Case ID: ad_217/html/0318-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "H. T. Kellogg, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Vera F. Strong, as Executrix, etc., of William H. Dailey, Deceased, Appellant, v. Lewis G. Dailey, Surviving Partner of the Firm of W. H. Dailey & Son, Respondent.
    Third Department,
    July 2, 1926.
    Partnership — accounting — defendant and father, testator, were in partnership in sand and gravel business — testator purchased lots, paid part of purchase price and took title in son’s name who took back mortgage for balance — evidence shows no intention on part of defendant to charge for sand sold from lots — defendant not entitled to credit for sand taken from lots for partnership purposes.
    In an action for an accounting of a partnership, following the death of one of the partners, the defendant, the other partner and son of the testator, is not entitled to a credit for sand taken from lots, the title to which were in his name, for it appears from the evidence that the partnership was engaged in the sand and gravel business, that the testator purchased the lots in question and paid nearly one-half of the purchase price, that the lots were deeded to the defendant who gave a mortgage for the balance of the purchase price, and that at no time during the existence of the partnership was any charge made against the partnership by the defendant for sand taken from the lots in question.
    Appeal by the plaintiff, Vera F. Strong, as executrix, etc., from an interlocutory judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the defendant, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Broome on the 28th day of December, 1925, upon the report of a referee.
    
      Jenkins, Deyo & Hitchcock [C. H. Hitchcock of counsel], for the appellant.
    
      Rollin W. Meeker, for the respondent.
   H. T. Kellogg, J.

The plaintiff is the executrix of the estate of William H. Dailey, who was at the time of his death the senior member of the firm of W. H. Dailey & Son. The defendant, Lewis G. Dailey, a son of W. H. Dailey, is the surviving member of the partnership. The action was brought to obtain an accounting of the affairs of the partnership. The defendant filed with the referee, appointed to take and state the accounts, a statement of account showing a balance of partnership assets over liabilities of $3,576.76. The referee surcharged the defendant with various items totalling $872.49, and credited him with $12,337, for the value of sand and gravel furnished to the partnership from certain lands, known as the Wilbur lots, to which the defendant had title. The referee’s report was confirmed and an interlocutory judgment, based upon the report, was entered. The plaintiff then appealed. The sole question raised is whether or not the defendant was entitled to the credit of $12,337 allowed to him by the referee.

William H. Dailey and his son, the defendant Lewis G. Dailey, were engaged as partners in a sand and gravel business. The business consisted of excavating sand and gravel from vacant land and marketing the same. William H. Dailey had been in the business for several years. Lewis G. Dailey had been doing railroad work. In July, 1919, the father persuaded the son to come and work with him. Articles of copartnership were not signed until September 27, 1919, but according to the testimony of Lewis G. Dailey, the two were working together in this same business ” before that time. Early in July the father, William" H. Dailey, negotiated for the purchase of the so-called Wilbur lots. On July 12, 1919, he purchased the same for $2,500. The father gave his check to the seller for $1,000. The premises were deeded to Lewis G. Dailey who gave back a bond of $1,500, secured by a mortgage on the lots, to secure the balance of the purchase price. Thereafter, until the death of William H. Dailey in November, 1921, sand and gravel were excavated from the lots and marketed by the partnership. Twelve thousand, three hundred and thirty-seven cubic yards were so excavated. The material, before excavation, was of the value of one dollar per cubic yard. The sand and gravel thus excavated by the firm are the basis of the credit allowed to Lewis G. Dailey. There was no evidence of any express contract entered info by the firm with Lewis G. Dailey for the purchase of the material. The referee based his allowance of the credit upon the simple fact that the title to the lands from which the excavations were made was in Lewis G. Dailey. He held that there was no trust interest in the lands held by William H. Dailey because of the consideration in part paid by him. While this is undoubtedly true it does not conclude the matter. The plaintiff is not seeking an interest in the Wilbur lots. She is merely defending against a claim that gravel and sand, excavated from the lots and marketed by the firm, had been sold, the firm by Lewis G. Dailey. The proof requires no such inference. On the contrary, it sanctions, with greater propriety, the inference that the sand and gravel were furnished free of charge. William H. Dailey and Lewis G. Dailey were father and son. They were partners in a sand' and gravel business. Lewis G. Dailey had the legal title to the Wilbur gravel and sand lots. However, the only cash furnished for the purchase of the lots was provided by William H. Dailey. It is a natural assumption that the partners excavated the lots, to provide material for their business, as if the lands were jointly owned, without thought of a credit to the partner having legál title. This assumption is borne out by several significant items of proof. No account of the excavated material was kept either by the firm or by Lewis G. Dailey. No credit was given on the firm books to Lewis G. Dailey for the material taken. No charge therefor was made upon any books of account kept by Lewis G. Dailey and no bill for the material was ever rendered to the firm. The plaintiff in her complaint alleged that, at the death of William H. Dailey, the firm had assets amounting to $6,101.50, and “ that as against said assets the said firm had liabilities, which to the best of plaintiff’s knowledge and belief did not exceed $934.50.” These allegations were not denied by the defendant in his answer. On the contrary, he filed with the referee a statement of account showing a balance of partnership assets over liabilities of $3,576.76. Had the firm purchased the gravel and sand from the Wilbur lots its liabilities would have exceeded its assets by more than $8,000. Moreover, in the account so filed, the defendant, instead of crediting himself with the sand and gravel furnished, actually debits himself as owing the firm the sum of $138. It seems to us that his subsequent claim, made in the course of the hearings before the referee, that he was a creditor of the firm for a sum greater than $12,000, was entirely an afterthought. We think it was not made at an earlier stage in the proceedings for the reason that he had always considered the fact to be that sand and gravel furnished from the Wilbur lots were supplied free of charge, precisely as if the lots had been partnership property. We think the evidence conclusive that such was indeed the fact and that Lewis G. Dailey was not entitled to the credit allowed.

The judgment should be modified by eliminating the credit to the defendant of $12,337, and as modified affirmed, with costs to the appellant.

Interlocutory judgment modified by eliminating the credit to the defendant of $12,337, and as modified unanimously affirmed, with costs to the appellant.

The court disapproves of findings third, fourth and seventh of the judgment in so far as they find that the defendant contributed to the firm material of the value of $12,337, and of all the calculations made in the various findings based upon a credit to the defendant for such an amount. It affirmatively finds that the material furnished from lands to which the defendant has title was supplied free of charge according to the mutual understanding of the partners.