Court Opinion

ID: 9865823
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-25 21:13:00.824835+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:55:38.558798
License: Public Domain

On Petition for Rehearing.
Rabb, J.
Appellee earnestly insists in his petition for a rehearing of this case that the court failed to give proper attention to the questions presented by his assignment of error, for the reason that each assignment is not taken up, discussed and decided, in the opinion delivered by the court, in the order and manner in which they are presented by appellant.
*2956. The statute does not require this court, upon the affirmance of a judgment of the court below, to give any opinion in deciding the case, and therefore, after a full consideration and determination by the court of all the questions presented by the record, and the conclusion being reached that the judgment should be affirmed, it was deemed that a simple statement of the meritorious question involved in the appeal, together with the court’s decision thereon, was all that was necessary to be shown in the opinion handed down; but inasmuch as appellant, in evident sincerity and good faith, conceives that a palpably reversible error intervened in the action of the court below in overruling a demurrer to appellee’s complaint, we here state the question as it is presented in the record, and the views of the court upon it.
7. The substantial averments of the complaint are, that in January, 1897, the parties formed a partnership to carry on the business of manufacturing and selling barrel staves and headings. Each contributed a certain sum to the capital of the firm, the contract being that each partner was to share in the profits and losses of the business in the proportion that his interest bore to the capital invested; that the firm operated until January 1, 1906, when it was dissolved; that at the time of the dissolution of the partnership an invoice was taken of the assets and liabilities of the partnership; that the appellant purchased certain items of partnership property, and agreed to pay the partnership therefor $9,400; that he further agreed to take all the unfinished material belonging to the partnership, finish and complete the same for market, and, when realized upon, to account to the appellee for his share of the profits; that as to the residue of the property belonging to the firm no agreement was made between the parties as to its disposal; that the partnership was the owner of factories and plants, consisting of machinery, buildings and fixtures, at Portland and Geneva, in Indiana, and at Mingo, *296Missouri, of the value of $12,000; that the appellant has wrongfully taken possession of the partnership property, sold part of the same, and converted the proceeds to his own use, refusing to account to the appellee for the same; that he has taken possession of the firm’s factories at Portland, and is running' and operating the same in his own private business, and is claiming the absolute ownership thereof; that he has sold stock and other assets of the firm to the extent of $16,000, and appropriated the same to his own use, and refuses to account to the appellee for the same. The complaint demands an accounting and judgment for whatever sum may be due to appellee upon the final settlement of the partnership, and for all other proper relief.
*2978. *296It is appellant’s theory that this complaint is bad, because it fails to show that the firm’s debts were all paid, and that until the partnership debts were paid no action could be maintained by either partner against the other for anything. This is an entirely mistaken view of the law. Simply because the debts of a partnership may not all be paid, does not leave one partner remediless against the wrongful invasion, by his copartner, of his rights in the partnership property. If the partnership is dissolved and the partnership assets come into the hands of one of the partners, such partner will be treated as a trustee for the other members of the firm, and, for any violation of that trust, the courts of equity afford complete and ample redress. In Skillen v. Jones (1873), 44 Ind. 136, 145, the Supreme Court said: “If the surviving partner fails unreasonably to close up and settle the partnership business, or if it shall be shown that he is unfaithful to his trust, a court will entertain an action against him for an account and final adjustment of the partnership business, and in a proper case appoint a receiver.” The same principle applies as well to a case where the partners are all living, the partnership dissolved, and the firm’s assets are in the hands of one of the partners. Such partner cannot hold the firm’s property, *297divert it to his own use, and meet his partner’s demand for an accounting by the plea that the firm’s debts are not paid. And while one partner may not maintain an action at law against a copartner for a share of the profits of the partnership business until there has been a final accounting and settlement of the partnership business, it is equally well settled that he may maintain a suit in equity to compel an accounting, and recover such sum as may be found due upon final settlement of the partnership affairs. Meredith v. Ewing (1882), 85 Ind. 410; Douthit v. Douthit (1892), 133 Ind. 26; Miller v. Rapp (1893), 135 Ind. 614; Adams v. Shewalter (1894), 139 Ind. 178; Hanna v. McLaughlin (1902), 158 Ind. 292; Bond v. May (1906), 38 Ind. App. 396. And this is what is sought in this complaint. It is a suit to compel an accounting, by one partner against another, who is alleged to have in his possession the entire assets of the firm, and which it is alleged he has converted to his own use. The demurrer to the complaint was properly overruled.
Petition for rehearing overruled.