Wiegand v. Copeland

14 F. 118, 7 Sawy. 442, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2723
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 F. 118 (Wiegand v. Copeland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiegand v. Copeland, 14 F. 118, 7 Sawy. 442, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2723 (uscirct 1882).

Opinion

Sawyer, C. J.

From the record in this case it appears that prior to the fifteenth day of June, 1876, the plaintiff and the defendant were each engaged in business at Yokohama, in Japan, as brewers; and that on that day they entered into a copartnership to carry on the business of brewing. The defendant seems to have been the owner of a larger establishment than the plaintiff. It was agreed that the value of the defendant’s land, brewery, and what is called his plant (by which, T suppose, is meant the implements and fixtures [119]*119used in carrying on the business of brewing, etc.) should be estimated and put into the business at $30,000. They were to be equal partners; and Wiegand, being unable to contribute his share of that amount, became indebted to Copeland in the sum of $15,000, being one-half the value of the property. Soon afterwards, or at about the same time, Wiegand contributed to the copartnership his plant and stock, valued at $2,421.64. Thi's the consul general holds — and I think properly, under the testimony — was an additional amount of capital. Copeland took one-half the stock and plant of Wiegand, and gave him credit for the amount — $1,210.82—upon his indebtedness of $15,000 for one-half of the capital, which left him still indebted to the amount of $13,789.18.

Copeland did not transfer to Wiegand the legal title to one-half of the real estate of the copartnership; but, upon the formation of the copartnership, books were opened and the property entered at $30,-000 as capital, and each of the parties was credited with one-half of the amount — $30,000—at which the real estate, plant, etc., had been agreed to be appraised.

The copartnership business was carried on for three years and a half, and the complainant then filed a bill for a dissolution of the partnership, alleging fraudulent acts and other irregularities on the part of Copeland. The case was tried before Consul General Yan Burén, who found that Copeland had not been guilty of the acts charged, and he would have dismissed the bill, but, as the action had been instituted, it was agreed by the parties that a decree of dissolution of the copartnership should be entered, and the business of the firm wound up. A decree dissolving the copartnership was therefore entered, and the matter referred to an accountant to prepare a statement of the property and accounts of the firm. In his report the accountant finds that the net profits of the copartnership business have amounted to $19,450; that under an arrangement that each partner was to draw $150 a month, Copeland has drawn out a little more than that amount, and Wiegand something less; and that, upon striking a general balance, $26,287 of the estimated value of the firm assets is found to be the share of Copeland, and $6,250 that of Wie-gand. Thereupon the court entered a decree adjudging these amounts to be the proportions belonging to the parties, respectively, and ordering that the partnership property, including the real estate, plant, etc., be sold at public auction, and the proceeds, after deducting certain sums' for expenses, costs, and fees, divided pro rata between the parties.

[120]*120Subsequently, further proceedings were had in the case, upon which additional provisions were made relative to the manner in which the property should be sold; and all the property of the partnership was, thereupon,. sold, in pursuance of the decree and the further direction of the court. Upon the sale it' proved that there were no bidders except Copeland; Wiegand being unable to purchase, and the property being apparently situated in a country where no other persons than the plaintiff and defendant were desirous of engaging in the brewing business. ' The property was bid in by and sold to the defendant, Copeland, for $12,000, — mn amount very much less than the value at which it had been estimated in the report of the accountant and in the decree ,of the court, where the value of the assets of the firm was set down at $3^,537. As a result, Wiegand not only had nothing coming to him, but he was brought, in debt to the amount of several thousand dollars. A further decree was thereupon entered that lie pay to Copeland the amount of such indebtedness, and this appeal has, consequently, been taken.

The first .question raised by the appellee is that the appeal is not from a final decree. The decree of December 6, 1879, from which the appeal is in terms taken, being the first decree, determines the rights .of the parties, and directs that the property be sold, and that certain sums be paid out to the various parties for costs, fees, and expenses, and the remainder divided pro rata, according to their respective interests, between the complainant and the defendant. It is insisted that this is not, under the law, a final decree, and that, therefore, an appeal from it does not lie.

It is not entirely clear to my mind whether or not this is a final decree, within the meaning of the law. It determined certain rights of the parties, and fixed the proportionate amounts due to each upon the assumed valuation of the property of the copartnership. It provided for the payment of certain sums of money to various parties, but without ascertaining the amounts, and the partnership debts. The debts of the firm had not been ascertained by the decree, and the amounts to be paid as costs were not determined. There were subsequently further proceedings, and further provisions made having the effect of additional provisions to the decree, by which the mode of sale of the property was prescribed; and still later, after the affairs of the copartnership were- settled, the debts, expenses, fees, and costs ascertained, and paid out of the proceeds of the sale, there was e'ntered another further, separate, and final decree, directing that Wiegand pay to Copeland a certain amount, being the balance finally found [121]*121•due him. It is therefore a matter of some doubt whether or not the decree appealed from is properly a final and appealable decree. But the conclusion to which I have come on the merits of the case makes it unnecessary to definitely determine that question, as the result as to this appeal would in any event be the same.

Assuming, then, for the purpose of this case, the appeal to have been properly taken, the first point made by Wiegand is that the property referred to ought not to have been regarded as partnership property, because the legal title .to one-half of it had not been absolutely conveyed to him by Copeland. Under the terms of the copartnership agreement it was manifestly partnership property, its value being therein fixed at $30,000; and, upon the commencement of the business of the firm, one-half of that amount was charged to each party upon the firm books, and no question as to its not being partnership property was raised daring the three and a half years in which the business was being amicably conducted. Besides, Copeland gave Wiegand an acknowledgment in writing that one-half of that property was held in trust for him, and a mortgage was given by Wiegand upon his half of the partnership property to secure to Copeland the payment of the $15,000 due him on account of his half interest in this property. Wiegand claimed one-half of the profits of the copartnership business, and if he was entitled to a full share of the profits, he was, certainly, liable for an equal share of the losses from depreciation in value of the firm assets, or otherwise.

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Bluebook (online)
14 F. 118, 7 Sawy. 442, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiegand-v-copeland-uscirct-1882.