book, a large part of which was kept by the complainant himself, and which showed the falsity- of these averments, that their unfounded character clearly appeared, and complainant’s counsel properly felt obliged to withdraw them. A party who puts himself in such a position before the court cannot expect that his testimony on other material points in the case will be accorded great weight, especially when it is so utterly at variance with his subsequent conduct. Eliminating, therefore, from our consideration, the conversation which Towle reports between himself and Hammond on the train in 1887, the only other evidence as to the terms of that partnership is the conversation which took place when Towle consented to receive one-fifth interest in the corporation. If there had been' no agreement or understanding theretofore, this was a ratification of the terms which Hammond claimed, and must be regarded as settling the ratable interests of the two in that firm, unless Towle was induced to agree to it by misrepresentation. Complainant’s witnesses state that Hammond said to Towle that he had bought Ives’ share from Ives, and that he paid for it with his own money. The bill avers that this was false, and that he paid for it out of the money of George H. Hammoud & Co. The books show conclusively that while, in making the payments to Ives, he used the checks of the firm, as he did in all his personal business, they were charged to him on the books of the firm as his individual payments. The statement of Hammond, therefore, that he paid for Ives’ interest with his own money was true. This is the only alleged misrepresentation averred in the bill, and it is difficult to understand how, in the absence of amendment, complainant can rely on any other.

Still, let us consider the circumstance resting on the evidence of Towle alone, that Hammond, in his statement to Towle, fixed the purchase of Ives’ interest as at a time before Ives failed. When Towle was first a witness he did not report Hammond as fixing any time. It was not until two years later, when it became clear that Hammond had paid for Ives’ interest with his own money, that Towle recalled this part of the conversation. Such evidence, in view of the recklessness of Towle in his other testimony already alluded to, would l>e a very slender thread on which to hang a decree setting aside transactions of 20 years’ standing. But let us assume that it is true.

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Bluebook (online)
99 F. 510, 40 C.C.A. 498, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/towle-v-hammond-ca6-1900.