Walker v. Patterson

208 N.W. 3, 166 Minn. 215, 1926 Minn. LEXIS 1161
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 26, 1926
DocketNo. 24,779.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 208 N.W. 3 (Walker v. Patterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Patterson, 208 N.W. 3, 166 Minn. 215, 1926 Minn. LEXIS 1161 (Mich. 1926).

Opinions

1 Reported in 208 N.W. 3, 7. Action by a surviving partner for an accounting. In 1892 plaintiff and Healy C. Akeley organized the firm of Walker Akeley for the purpose of buying and selling timber and timber lands. It continued until 1912, when it was dissolved by the death of Mr. Akeley. Its remaining assets included a large acreage of timber land, most of which had been cut over and some sold under executory contracts. Plaintiff, as surviving partner, has had charge of the firm's business since the death of Mr. Akeley. Claiming that the firm was indebted to him in a large amount, plaintiff commenced this action in 1915 for the purpose of having the accounts settled and the balance due him ascertained and charged by judgment against the remaining assets of the firm. Mr. Akeley died intestate. Through what appears to have been a family settlement, his daughter, defendant Florence A. Patterson, has become the sole owner of Mr. Akeley's interest in the partnership lands. The Akeley side of the controversy has been and is represented by Mrs. Patterson and she will be considered and referred to as the defendant.

Walker Akeley, over a long period, had important transactions with the intervener, the Red River Lumber Company, a corporation controlled through stock ownership by plaintiff. Defendant by answer and cross-complaint challenged the account between Walker Akeley and intervener and asked that the latter be brought in as a party to the end that the state of its account with the firm might be ascertained and fixed by judgment. Accordingly the Red River Lumber Company intervened, claimed a balance due it from the firm and joined in the prayer for an accounting. After a trial beginning in May, 1917, but not concluded until February, 1923, *Page 218 there was a decision for plaintiff and intervener. It determined that there was due intervener, as of May 1, 1924, $73,710.55, and that there was owing plaintiff $81,428.73. Title to the remaining firm property was adjudged in plaintiff as surviving partner for the purpose of administering the assets, paying the debts and closing the firm's affairs, a sale at auction being directed for that purpose. Defendant challenged the decision by motion for amended findings or a new trial which was denied. The appeal is by defendant from the order denying that motion.

Evidence and argument deal with transactions of more than 30 years and involving many millions of dollars. The record and exhibits make a huge bulk but our task has been much facilitated by the comprehensive findings and explanatory memorandum of the learned trial judge and the invaluable assistance of the written and oral argument here.

1. We dispose first of the issues between intervener and defendant. The questioned transactions were gone into with painstaking detail. Inaccuracies and omissions of accounting were found, some of them involving small and others substantial amounts. The findings are that not a single error was due to dishonesty or other improper motive, but that each and every one of them was due wholly to inadvertence. Particularly do the findings negative the suggestion that plaintiff sought or received any advantage because of his dual interest, he being on the one hand the controlling stockholder of the corporation and on the other one of the two partners. It is established by the findings that "no important transaction of the firm was ever entered into without being submitted to and approved by Mr. Akeley and nearly every written contract made by the firm bore his signature." Next it was found that Mr. Akeley had full knowledge of Mr. Walker's connection with and control of intervener and that he received "a full and true transcript of all journal entries * * * and also a ledger trial balance" monthly from the office of Walker Akeley. That is but another way of saying that he was advised continuously and accurately of the details of all firm business, including its transactions and the state *Page 219 of its account with intervener. The important contracts between intervener and the firm seem to have been negotiated and signed on behalf of the latter by Mr. Akeley, Mr. Willis Walker, a son of plaintiff, representing the intervener. There is nothing in the record to require a finding that Mr. Akeley permitted himself or his firm to be defrauded by his partner's son.

The firm and its activities did not by any means constitute all of Mr. Akeley's interests. He was an incorporator and for many years president of the Itasca Lumber Company, engaged in logging and lumbering on a large scale in Minnesota and to a considerable extent in territory not far from that in which intervener and the firm conducted their major operations.

The principal item in controversy with intervener is an admitted trespass by it and the wrongful cutting of timber belonging to the partnership. The finding is that the trespass was committed, but that it was not wilful or of such a nature as to render intervener liable for treble damages under the statute, sections 9396 and 9585, G.S. 1923. The intervener was charged with actual damages for the trespass as of the date thereof. The findings with respect to that item and all of the others involved are so sustained by evidence that we cannot disturb them.

2. With respect to her case both as against plaintiff and intervener, there is complaint for defendant that no express findings were made as to several minor points. That is true, but the whole account was examined and the result stated. So the decision is clearly a finding on all points made and litigated. As to the items not allowed in defendant's favor (many were), it must be taken as a negative finding. In that light we have reviewed it and find nothing warranting modification or reversal. Here, the burden is upon defendant as appellant, to show that there is no substantial evidence "reasonably tending to sustain the findings of the trial court." McAlpine v. Millen, 104 Minn. 289 (300), 116 N.W. 583. In that she has not been successful as to any of the many claims contested below. Only one of those decided adversely to her can be discussed in detail. *Page 220

3. The main issue concerns a detached but fairly compact tract of some 17,000 acres east of Grand Rapids, referred to as the "iron ore lands." They were acquired by plaintiff prior to 1887. They were then thought of as pine or timber lands only, but subsequently proved to be on the west end of the Mesaba Iron Range and to contain large bodies of ore. Defendant avers that plaintiff has been guilty of fraud in not dealing with them as partnership property and accounting for their proceeds (over $3,000,000) as cash, and that he should now be charged accordingly. Her theory is that these lands, with others then owned by plaintiff, were made the subject of an oral partnership in March, 1887, whereby Akeley became the equitable owner of a one-half interest; that that oral and general partnership continued until Akeley's death in 1912 and was the original and continuing basis of the firm and all its dealings. That, we say, is defendant's theory of the case. The learned trial judge found that it was contrary to fact. For compelling reasons, not all of which need be stated, it is our opinion that the record would not sustain a contrary finding.

Whatever their relationship and obligations to each other after a partnership is formed, the parties are not trustees for each other and there is no confidential relation in their negotiations for the partnership.

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

Related

Waite ex rel. Bretton Woods Acquisition Co. v. Sylvester
560 A.2d 619 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1989)
Lehman v. Stout
112 N.W.2d 640 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1961)
Fleisher Engineering & Construction Co. v. Winston Bros.
42 N.W.2d 396 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1950)
Las Vegas MacHine & Engineering Works, Inc. v. Roemisch
213 P.2d 319 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1950)
Dayton Co. v. Carpet, Linoleum & Resilient Floor Decorators' Union
39 N.W.2d 183 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1949)
H. F. Shepherdson Co. v. Central Fire Insurance Co.
19 N.W.2d 772 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1945)
Diesen v. Cox
238 N.W. 785 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1931)
Klemme v. Long
237 N.W. 882 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1931)
In Re Estate of Walker
236 N.W. 485 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1931)
Crawford v. Lugoff
220 N.W. 822 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1928)
Walker v. Patterson
208 N.W. 3 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1926)
Bailey v. Bailey
207 N.W. 987 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 N.W. 3, 166 Minn. 215, 1926 Minn. LEXIS 1161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-patterson-minn-1926.