Weiss v. Hamilton

105 P. 74, 40 Mont. 99, 1909 Mont. LEXIS 141
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1909
DocketNo. 2,715
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 105 P. 74 (Weiss v. Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weiss v. Hamilton, 105 P. 74, 40 Mont. 99, 1909 Mont. LEXIS 141 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit for an accounting. The plaintiff recovered judgment, and the defendant appealed from the judgment and from an order denying her a new trial.

The complaint alleges: That the plaintiff is administratrix of the estate of R. A. Weiss, deceased; that on or about January 1, 1900, R. A. Weiss and this defendant entered into a copartnership, under the firm name of Weiss & Hamilton; that such copartnership continued until the death of Weiss, which occurred on January 21, 1906; that during the continuance of such copartnership valuable properties were acquired and were owned by the partnership at the time of the death of Weiss; that the defendant has the exclusive possession of such properties and has refused to account to the plaintiff. The answer admits that Weiss died on January 21, 1906, and that the plaintiff is the administratrix of his estate. It denies every other allegation of the complaint.

Upon the trial the plaintiff called the assistant cashier of the bank of W. A. Clark & Bro., who testified: That in 1903 an account was opened with the bank in the name of “Weiss & Hamilton”; that the account was continued until January 18, 1906, when the sum of $2,545 was withdrawn, which balanced the account. A. F. Greene testified for plaintiff that he purchased from the defendant a one-fourth of her undivided one-half interest in certain mining claims located. south of Butte, for which he paid her $1,000. W. I. Lippincott testified: That he was secretary of the Butte Crude Petroleum Company; that the records of the company show that originally certain shares [103]*103of stock had been issued to Weiss, and certain other shares had been issued to .Mrs. Hamilton; that, of the shares originally issued to Weiss, 4,500 had thereafter been canceled, and a like •number issued to Mrs. Hamilton at the same time. J. H. McDonald testified that at one time in a conversation Mrs. Hamilton had spoken of the interest of herself and Weiss in the mining claims south of Butte as a partnership interest.

The plaintiff herself testified that the defendant had not accounted. In support of the allegations of her complaint that a copartnership existed between Weiss and the defendant, and that such copartnership owned property which was in the possession of the defendant, it was apparently deemed necessary by plaintiff to make the defendant a witness in her behalf, and this was done. Mrs. Hamilton testified at some length with reference to the business relations which existed between herself and Weiss, from the time they first met in Spokane, in 1897, to the date of the death of Weiss, in 1906. It appears from her testimony that in 1897 she had $10,000 in cash, and 'that at that time Weiss was without any funds whatever. Some 'time later, at the suggestion of Weiss, Mrs. Hamilton furnished the necessary funds, and the two located certain oil and coal lands in Wyoming; every claim being located in the names of ft. A. Weiss and Julia F. Hamilton. Later, under a similar arrangement, some sixty or more mining claims were located south of Butte, and each mining claim was likewise located in the names of It. A. Weiss and Julia F. Hamilton, locators. Mrs. Hamilton furnished all the funds necessary to make the locations and pay for the work done upon the claims. It appears from her testimony that in all these transactions it was understood between them that Mrs. Hamilton was to furnish all the money, Weiss to do the work of locating the claims, and each was to share equally in the profits, if any were realized. The oil claims were transferred to two corporations, the Butte Crude Petroleum Company and the Monumental Oil Company. Neither Weiss nor Mrs. Hamilton ever assumed to transfer joint or common property; but each apparently transferred an undi[104]*104vided individual interest. For her interest transferred to the Butte Company, Mrs. Hamilton received 60,000 shares of the capital stock of that company, and it appears that Weiss received, for his interest transferred to the same concern, 125,000' shares of the capital stock of the company. For her interest in the oil claims transferred to the Monumental Company, Mrs. Hamilton received $3,000 in cash, while Weiss received certain shares of the capital stock of that company for his interest. Later on Weiss became dissatisfied and exchanged his stock in the Monumental Company to Mrs. Hamilton for her interest in the coal land claims. It appears that these coal land claims were subsequently forfeited. Some of the mining claims which had been located south of Butte were sold to the Cleveland-Montana Company, a corporation. For her interest in the claims so sold, Mrs. Hamilton received $7,000 in cash, while Weiss received 300,000 shares of the capital stock of the Cleveland Company for his interest conveyed to it. Mrs. Hamilton further testified that she understood from Weiss that he sold some of the stocks owned by him, but she did not know to whom or for what price they were sold. It also appears from her testimony' that she and Weiss never had any common funds in which both were interested; that when property was disposed of each received a distributive share of the selling price, in money or stock; that when stock was taken by either it was controlled and disposed of by the individual owner without consulting the other. It also appears that the money deposited in the Clark bank in the names of Weiss & Hamilton was the individual money of Mrs. Hamilton, and that it was deposited in those names at the suggestion, of Weiss himself. Mrs. Hamilton testifies positively that the remaining $2,545, which she withdrew from the bank on January 18, 1906, and which withdrawal balanced the account, was her individual money, in which Weiss did not have any interest whatever. During the year 1906 it was necessary to do the annual representation work on the mining claims then held by Mrs. Hamilton and the estate of Weiss, and, since the estate did not then have any funds, [105]*105Mrs. Hamilton expended the $2,545, which she had withdrawn from the bank, and the $1,000 which she had received from the witness Greene, in having such representation work done. She testifies that during that year they were offered $24,000 for these mining claims; but, by reason of plaintiff’s refusal to join in a sale, they were not able to dispose of them. During 1907 the representation work was not done for lack of funds, and the claims were forfeited.

The foregoing is, in substance, the whole of the material evidence introduced in behalf of the plaintiff. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s case, the defendant interposed a motion for judgment in her favor. This motion was denied, and the defendant rested without introducing any evidence. The trial court found: (1) That Weiss and Mrs. Hamilton were copartners; (2) that the coal, oil, and mining claims were copartnership property; (4) that on January 18, 1906, there was on deposit in the Clark bank, to the credit of such copartnership, $2,545; (5) that Mrs. Hamilton withdrew this money and appropriated it to her own use; (6) that this money was the principal asset of the copartnership. From these and other findings, not material here, the court concluded that the plaintiff was entitled to a judgment against the defendant for $1,272.50, being one-half of the amount withdrawn by the defendant from the Clark bank on January 18, 1906.

The rule invoked by counsel for respondent that, on appeal in an equity case, this court will determine whether the evidence preponderates against the findings of the trial court, is applicable only in a case where there is a controversy as to the facts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 P. 74, 40 Mont. 99, 1909 Mont. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weiss-v-hamilton-mont-1909.