Court Opinion

ID: 3232984
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:08:10.427073+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:17.754228
License: Public Domain

Bill to Declare a Trust in a Lease.
1. Partnership; Firm Assets; Lease in Name of Partner. — Where a storehouse is necessary for the transaction of a partnership business, and one of the partners leases it, taking the lease in his own name, he will be treated as a trustee of it for the firm in view of his duty to the firm, there being no assent of his partner to its being treated as an individual transaction; and its equitable status is not dependent on its acquisition by payment of the partnership funds, or any express contract between the partners, or on specific consideration moving between them.
2. Same; Action Between. — In a suit between partners as to a lease of property necessary for the partnership business, the limit of relief is to have it decreed a partnership asset, obviously it cannot be sold and its proceeds divided, except by agreement, in advance of and independently of a dissolution and settlement of partnership affairs.
3. Frauds; Statute; Real Property; Partnership Lease. — Where a lease is taken in the name of one of the partners, the statute of frauds has nothing to do with the question of its being treated by equity as partnership assets, as equity treats all partnership property as personalty so far as partnership rights are concerned, and an implied trust is involved.
The complainant's right to share with his copartner in the benefits or profits arising from the leasehold procured by the latter under the circumstances shown does not depend upon the ordinary principles of implied or constructive thusts. The right grows out of the partnership relation, and the duties and obligations imposed by law upon partners.
As stated by Lord Lindley:
"Good faith requires that a partner shall never obtain a private advantage at the expense of the firm. He *Page 221 
is bound, in all transactions affecting the partnership, to do his best for the common body, and to share with his copartners any benefit which he may have been able to obtain from other people, and in which the firm is in honor and conscience entitled to participate." — Ewell's Lindley on Partnership, vol. 2, p. 775 (*571, 572).
This is the uberrima fides of the civil law, now universally approved as the soul of the partnership relation. — Bestor v. Parker,106 Ala. 240, 250, 17 South.389.
"While the partnership relation continues, the law imposes upon each partner the duty of acting with the utmost good faith toward his copartners. It treats him as their confidential agent in all partnership transactions, and subjects him to the inability of such an agent to secure for himself that which it is his duty to obtain, if at all, for the firm of which he is a member. Accordingly, if he purchases property for his individual benefit, or takes a lease of it when the firm is entitled to the advantage of such purchase or lease, or secures a valuable contract for himself, which it was his duty to obtain for the firm, he will be treated as a trustee thereof for the firm, and be compelled to account to the firm for the profits of the transaction, unless such a purchase or transaction is assented to by his copartners." — 30 Cyc. 458, 5.
If the allegations of the bill are true, the defendant has been guilty of a flagrant breach of the duty owed to the complainant, and equity will treat the leasehold acquired by him as an asset of the firm, to be shared in, as other assets are, by his copartner in the business. — Johnson's Appeal, 115 Pa. 129, 8 A. 36, 2 Am. St. Rep. 539.
In such a case this equitable status of the property does not depend upon its acquisition by the payment of *Page 222 
partnership funds, nor upon any express contract between the partners, nor upon any specific consideration moving between the partners. Nor has the statute of frauds anything to do with the case since equity treats all partnership property as personalty, and deals with it accordingly, so far as partnership rights are concerned (Powers v. Robinson,90 Ala. 225, 8 So. 10); and because, also, an implied trust is involved.
The demurrer was without merit, as to any of the grounds assigned, and should have been overruled.
It may be noted that the right of the complainant in this proceeding extends no further than to have the status of the leasehold fixed as a partnership asset. Obviously it cannot be sold and its proceeds divided in advance and independently of a settlement of the partnership affairs, except by agreement of the parties; and it does not appear that these has been such a settlement, nor even a dissolution of the partnership.
The decree of the chancellor will be reversed, and a decree will be here rendered overruling the demurrr to the bill.
Reversed and rendered.
ANDERSON, C. J., and MAYFIELD and GARDNER, JJ., concur.
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