The right of one partner to have the affairs of the firm wound
up at once, upon the assignment by the other partner before the
expiration of the term of all his property for the benefit of its
creditors is subject, to modification according to
circumstances.
When one of two partners purchases real estate with partnership
funds, but takes title in his own name, and takes possession, his
possession is the possession of both, and a trust results in favor
of his partner.
Statutes of limitation do not run against a
cestui que
trust where the trust is express and clearly established, but
when the trustee openly disavows it, and sets up adverse title in
himself, time begins to run.
Where partnership affairs are being wound up in due course,
without antagonism between the parties or cause for judicial
interference, assets are being realized and debts extinguished, and
no settlement has been made between the partners, the statute of
limitations has not begun to run.
When the right of action accrues between partners after a
dissolution of the partnership so as to set the statute of
limitations in motion depends upon the circumstances of each case,
and cannot be held as matter of law to arise at the date of the
dissolution or to be carried back by relation to that date.
On the 10th day of March, 1885, George R. Riddle and Wilson S.
Packer, as trustee for Electra Packer, filed their bill of
complaint in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern
District of Arkansas against Joseph M. Whitehill, alleging that on
the 7th day of March, 1870, and for more than twenty
Page 135 U. S. 622
years prior thereto, the complainants and one T. J. Coleman,
deceased, were partners in business under the firm style of Riddle,
Coleman & Co., with their principal office at the City of
Pittsburgh, in the State of Pennsylvania, engaged in dealing in
coal, purchasing and transporting the same to the markets on the
lower Mississippi River and elsewhere, and selling the same for a
profit; that on said 7th day of March, 1870, said firm of Riddle,
Coleman & Co. entered into an agreement with the defendant,
Joseph M. Whitehill, as follows:
"Memorandum of articles of agreement between J. M. Whitehill, of
the first part, and Riddle, Coleman and Co., of the second part, as
follows:"
"They agree to start a coal depot at Island Eighty-Two in
co-partnership, and the said Whitehill agrees on his part to give
his whole attention to the management at the coal yard, and the
said Riddle, Coleman and Co., on their part, are to furnish coal,
capital, or credit to start the yard, and charge no interest for
the extra capital, in lieu of the said Whitehill's services at the
depot. The said Whitehill is entitled to one-half the profits or
losses, and the said Riddle, Coleman and Co. the other half, to be
allowed about Vicksburg and New Orleans prices for the coal
delivered at the island. It is also agreed that the business shall
be carried on under the name and style of J. M. Whitehill and Co.,
and the partnership is exclusively for the purpose of selling coal
by retail, and no other, and to continue for five years, providing
the firm of Riddle, Coleman and Co. wish to continue in the coal
business; but if they want to stop the coal business, or wish to
draw out of the business at Eighty-Two, the firm of J. M. Whitehill
and Co. is to wind up their affairs and sell the stock to the best
advantage for all parties concerned."
"This the 7th day of March, A.D. 1870."
"J. M. WHITEHILL"
"RIDDLE, COLEMAN & Co."
That in accordance with said agreement, Riddle, Coleman &
Co. furnished to said firm of J. M. Whitehill & Co. a
complete
Page 135 U. S. 623
plant and outfit with which to start a coal yard and depot for
the retailing of coal at Island Eighty-Two, consisting in part of a
wharfboat, with rooms for office, for residence of Whitehill's
family, quarters for the crew and employees of the firm, box-boats
or flats for measuring out and selling coal from boxes, shovels,
chains, lines, barrows, anchors, etc., and also coal in barges and
coal-boats; insured the same, and also furnished additional plant
and stock from time to time as needed for said business, and
Whitehill & Co. established a depot and coal fleet at Island
Eighty-Two, and carried on the business of a retail dealer in coal
for about the space of two years at that point, and, with the
knowledge and consent of Riddle, Coleman & Co., started a
retail store there, partly for the purpose of supplying their
labor, and partly for profit, carried on with the capital of
Riddle, Coleman & Co., and for the profit of J. M. Whitehill
& Co.; that in the latter part of the year 1871, or early in
1872, to induce the firm of J. M. Whitehill & Co. to change and
remove their place of business, depot, and coal fleet from Island
Eighty-Two to Arkansas City, the proprietors of the last-mentioned
place leased to that firm, free of rent, the landing and coaling
privileges at Arkansas City for a term of years, and donated to
them certain town lots in said town; and, with the knowledge and
approbation of Riddle, Coleman & Co., the firm of J. M.
Whitehill & Co. changed during the year 1872 the location of
their business from Island Eighty-Two to Arkansas City, and the
fleets, barges, boats, and all their outfit were moved by one of
the tow-boats of Riddle, Coleman & Co. from Island Eighty-Two
to Arkansas City, and from that time until October, 1877, and
afterwards, J. M. Whitehill & Co. carried on the business as
dealers in coal at Arkansas City, and also kept a general store,
and did a general merchandising business at that place. That in
addition to the landing and coaling privilege and the lots donated
to said firm by the proprietors of said town as an inducement to
said firm to locate their business at that point, the said J. M.
Whitehill, for the use of the firm, purchased a large number of
other town lots in the town, and paid for the same with the money
of the firm, and in like manner acquired
Page 135 U. S. 624
and purchased an undivided half interest in the entire
riverfront of the town for a distance of about three thousand feet,
and leased the other half interest in the riverfront for a period
of twenty-five years from the 1st day of May, 1872, and paid for
the same out of the money and with the property of the firm, and
expended large sums of the money of the firm in building residence
houses, storehouses, warehouses, high water platform, a large and
expensive icehouse, a hotel, and other valuable improvements on the
lots and lands so donated to and purchased with the money and
property of said firm, and certain lots are enumerated as having
been conveyed as an inducement to locate at said town.
The bill further averred that the riverfront was leased to the
firm on the 1st day of May, 1872, for five years, and this was
subsequently extended for the additional term of twenty years from
the 1st day of May, 1877; that on the 21st of July, 1875, an
undivided half of the riverfront was sold and conveyed to the firm;
that the deeds to some of the land and town lots were taken in the
name of J. M. Whitehill & Co., and the deeds to other parts of
the land and town lots were taken in the name of J. M. Whitehill;
but complainants charge that all the land and town lots not donated
to the firm were purchased with its money and for its benefit, and
held as partnership assets of the firm. That the business of the
firm of J. M. Whitehill & Co. was very profitable, and large
profits were realized therefrom, all of which, and much of the
capital furnished by Riddle, Coleman & Co., were used in the
purchase and improvement of the lots and riverfront, and J. M.
Whitehill & Co. became largely indebted to said Riddle, Coleman
& Co. for plant and stock furnished by them.
It was further alleged that Riddle, Coleman & Co. became
embarrassed and were forced to suspend business, and on the 15th
day of October, 1877, made an assignment to James Lynn, as
assignee, under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania, of all their
real and personal property, including the indebtedness to them from
J. M. Whitehill & Co., and all their interest in the business,
profits, and property of said J. M. Whitehill & Co. of every
description, to be collected or sold and disposed
Page 135 U. S. 625
of for the benefit of their creditors; that T. J. Coleman, a
member of the firm of Riddle, Coleman & Co., died in the year
1878; that the surviving members of that firm, to-wit, the
complainants in this cause, devoted themselves, with the aid of the
assignee, to realize on the assets of the firm, and after several
years' attention to that object, and the application of their
individual means to the payment of the debts of the firm, they
succeeded in settling up and discharging the debts, and, upon a
public sale made in virtue of the powers contained in the deed of
assignment, with the express assent of their creditors, all the
uncollected assets of the firm, including the indebtedness of the
defendant J. M. Whitehill, and the firm of J. M. Whitehill &
Co., were assigned and conveyed by said assignee to W. S. Packer,
as trustee for Electra Packer, and George Riddle, by deed dated the
3d day of January, 1885, a copy of which was attached.
Complainants averred that no part of the indebtedness of J. M.
Whitehill or J. M. Whitehill & Co., and no part of the assets
of said J. M. Whitehill & Co., was ever paid to or collected by
the said assignee, and the same, and the right to sue for and
collect the same, is now vested in the complainants, who are also
the sole surviving partners of said firm of Riddle, Coleman &
Co.; that at the time of the assignment, the 15th day of October,
1877, the firm of J. M. Whitehill & Co. was indebted to the
firm of Riddle, Coleman & Co. in the sum of $10,000 for plant,
stock, boats, barges, flats, ferry-boats, tugs, anchors, etc., and
for coal furnished and supplied to J. M. Whitehill & Co. by
Riddle, Coleman & Co.; that Riddle, Coleman & Co. were
entitled to one-half of the profits realized by said firm, and also
entitled to one-half of the assets of the firm of J. M. Whitehill
& Co., which amounted in part to over $65,000, given in various
items; that defendant, Whitehill, published a dissolution of the
firm, and took and retained possession of all its assets, and on
the tenth day of March, 1881, sold and delivered to Brown, Jones
& Co. a part of the property of the firm of J. M. Whitehill
& Co. for the sum of $16,000, and also leased to Brown, Jones
& Co. the coal privilege at the landing for a term of ten years
at the price and
Page 135 U. S. 626
sum of $800 per annum, and has collected and received the same
for three or four years, and is now in receipt of the same; that
there is on said riverfront a large and valuable icehouse,
warehouses, and other large and valuable improvements erected
thereon with the money and for the benefit of J. M. Whitehill &
Co., from which defendant, Whitehill, has collected rents and
received the profits since the date of the assignment of Riddle,
Coleman & Co.; that Whitehill has carried on the business of a
receiving and forwarding merchant and ferryman, by reason of
holding the riverfront, and derived large profits; that he has
received annually large sums of money for the rent of houses and an
hotel, built with the money of the firm of J. M. Whitehill &
Co., and Riddle, Coleman & Co. are entitled to one-half of all
these receipts; that defendant Whitehill has sold some of the lots
embraced in the conveyances aforesaid, and received the money
therefor, and has exchanged some of the lots for other property
situated in the town, and, as the title was in some instances taken
in his own name, the purchasers or grantees of some of the lots may
have taken the same for a valuable consideration without notice of
the rights of Riddle, Coleman & Co., but defendant, Whitehill,
should be held to account for the proceeds of such lots, to
one-half of which complainants are entitled, and that, as
complainants charge on information and belief, Whitehill purchased
with the money of Whitehill & Co. a plantation, and took the
title thereto in the name of his wife and his brother, and ought to
be required to account for the same. The bill then prayed that an
account be taken of the partnership business of the firm of J. M.
Whitehill & Co.; that that firm may be dissolved; that a master
may be appointed to state an account of the business and property
and the liabilities of the firm, the indebtedness of J. M.
Whitehill & Co. to Riddle, Coleman & Co., the interest of
Riddle, Coleman & Co. in the assets of the business of J. M.
Whitehill & Co., the profits realized by Whitehill from the
property and privileges of J. M. Whitehill & Co., etc., and
that at the final hearing complainants may have a decree for the
amount due from the defendant, and that the lots and
Page 135 U. S. 627
real estate purchased with the assets of the firm, remaining
undisposed of to
bona fide holders without notice, be
appropriated to the satisfaction of the decree, and a judgment be
rendered against the defendant for any balance due complainants on
the business of said partnership, and that a receiver be appointed,
and for general relief. The bill was verified by one of the
complainants.
The defendant, Whitehill, demurred, and assigned for causes of
demurrer:
"First, that said bill, in case the same were true, contains no
matter of equity whereon this Court can ground any decree, or give
complainants any relief, as against this defendant."
"Second, that it appears by the bill that said James Lynn is a
necessary party, inasmuch as it is stated that said Riddle, Coleman
& Co. assigned to him all the real and personal property of
said firm, and it does not appear that he has disposed of the same,
and the bill seeks action in relation thereto."
"Third, that the right of action, if any existed to sue for the
settlement of the partnership matters, accrued at the time of the
dissolution of said firm of J. M. Whitehill & Co., on October
15, 1877, and more than seven years next before the institution of
this suit, and that the demand is stale, and is barred as a cause
of action against this defendant."
"Fourth, that it appears from the bill that the creditors of
said Riddle, Coleman & Co. were paid before the pretended sale
to complainants by said James Lynn as assignee on January 3, 1885,
and that there is no privity between complainants and this
defendant to enable them to call on him for a settlement of said
partnership matters."
On the 14th of April, 1886, the court sustained the demurrer,
and ordered the bill to be dismissed for want of equity, and
complainants prayed an appeal to this Court, which was allowed. On
the 7th of October, 1886, one of the days of the same term, the
complainant moved to set aside the decree dismissing the bill, and
for leave to amend the same by inserting therein that the defendant
continued in the possession and control of the assets belonging to
the firm of J. M. Whitehill
Page 135 U. S. 628
& Co. for the professed purpose of paying the debts of the
firm, representing to the assignee, Lynn, that J. M. Whitehill
& Co. were indebted in the sum of $20,000; that he (the
defendant) had in 1879 made arrangements to pay said indebtedness
by installments of $6,000 per year, and that he was using the
assets of the firm for that purpose; that defendant did not make
any adverse claim to the assets belonging to J. M. Whitehill &
Co. until long after the sale hereinbefore stated, in 1881, and
that after paying all the debts of J. M. Whitehill & Co., the
defendant is indebted to the firm of Riddle, Coleman & Co., and
subject to account, as hereinbefore stated. This motion to set
aside the decree and for leave to amend was continued on the 23d
day of October, 1886, to the next term at which term the motion was
overruled. The transcript of record was filed in this Court on the
second day of April, 1887.
The sections of the statute of limitations of Arkansas referred
to are as follows:
"SEC. 4471. No person or persons, or their heirs, shall have,
sue, or maintain any action or suit, either in law or equity, for
any lands, tenements, or hereditaments, but within seven years next
after his, her, or their right to commence, have, or maintain such
suit shall have come, fallen, or accrued, and all suits, either in
law or equity, for the recovery of any lands, tenements, or
hereditaments, shall be had and sued within seven years next after
title or cause of action accrued, and no time after said seven
years shall have passed."
"SEC. 4478. The following actions shall be commenced within
three years after the cause of action shall accrue, and not
after:"
"First, all actions founded upon any contract or liability,
express or implied, not in writing."
"SEC. 4483. Actions on promissory notes, and other instruments
in writing not under seal, shall be commenced within five years
after the cause of action shall accrue, and not afterwards."
"SEC. 4488. All actions not included in the foregoing provisions
shall be commenced within five years after the cause of action
shall have accrued."
Dig.Stat.Ark. 1884, p. 886.
Page 135 U. S. 632
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating the facts as above,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Upon the face of the bill, of which the transfer to the
complainants formed a part, we think the latter could maintain the
suit if a cause of action existed, and we assume that the demurrer
was sustained, and the bill dismissed, as the result of the
application of the statute of limitations or the doctrine of
laches. Should this conclusion have been reached upon the facts
admitted? By the terms of the agreement in question, the
partnership was to continue for five years, provided Riddle,
Coleman & Co. wished to remain in the coal business, but if not
or if they desired to terminate this particular connection, J. M.
Whitehill & Co. were "to wind up their affairs and sell the
stock to the best advantage for all parties concerned." The five
years ran out on the 7th day of March, 1875, but the firm went on
in business. Many of the lots in question had been conveyed to
Whitehill & Co. prior to 1875, and the term of the lease of the
riverfront did not expire until May, 1877, when it was renewed for
twenty years, an indication that the firm had then no intention of
bringing its business to an end. The management at Arkansas City
was confided to Whitehill, while Riddle, Coleman & Co.
furnished the capital invested in the plant, and the coal from year
to year, dealing in which was the specific object of the
enterprise.
On the 15th day of October, 1877, the firm of Riddle, Coleman
& Co., which had then been carrying on business at Pittsburgh
for more than twenty-seven years, was compelled to make an
assignment. If a member of an ordinary partnership assigns where
the partnership is at will, the assignment dissolves it, and if it
is not at will, the assignment may be treated by the other members
of the concern as a cause for dissolution.
Page 135 U. S. 633
The assignee of one partner cannot be made a member of a
partnership against the will of the other partners, but the
absolute right to have the affairs of the firm at once wound up,
when the specified duration of the partnership has not expired, may
be subject to modification according to circumstances.
Taft v.
Buffum, 14 Pick. 322;
Buford v. Neely, 2 Devereaux
Eq. 481;
Monroe v. Hamilton, 60 Ala. 226; Lindley on Part.
*364;
Helmore v. Smith, 35 Ch.D. 436. In the case at bar,
J. M. Whitehill & Co. continued in business after October,
1877, although the bill does not state for how long a time. The
failure of Riddle, Coleman & Co. presumably prevented their
furnishing coal, yet the averments of the bill show that the
business of Whitehill & Co. had expanded far beyond the traffic
to which it had been originally confined. But, assuming that by the
assignment the partnership of J. M. Whitehill & Co. was
dissolved, it was the duty of Whitehill to proceed at once to wind
up the business and sell the stock to the best advantage not only
for himself but for Riddle, Coleman & Co., and this was in
compliance with the express provisions of the agreement. It appears
that a portion of the stock, to the amount of $16,000, was not sold
until the 10th day of March, 1881 at which time the coal privilege
at the landing was leased for ten years, and while some of the real
estate had been disposed of, a large part remained yet to be
divided when the bill was filed. The proposed amendment showed that
the firm's liabilities were not liquidated until 1883.
According to the allegations of the bill, on the 15th day of
October, 1877, when Riddle, Coleman & Co. assigned, the firm of
J. M. Whitehill & Co. was the owner of town lots, of
riverfront, residences, storehouses, and a hotel, bought and paid
for with the partnership funds. The title stood in the name either
of J. M. Whitehill or of J. M. Whitehill & Co., and part of the
property was in use for partnership purposes and so employed, while
a part was not, but represented the investment of partnership
gains. A partnership, as such, could not hold the legal title to
real estate, as it is not a person in fact or in law, and the
situation in this case is well described in
Page 135 U. S. 634
Percifull v. Platt, 36 Ark. 464, where it was held:
"If the title be made to all the partners by name, they hold the
legal title as tenants in common, without survivorship. If to one
partner alone, the whole legal title vests in him, which is the
case also where the title is to a partnership name, which, as in
this case, expresses the name of one party only, with the addition
of '& Co.' If the deed be to a name adopted as the firm style,
which includes the name of no party, it passes nothing in law. The
same occurs where the deed is to one already dead."
As to this real estate, whether the deeds ran to J. M. Whitehill
& Co. or to J. M. Whitehill, the latter held the title in
trust, and it was so ruled in
McGuire v. Ramsey, 9 Ark.
519. It is there said that
"where real estate is purchased and paid for with partnership
funds, but conveyed to one of the partners alone, a trust results
in favor of the other partners,"
and that lapse of time "cannot be allowed in favor of one
partner in possession of real estate against the other, for the
possession of one is the possession of both."
Lord Redesdale, in
Hovenden v. Lord Annesley, 2 Sch.
& Lef. 633, laid down the rule that if the trust be constituted
by act of the parties, the possession of the trustee is the
possession of the
cestui que trust, and no length of such
possession will bar; but if a party is to be constituted a trustee
by the decree of a court of equity, founded on fraud or the like,
his possession is adverse, and the statute of limitations will run
from the time that the circumstances of the fraud were
discovered.
"As a general rule, doubtless," said MR. JUSTICE GRAY,
delivering the opinion of the Court in
Speidel v. Henrici,
120 U. S. 377,
120 U. S.
386,
"length of time is no bar to a trust clearly established, and
express trusts are not within the statute of limitations, because
the possession of the trustee is presumed to be the possession of
his
cestui que trust. . . . But this rule is in accordance
with the reason on which it is founded, and as has been clearly
pointed out by Chancellor Kent and Mr. Justice Story subject to
this qualification -- that time begins to run against a trust as
soon as it is openly disavowed by the trustee, insisting
Page 135 U. S. 635
upon an adverse right and interest which is clearly and
unequivocally made known to the
cestui que trust, as when,
for instance, such transactions take place between the trustee and
the
cestui que trust as would, in case of tenants in
common, amount to an ouster of one of them by the other. . . . In
the case of an implied or constructive trust, unless there has been
a fraudulent concealment of the cause of action, lapse of time is
as complete a bar in equity as at law."
Courts of equity sometimes act in obedience to the statute, and
sometimes apply it by way of analogy. Where the cause of action is
legal, and the statute has barred the remedy at law, the defense is
as complete in equity as at law; but where the case falls within
the proper, peculiar, and exclusive jurisdiction of a court of
equity, the statute is not necessarily applied. Real estate
purchased with partnership funds for partnership uses, though the
title be taken in the name of one partner, is in equity treated as
personal property so far as is necessary to pay the debts of the
partnership and to adjust the equities of the partners; but the
principle of equitable conversion has no further application.
Clagett v.
Kilbourne, 1 Black 346, 349;
Shanks v.
Klein, 104 U. S. 18;
Allen v. Withrow, 110 U. S. 119;
Buchan v. Sumner, 2 Barb.Ch. 165;
Collumb v.
Read, 24 N.Y. 505. Whitehill here was in possession for the
benefit of the parties lawfully entitled, and apparently occupied
no position adverse to them.
In
Knox v. Gye, L.R. 5 H.L. 656, the effect of the
statute of limitations, 21 Jac. I, c. 16, providing that all
actions of account and upon the case should be commenced and sued
within six years next after the cause of such action or suit, and
not after, as repeated in the ninth section of 19th & 20th
Vict. c. 97, with this additional provision, namely, that
"no claim in respect of a matter which arose more than six years
before the commencement of such action or suit shall be enforceable
by action or suit by reason only of some other matter of claim
comprised in the same account having arisen within six years next
before the commencement of such action or suit,"
upon a bill for an account brought by the executor of a deceased
partner against the survivor more than six
Page 135 U. S. 636
years after the death was considered. It was held that the
matter -- namely, the dissolution of the partnership and
consequently the possession of the partnership property by the
surviving partner, arose more than six years before the
commencement of the suit, and was barred; that the right of action
arose upon the death of the deceased partner, and the cause of
action was the possession of the partnership estate by the
surviving partner; that where, in the matter of the enforcement of
a legal right, a court of common law would, under the provisions of
the statute of limitations, refuse the enforcement after the lapse
of six years from the accruing of the right of action, a court of
equity would, where its power to grant relief was asked for under
similar circumstances, adopt the principle of the statute and
decline to grant such relief.
Lords Weestbury, Colonsay, and Chelmsford concurred in the
result, while the Lord Chancellor (Lord Hatherly) dissented. It was
held by Lord Westbury that
"there is no fiduciary relation between a surviving partner and
the representatives of his deceased partner. There are legal
obligations between them equally binding on both."
But the Lord Chancellor insisted with emphasis that
"there is a fiduciary relation between them. The surviving
partner alone having the legal interest in the partnership
property, and being alone able to collect it, there arises a right
in the representatives of the deceased partner to insist on the
surviving partner holding the property, whenever received, subject
to the rights of the deceased partner, and he cannot make use of
the partnership assets without being liable to an account for
them."
We are not prepared to decide that there is a definite rule of
law that statutes of limitation commence to run immediately upon
the dissolution of a partnership, irrespective of the circumstances
of the particular case. Mr. Justice Lindley, in his excellent work
on Partnership, says:
"So long, indeed, as a partnership is subsisting, and each
partner is exercising his rights and enjoying his own property, the
statute of limitations has, it is conceived, no application at all;
but as soon as a partnership is dissolved, or there is any
exclusion of one partner by the others, the case is very different,
and the statute
Page 135 U. S. 637
begins to run."
American ed. 1888, *510. The learned author in his last edition
cites
Knox v. Gye, supra, and
Noyes v. Crawley,
10 Ch.D. 31, in which Vice-Chancellor Malins quotes the above
language with commendation, and dissents from
Miller v.
Miller, L.R. 8 Eq. 499. Where, however, partnership affairs
are being wound up in due course, without antagonism between the
parties or cause for judicial interference, where assets are being
realized upon and liabilities extinguished, and no settlement has
been made, the cause of action has not accrued, and the statute has
not begun to run. Of course where the partnership expires in
accordance with its terms or is dissolved by agreement, each
partner, as a general rule, has an equal right to the possession of
the partnership property, and if they cannot agree as to the
disposition and division of it, a court of equity will appoint a
receiver to collect and apply the effects. Each partner has a right
to have the partnership assets applied in liquidation of the
partnership debts, and to have the surplus assets divided, and each
may insist on a sale, and that nothing shall be done except with a
view to wind up the concern. But in case of dissolution by death,
surviving partners are invested with the exclusive right of
possession and management of the whole partnership property and
business for the purpose of paying the partnership debts, and
disposing of the effects of the concern for the benefit of
themselves and the estate of the deceased.
Emerson v.
Senter, 118 U. S. 3. If they
go on with the business under the credit, and risking the effects,
of the firm and profits result, they will be bound to account for
those profits as belonging to the firm, and they are liable to be
charged with interest on the funds they use, though no profit, or
even a loss, is made. And so, upon dissolution by an assignment,
the solvent partners are in equity entitled to hold the effects and
property in the way that surviving partners do, and if they
continue the business, it is at their own peril in the absence of
special provision. When the right of action accrues so as to set
the statute of limitations in motion depends, as we have said, upon
circumstances, and cannot be held as matter of law to arise at
the
Page 135 U. S. 638
date of the dissolution or to be carried back by relation to
that date.
Todd v. Rafferty's Administrator, 30 N.J.Eq.
254;
Partridge v. Wells, 30 N.J.Eq. 176;
Prentice v.
Elliott, 72 Ga. 154;
Hammond v. Hammond, 20 Ga. 556;
Massey v. Tingle, 29 Mo. 437;
McClung v.
Capehart, 24 Minn. 17;
Hendy v. March, 75 Cal. 566;
Foster v. Rison, 17 Grattan 321;
Roggs v.
Johnson, 26 W.Va. 821;
Atwater v. Fowler, 1 Edw.Ch.
423. In
Causler v. Wharton, 62 Ala. 358, the court held
that where one partner, by a written agreement with the other, left
the partnership assets with him to dispose of whenever he could do
so at a fair price, a continuing trust was thereby created, and the
bar of the statute of limitations would not begin to run against
the right to an account of the partnership dealings so long as the
party to whom the assets were delivered acted under the trust or
admitted that it was still continuing. Under the agreement here, it
is obvious that it was Whitehill who was to close up the business
at Arkansas City, which had been under his management, and, under
the averments of this bill, such a trust was created as would not
be barred by the statute of limitations until it was repudiated by
Whitehill, which attitude on his part there is nothing here to
disclose unless his defense to the bill may be construed as
such.
In
Adams v. Taylor, 14 Ark. 62, it was held that
"the relation between co-partners does not create such a trust
as will exempt a bill for a mere account and settlement from the
operation of the statute of limitations, or the analogous bar by
lapse of time or staleness of the demand."
That was a case where a partner came into chancery, eight years
after the dissolution of the partnership, for an account and
settlement, and no circumstances of fraud, accident, or concealment
were alleged to have prevented the settlement after the partnership
affairs had been wound up. The question of when the right of action
accrued did not arise, nor was that anything more than, as stated
by the court, a bill for a mere account and settlement; whereas we
have in this case the state of affairs which existed in
McGuire
v. Ramsey, 9 Ark. 519, where, with respect to real estate paid
for with partnership funds, it was
Page 135 U. S. 639
held that the plea of the statute could not be allowed in favor
of one partner in possession of such real estate as against the
other.
The case of
Chouteau v. Barlow, 110 U.
S. 238, is very much in point. Sanford, Chouteau, Sarpy,
and Sire were co-partners in business in St. Louis. During its
existence, the partnership purchased and paid for with the
partnership funds acre lands and town lots in Wisconsin and
Minnesota, and held the same for the benefit of the co-partnership.
The firm was dissolved in 1852 by the retirement of Sanford, and
some twenty-four years thereafter his executor and trustee filed a
bill against the representatives of the other members of the firm,
who had all died, to compel an accounting touching the property of
the partnership, and the proceeds of such property. The dispute
between the parties was as to the terms of the agreement of
dissolution of the partnership in 1852. The complainants alleged
that Sanford released to Chouteau all his interest in the estate of
the firm except its lands and town lots in Minnesota, and that
Chouteau agreed to relieve Sanford from the debts of the firm, and
assure to him his proportion of the lands and town lots free from
any debt or liability growing out of the co-partnership affairs.
The answer alleged that Chouteau agreed to relieve Sanford from the
debts of the firm, and that Sanford released to Chouteau all his
interest in the assets of the firm, including his interest in any
of the lands and town lots in Minnesota, and further averred by way
of defense that more than six years had elapsed since the accruing
of any of the alleged causes of action set out in the bill. The
opinion of the court thus concludes:
"On the whole case, we are of opinion that after the dissolution
of the St. Louis firm, the members other than Sanford were entitled
to collect and dispose of all its assets, including the Minnesota
'outfit' and the Minnesota lands, to liquidate its affairs, without
the interference of Sanford; that all claim on their part against
Sanford individually was relinquished, leaving recourse only to
those assets, and that, if there should be any surplus of those
assets after paying the debts of the firm, and the advances of any
of the other partners therefor, Sanford's executors would be
entitled
Page 135 U. S. 640
to his proper proportion of such surplus. No judicial accounting
has been had on the basis of the rights of the parties, as we have
defined them. The bill prays that the defendants may account
touching the affairs and property of the co-partnership, and
touching the proceeds of any such property. We think the plaintiffs
are entitled to such an accounting, and are not barred from it by
laches or by the operation of any statute of limitations."
In the case at bar, the business of Riddle, Coleman & Co.
was finally wound up by the payment of its debts in full, to do
which, as we understand the bill, coupled with the terms of the
deed to the complainants, a public sale was had with the consent of
the creditors, and the complainants purchased the interest in, and
the rights and claims against, certain companies and individuals in
the south, along the Mississippi River, including the interest and
claims against Whitehill and the late firm of J. M. Whitehill &
Co. This was within four years after Whitehill had disposed of the
enumerated assets, and made the lease of the coaling privilege, and
within three years after the payment of the outstanding
indebtedness, according to the amendment. Certainly Whitehill ought
not to be allowed to complain that he was permitted to take his
time in selling the stock of the concern to the best advantage, and
it is clear, as the case stands at present, that the statute did
not run as against the trust in the real estate conveyed to him or
to J. M. Whitehill & Co., and purchased with the money of the
firm.
The decree is reversed and the cause remanded with
directions to allow the complainants to amend their bill, and for
further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.