Weeks v. McClintock

50 Ark. 193
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 50 Ark. 193 (Weeks v. McClintock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weeks v. McClintock, 50 Ark. 193 (Ark. 1887).

Opinion

Battle, J.

In the latter part of May, 188Í, Weeks & Co. and J. M. McClintock entered into a partnership to manufacture spokes and' gin and bale cotton. Their firm name' and style w.as J. M. McClintock & Co., and their' place of business, Eredonia, in Prairie county, Arkansas.! By tbe terms óf their contract, which was in parol, they were' to be equal partners, and McClintock was to manage and • superintend the business and give it his undivided- attention,, and to receive for his services one hundred dollars a month.; In June; 1881, he took charge of the machinery of the firm • and commenced business. In a few months the new firm 1 enlarged its business by adding new machinery of the value of §3,000, and operating a saw mill and shingle machine. In November, 1883, it sold a part of the machinery to Weeks & Co. and ceased to do business, and turned over the machinery remaining unsold, and tbe grounds and buildings belonging to it, to Weeks & Co.

McClintock and Weeks failing to agree upon a settlement of their partnership affairs, and Weeks refusing to arbitrate them, McClintock filed bis complaint in equity in the Prairie circuit court, asking for an accounting, a settlement o.f accounts, and a dissolution of' the partnership. Weeks- answered ; and by consent of both parties the cause was re- ' férred to the clerk of the court as master to take proof and state an account, which he did, allowing to McClintock the 1 sUm of one hundred dollars a month for twenty-eight months for superintending the business .of McClintock & Co., and , refusing, to allow Weeks & Co. §419.19, the amount of the-, account of Blanchard and Brooks with Weeks & Co., which ; Weeks alleges McClintock & Co. agreed to pay. Weeks,, excepted to the account, because the master allowed the one one hundred dollars a month for twenty-eight months, and refused to allow the $419.19, and for other reasons. The court overruled the exceptions stated, and rendered a judgment against Weeks in favor of McClintock for $660.67, the balance found to be due him, and Weeks appealed.

It is insisted that McClintock is not entitled to the one hundred dollars a month for twenty-eight months, because he failed and neglected to manage and superintend the business of McClintock & Co. as he agreed to do; but on the contrary neglected it and did not give it exceeding one-third of his time. Some of the witnesses testified that he was not present at his place of business more than one-third of his time, and that in his absence the interest and business of the firm were neglected and suffered materially, while others testified that he was not often absent, except on the business of the firm, and that the business did not suffer on account of his absence, and was not neglected. The preponderance of evidence, however, shows McClintock did not give the business his undivided attention and time as he agreed to do, but was often and a large portion of his time absent. While absent he left the business in charge of other persons. During all this time Weeks & Co.-were doing business within five hundred feet of the place of business of McClintock & Co., and knew of the absence of McClintock, and how he conducted the business, and acquiesced in his mode of attending to it. Under these circumstances is he entitled to the one hundred dollars a month for the time he had charge of the business ?

Judge Story says: “Partnership articles in the view of courts of equity, whatever may be the rule at law, are liable to be controlled, superseded, qualified, or waived by the acts and transactions of the partnership, in the course of the business thereof, wherever the assent of all the partners thereto may be fairly inferred, and however positive or stringent, those provisions may be. (‘ Partners/ it has been said, ‘ if they please, may, in the course of the partnership, daily come to a new arrangement for the purpose of having some addition or alteration in the terms on which they carry on business, provided those additions or alterations be made with unanimous concurrence of all the partners/) In short, in many eases of this kind, looking to the course of conduct of the partners, and the special circumstances of their business, or to their general acquiescence, or their positive acts, we may often have the most satisfactory evidence that the partnership articles have been laid aside, either joro tanto, or in whole, and that new articles and arrangements have been entered into in their stead. Hence it has been judicially declared, that, in courts of equity, articles of partnership, containing clauses which have not been acted upon by the parties, are read, as if those clauses were expunged, or were not inserted therein/’ Story on Partnership, sec. 192.

In Pilling v. Pilling, De G. J. & S., 162, “ a father took his two sons into partnership under articles by which it was agreed that the business should be carried on with the father’s capital, which should remain his; that yearly stock-takings should be made; that the partners should share profits and losses equally in thirds; that each of the sons, besides his oirn share of the profits, should have £150 a year out of the father’s share; that repairs and other outgoings in respect of the business premises should be paid out of the profits; that before division of the profits the father should have interest at £4 per cent, on his capital, and that in estimating profits a certain discount should be taken off the mills and machinery. The partnership lasted ten years, during the whole of which time in the yearly stock-takings the mills and machinery were valued as they stood, without any discount as provided in the articles, and without distinguishing the increase of value arising from additions and improvements, and the expenses of the additions and improvements were charged against the partnership ; the ¿6150 a year to each son was charged against the business, not against the father’s share of profits; each partner was credited with, interest, on the capital standing to his credit at the beginning , of the year, and the profit was then divided in thirds and the shares carried to the credit of the partners respectively.” It was “ held that this mode of keeping the accounts and the . division of the profits according to it evidenced a new agreement between the parties, and the account must be taken on ‘that footing, and not the footing of the articles', and that whether the mills and machinery were, according to the articles,, the property of the father or of the partnership, they - must be treated as, being, under this agreement, the property of the partnership.”

In Haller v. Williamowicz, 23 Ark., 566, the parties formed a partnership in the tanning business. By the articles of copartnership it was stipulated that Haller should have charge and control of the tan yard, and stock in it, and 'should devote all his time and attention to the business of the yard. Williamowicz interfered with the business of the 'yard contrary to the articles, by oausing defective vats to be built, and thereby caused a loss to be sustained by the co-partnership. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Ark. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weeks-v-mcclintock-ark-1887.