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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Dalglish (Fergus' Executor) v. Dennistoun, et e contra [1867] ScotLR 5_298 (20 February 1867) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1867/05SLR0298.html Cite as: [1867] ScotLR 5_298, [1867] SLR 5_298 |
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Page: 298↓
Circumstances in which held that the rights of the representatives of a deceased partner under a contract of copartnery were ruled by the terms of the contract itself, and a relative deed of agreement, and were not affected by an agreement subsequently entered into by the partners with the manager of the firm.
These were conjoined actious, the one at the instance of Mr Dalglish, Fergus' executor, calling on the defender to count and reckon with him as to the profits and proceeds of a copartnery between him and Mr Fergus, or to hold £20,000 as the sum due by the defender in respect of said copartnery; the other at the instance of Mr Dennistoun, claiming a sum of £1974, 19s. 10d. as the issue of the same contract of copartnery.
Page: 299↓
The pursuer makes the following statements, which are admitted:—
“John Fergus, Esq., of Prinlaws, died on 23d January 1865, leaving a trust-disposition and settlement dated 9th November 1864, by which he appointed the pursuer and Andrew Wylie, flax-spinner at Prinlaws, Fife, and David Gibson, writer in Kirkcaldy, to be his trustees and executors. An extract of the trust-deed has been produced. The pursuer alone has accepted of the trust, and the estate of Mr Fergus is now under his administration. The right or interest held by Mr Fergus in the said firm of Alexander Fletcher & Company is a part of that estate.
The said company was first formed in 1843, when Mr Alexander Fletcher, merchant in Glasgow, the defender Mr Dennistoun, and the said John Fergus, entered into a copartnership for the purpose of carrying on the business of flax-spinning and thread-making at St Rollox, near Glasgow, under the firm of Alexander Fletcher and Company. This company was dissolved by the death of Mr Fletcher in 1845, and thereupon the said defender and the said John Fergus formed a new partnership under the old firm. The contract between them is dated 22d and 30th December 1845; a copy of it has been produced.
By the said contract it was, inter alia, provided (1) that the business should be carried on for twenty-one years from 30th June 1845; (2) that the said partners should share equally in the profits and losses of the concern; (3) that the books of the company should be brought to a regular balance at least once every year upon the 30th day of June during the subsistence of the contract, by which balance the value of the company's property, stock of goods, and outstanding debts should be fixed and ascertained, and after deducting therefrom the debts due by the company, the salaries payable to the clerks and others, and all incidental charges attending the management of the business, interest at the rate of five per centum per annum on the capital advanced by the partners, and a suitable sum for deterioration of property and for bad and doubtful debts, the net profits of the preceding year, or for any shorter period embraced in such balance, should be fixed and ascertained, and carried in just proportions to the credit of the partners' accounts in the books of the company; it being declared that after the balance was thus completed and the result thereof carried to the accounts of the respective partners, the same should be probative in all questions between the partners, their heirs, and representatives, although the balance should not be docqueted by them, and although no minute should be entered or subscribed in the sederunt-book of the company relative thereto, provided such balance was regularly made up in the manner above specified, and the same was authenticated by the handwriting or subscription of the manager or managers for the time being; and (4) that on the death, bankruptcy, or declared insolvency of any of the partners, the surviving or solvent partner should pay to the representatives of such deceasing or insolvent partner his share and interest in the trade, stock, and estate of the company, as the same stood at the last balance preceding such death, bankruptcy, or declared insolvency, as in full of all which they could claim from the remaining partner.”
The pursuer then says:—“The defender, Mr Dennistoun, and the said John Fergus, executed a supplementary agreement, dated 1st and 7th December 1859, by which, on the narrative that by the seventh article of their said contract of copartnership it was provided that in the event of the death, bankruptcy, or declared insolvency of either of them during the period of the copartnery, the surviving or solvent partner should pay the representatives of such deceasing bankrupt or insolvent partner his share and interest in the trade, stock, and estate of the company, as the same stood at the last balance preceding such death, bankruptcy, or declared insolvency, as in full of all they could claim from the remaining partner; and that the said parties had resolved to alter the said contract to the extent after specified. Therefore they agreed that in case of any of the events above specified happening during the currency of said contract, the surviving or solvent partner of said firm might take the interest of the deceasing or insolvent partner in the trade, stock, and estate of said company, in the manner above pointed out, under the provision that the works of the company, that is to say, the whole heritage, machinery, and utensils employed in the business of the company, should be valued in the balance at the sum of £20,000 sterling, or, in the option of the surviving or solvent partner, the copartnery business should be wound up, and the whole estate of the company disposed of in manner pointed out in article ninth of said contract, whereby it was provided that if none of the partners should become the purchasers of the whole heritable property, machinery, stock, and estate of the company, these should either be sold privately by agreement of all the parties, or, failing such agreement, should be exposed to sale in one lot, at such upset price as might be agreed on by them; and should they not agree, then the upset price to be the value standing in the books at the last balance preceding such sale, and if no sale could thus be effected, the whole heritable property, machinery, stock, and estate of the company should, after due advertisement, be sold by public roup or private bargain, at such reduced price or prices, and in whole or in such detached lots, as would suit intending purchasers. With reference to the statement in the answer for the defender, Mr Dalglish, the pursuer, further avers—(1) that the said defender possessed no such option as he is here said to have exercised; (2) that there was not, as at 30th June 1864, nor for years before, a balance of the affairs of the company made out and completed in the manner provided for by the contract of copartnery, or so prepared and completed as to be conclusive of the extent of the rights and obligations inter se of the partners in the concern; (3) that the balance, such as it was, said to have been prepared on 30th June 1864 was not the last balance brought out in the lifetime of Mr Fergus; (4) that the works, &c., were not valued in any balance of the company's affairs, and particularly in a balance prepared and completed as at 30th June 1864, at the sum of £20,000; on the contrary, these always appeared at a higher figure in such balances as were framed; (5) farther, the minute of 1859, by which the option said to have been exercised by the defender is assumed to have been conferred, was not operative in 1865, the year in which Mr Fergus died, having been superseded permanently, or at anyrate for that year, or for a longer period, by the agreement of December 1864, betwixt the company and the defender, George Anderson, which is set forth in the next article of the condescendence. The provisions of that agreement were inconsistent with the provisions of the
Page: 300↓
said minute, as well as provisions in the original contract, particularly those relating to the dissolution of the company through the death of a partner, and the emerging rights and obligations both of the deceasing and of the surviving partner. With reference to the last of the defender's counter statements, the pursuer admits that a small balance of the debts due by Mr Fergus to the Union Bank is still unpaid. Quoad ultra, the explanations and counter-statements in his answer, so far as inconsistent with the pursuer's averments, are denied.” The defender, in answer to the above condescendence, says:—“The agreement and contract are referred to for their terms; and it is explained that Mr Fergus died during the currency of the contract, and that the defender thereupon duly exercised the option of taking over the concern upon the footing of the works being valued on the 30th June 1864 balance at £20,000, instead of availing himself of the option of winding up the concern. In regard to the averments introduced by the pursuer into his revised condescendence with reference to the statements in this answer, it is admitted that the works were not valued at £20,000 in the balance of the books of the company, 30th 1864, or in the other balances thereof; and it is explained that, it was just because the works were greatly overvalued in these books and balances, that the agreement of 1859 (which merely followed up a similar previous agreement) was thought necessary. Quoad ultra, the pursuer's averments in this article are denied; and it is explained, that the system on which, from the commencement till the close of the concern, its books were kept and balanced, and its profit and loss account and individual partners' accounts were dealt with, was wholly planned and arranged by the late Mr Fergus, as the managing partner, and the only partner practically acquainted with the business. Explained farther, that, during the period of his active management, he took the entire charge and superintendence of the books and balances of the company and of its affairs generally, and his exclusive charge and superintendence ceased only a few years before his death, upon the occurrence of his insolvency, when the Union Bank of Scotland, who were his principal, if not only creditors, became the parties with whom the defender chiefly advised as to the management of the concern. The debt due by the late Mr Fergus to the Union Bank has not been fully paid, and they have the only substantial interest in this action.”
In 1864 the firm entered into an agreement with their manager, Mr Anderson, by which they bound themselves not to sell their mills or wind up the concern for a year, during which Mr Anderson was to continue manager. By the second agreement, Mr Anderson's salary was to be £600, and it was inter alia agreed that, with a view to the ascertainment of the net profits, of which Mr Anderson was to be paid one-third, the mills were to be valued at the commencement and end of the year at £28,000, and the book debts and stock-in-trade at such sums as should be agreed upon by both parties, or fixed by an arbiter.
The Lord Ordinary ( Barcaple) pronounced the following interlocutor:—
“ Edinburgh, 15th June 1867.—The Lord Ordinary having heard counsel for the parties, and considered the closed record, productions, and whole process: Finds that the deceased John Fergus having died on 23d January 1865, before the expiry of the term of copartnery fixed by the contract of copartnery between the defender and pursuer, John Dennistoun, and the said John Fergus, as the sole partners of the firm of Alexander Fletcher & Co., dated 22d and 30th December 1845, No.20 of process, the share and interest of the representatives of the said John Fergus in the trade, stock, and estate of the company, and the relative rights and interests of his said representatives, and the said John Dennistoun, as surviving partner, are regulated and fall to be ascertained by and according to the provisions of the said contract of copartnery, as the same are modified by the deed of agreement between the said John Dennistoun and John Fergus, dated 1st and 7th December 1859, No. 24 of process: Finds that the provisions of the said contract of copartnery and deed of agreement for regulating the relative rights and interests of the representatives of the said John Fergus, as predeceasing partner, and of the said John Dennistoun, as surviving partner, inter se, in the trade, stock, and estate of the company, and the mode of ascertaining the same, and especially the provisions therein contained, as to the right of the surviving partner to take the interest of the deceasing partner, under the provisions that the works of the company shall be valued in the balance at the sum of £20,000, or in his option to have the copartnery business wound up, and the whole estate of the company disposed of, are not set aside or altered by the memorandum of agreement between the said firm of Alexander Fletcher & Co. and George Anderson, dated 5th and 6th December 1864, No. 25 of process: Appoints the cause to be enrolled for further procedure, and reserves all questions of expenses.
“ Note.—The only question discussed at the debate was, Whether the provisions for settling the relative rights of the representatives of a deceasing partner and the surviving partner, contained in the original contract of copartnery between Mr Dennistoun and Mr Fergus in 1845, and relative deed of agreement between them in 1859, were set aside or altered by the memorandum of agreement between the company and Mr Anderson, their manager, in 1864? The Lord Ordinary is of opinion that the agreement with Mr Anderson was not intended, and cannot be held to affect the rights in that matter of the partners, inter se, as they were regulated by the contract of copartnery and relative deed of 1859.
The original contract contains a very precise provision for the event of the death or bankruptcy of either of the partners. The surviving or solvent partner was to pay to his representatives ‘his share and interest in the trade, stock, and estate of the company, as the same stood at the last balance.’ The immediately preceding head of the contract provides that the books shall be brought to a regular balance, at least once every year, upon 30th June, by which balance the value of the company's property, stock of goods, and outstanding debts shall be fixed and ascertained. By the deed of agreement between the partners in 1859, the provisions for taking over the interest of a deceasing or bankrupt partner is so far altered. An option is given to the surviving or solvent partner, either to take the interest of the deceasing or insolvent partner, or to have the business wound up, and the estate disposed of and divided. In the event of his taking the interest of the deceasing or insolvent partner, it is provided that the works, being the heritage, machinery and utensils employed in the business shall be valued in the balance at the sum
Page: 301↓
of £20,000. It is upon this last provision, which the defender Mr Dennistoun maintains to have been subsisting and operative at the death of Mr Fergus, that the dispute between the parties turns. In December 1864, while there was still eighteen months of the original term of partnership to run, the firm entered into an agreement with Mr Anderson, their manager. It sets forth that the firm had been desirous in 1862 to sell their mills, and wind up their concern, but that, at the request of Mr Anderson, they had agreed to carry them on for one year, which had been afterwards extended to 31st December 1864, and that the parties were desirous to carry them on for another year from that time. The firm accordingly bind themselves not to sell their mills, or wind up their concern for a year, and Mr Anderson agrees to continue to be their manager for that time.
The object of the remaining heads of the agreement is to provide for the remuneration of Mr Anderson as manager, which was to be partly by a fixed salary of £600, and partly by his receiving one-third of the net profits. With a view to the ascertainment of the net profits for this purpose, the mills were to be valued at the commencement and end of the year at £28,000, and the book-debts and stock-in-trade at such sums as should be agreed on by both parties, or as should be fixed by an arbiter. The Lord Ordinary is of opinion that these and the other provisions of the agreement were only made as between the firm and Mr Anderson, and for the purpose of giving effect to the engagement entered into with him; and that it was not intended that they should in any way affect the rights of the partners inter se. Mr Anderson was not to be liable for losses, and was not made a partner in any sense. The valuing of the mills at £28,000 is expressly said to be for the purpose of ascertaining the net profits, of which Mr Anderson was to be paid one-third. There is nothing in this arrangement for Mr Anderson's remuneration incompatible with giving effect to the provisions of the contract and the deed of 1859 as to the interest of a predeceasing partner in the concern. It cannot be inferred, and it is not contended, that the partners, Messrs Dennistoun and Fergus, agreed that, as between them in settling the interest of a predeceasing partner, the mills should be valued at £28,000, in place of £20,000 as fixed by the deed of 1859. It would be quite as compatible with the agreement made with Mr Anderson to take the works at the value of £20,000, fixed by the deed of 1859, as at any other valuation that could now be put upon them. The arrangements for fixing and settling Mr Anderson's remuneration are of a complicated kind, but the Lord Ordinary does not think that any of them are inconsistent with the previously subsisting provisions for the event of a partner dying. A more serious question, as it appears to him, is, whether the obligation undertaken by Mr Anderson to carry on the business for a year has not made the provision for the surviving partner, in his option taking over the interest of the deceasing partner, altogether inapplicable, and incapable of receiving effect in the event, which has happened, of a partner dying in the course of the year. The defender's counsel endeavoured to meet this view of the case by maintaining that the obligation to carry on the business for a year must be held to have been conditional on the survivance of both partners, and the subsistence of the company. The Lord Ordinary is not prepared to put that construction upon the obligation. It is in these terms:—‘First, The first parties agree and bind themselves and their representatives not to sell off their mills or wind up their concern for another year from the said 31st day of December in this present year 1864.’
The Lord Ordinary is disposed to think that this is an obligation intended to bind both the company and the representatives of a deceasing partner that in no event (except as provided for in the twelfth head of the agreement, which does not effect this question) should the mills be sold or the concern wound up before 31st December 1865. It was quite possible to fulfil such an obligation notwithstanding the death of a partner, and that whether his interest should be taken over by the survivor, or the concern carried on for behoof of all concerned. Reference was made to the opinion of the First Division of the Court in the recent case Hoey v. M'Ewan and Auld, not yet reported.
But there was there no obligation such as that undertaken to Mr Anderson in the present case, in which the Lord Ordinary inclines to hold that there continued to be a subsisting and operative obligation to Mr Anderson, notwithstanding the death of Mr Fergus, and consequent dissolution of the company.
Upon a full consideration, however, of the import of the obligation, the Lord Ordinary does not think that it is inconsistent with effect being given to the provisions as to the interest of a deceasing partner, even in the event of the death taking place during the year.
These provisions gave to the survivor an option to take over the interest of the deceasing partner. It was quite possible for him to do so, subject to the obligation, binding on the company and both partners, that the works should not be sold off, or the concern wound up, before 31st December 1865. And the Lord Ordinary does not think that the right to exercise this privilege could be refused to him upon the ground that the representatives of the deceasing partner were under an obligation that the concern should not be wound up during the year. That, as well as all the other obligations of the company, would necessarily be taken over by the surviving partner, along with the interest of deceasing partner; and it does not appear that the representatives of the latter could be entitled to insist upon continuing an interest in the business in respect of that, more than of any other obligation of the company involving a tract of time.
On the other hand, the surviving partner was entitled, in his option, to require that the business should be wound up, and the estate disposed of. As the option was entirely with the survivor, the difficulty arising from any supposed impracticability of given effect to this latter alternative seems to be got quit of by the fact that he has selected to take over the concern. But apart from that, the Lord Ordinary thinks that due effect would have been given to the right of the survivor to have the business wound up, and the estate sold, by carrying out the provisions of the contract of copartnery on that subject at the expiry of the engagement with Mr Anderson, the business being carried on in the meantime for the behoof of all concerned. Many circumstances might have existed, independently of the obligation to Mr Anderson, to make an immediate winding up impossible—all that either partner could require, if the concern was to be wound up, being, that it should be done as soon as the obligations of the company might permit.
Page: 302↓
Upon the whole, the Lord Ordinary is of opinion that the option conferred upon the surviving partner by the deed of agreement of 1859 is still applicable, and capable of receiving effect, and that the accounting between the parties must be subject to the provisions of that deed, including the provision as to the sum at which the works were to be valued.”
Mr Dalglish reclaimed.
Solicitor-General and Watson for him.
Clark and A. Moncreiff in answer.
The Court adhered to the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary.
Solicitors: Agents for Reclaimers— Murray, Beith, & Murray, W.S.
Agents for Respondent— Hamilton & Kinnear, W.S.