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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Duncan & Anor v MFV Marigold PD 145 & Ors [2006] ScotCS CSOH_128 (22 August 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_128.html
Cite as: 2007 SCLR 155, [2006] ScotCS CSOH_128, [2006] CSOH 128

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2006] CSOH 128

 

A7/05

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD REED

 

in the cause

 

MRS JESSIE DUNCAN AND ANOTHER

 

Pursuers

 

against

 

THE MFV MARIGOLD PD145 AND OTHERS

 

Defenders:

 

 

­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­________________

 

 

 

Pursuers: Ennis; Brodies, WS (for Messrs Stewart & Watson, Peterhead)

Defenders: Artis; Balfour & Manson, WS (for Iain Smith & Co, Aberdeen)

 

 

22 August 2006

Introduction

[1] The late Michael Duncan ("the deceased") was one of four partners in a firm which operated a fishing boat, the Marigold. He died on 18 March 2000. Cessation accounts were drawn up as at that date, without the agreement of the surviving partners. The accounts brought out a balance in the deceased's capital account of £133,537. That sum was not however paid to the deceased's executors, who are the pursuers in the present action. The surviving partners, who are the defenders in the present action, continued to operate the Marigold for several years, but eventually wound up the business. The assets were realised for much less than the amount which appeared in the cessation accounts. On the basis of the amounts realised, the defenders calculate that the share of the final surplus due to the pursuers is £14,323. The central issue between the parties is whether the pursuers should receive the sum brought out as due to the deceased's estate in the cessation accounts, or the deceased's share of the surplus of assets over liabilities at the completion of the winding up. There is also an issue as to the sum payable to the pursuers in respect of the defenders' use of the assets of the former partnership between the date of the deceased's death and the completion of the winding up.

[2] The stage which the action has reached is a discussion of the parties' preliminary pleas. The court is therefore concerned primarily with their respective cases as pleaded, rather than with evidence. It was however a matter of agreement that the court should have regard to the cessation accounts, to which both parties' pleadings refer.

 

The parties' positions

[3] It may be helpful to begin by explaining the parties' respective positions. It is not in dispute that the deceased and the defenders were partners in a partnership at will governed by Scots law, and that the partnership was dissolved upon the death of the deceased. It is equally not in dispute that the partnership engaged in commercial fishing; that its principal asset was the Marigold, together with the pressure stock licence and quota pertaining to it; and that the profits from the business were divided in specified proportions, the deceased's share being 22/64ths. The pursuers' averment that the assets of the business should, on dissolution, be divided in the same proportions is not formally admitted but does not appear to be in dispute, the defenders' calculation of the sum due to the pursuers being 22/64ths of what is said to have been the final surplus on winding up.

[4] The pursuers aver that, after the deceased died, the books and records of the partnership were forwarded by the partnership's agents, Caley Fisheries, to the partnership's accountants, Messrs Leiper & Summers. Caley Fisheries also provided the accountants with valuations of the partnership's assets. The accountants then prepared cessation accounts as at the date of death. I was informed, and it was not disputed, that the accounts were prepared without instructions to do so. It is averred that the accounts were prepared in accordance with appropriate accounting practice, and that they are a true and accurate statement of the partnership's profit and loss account and balance sheet, and of the partners' capital accounts, as at the date of death.

[5] The accounts cover the period from 1 January 2000 to 17 March 2000, the previous accounts having been for the year ended 31 December 1999. It is apparent from the accounts that they are based on a revaluation of the fishing boat, its value being stated at £825,000 as at 17 March 2000, compared with a figure of £360,000 as at 1 January 2000. Generally, the accounts are detailed and specific.

[6] In these circumstances, the pursuers conclude, first, for declarator that the accounts are true and accurate, and that the pursuers are entitled to payment of the share standing at credit of the deceased in his capital account, and secondly, for payment of £133,537 with interest from 18 March 2000.

[7] The defenders on the other hand aver:

"Following [the deceased's] death, the surviving partners decided with the concurrence of the pursuers to maintain the business and assets of the partnership whilst seeking an agreed settlement of the net capital value attributable to the share of the deceased. The pursuers sought agreement from the defenders to purchase the share. They sought a price which the defenders considered to be unrealistic. Various proposals were exchanged but no agreement was reached. Eventually, in about August 2002 the defenders as the surviving partners decided that, absent agreement, a winding up of the partnership could not be delayed further and that the vessel, licence and quotas must be sold. At that time the first pursuer [the widow of the deceased] refused to countenance the sale of the vessel. After further discussion with the pursuers the winding up was put in hand by the defenders in about October 2002".

[8] The defenders go on to aver that they were advised by Caley Fisheries that the best return would be achieved by decommissioning the vessel under a statutory scheme, and by selling the quota. The pursuers were consulted on the decommissioning proposal and agreed, the first pursuer signing the necessary application form. The application for a decommissioning grant was initially unsuccessful. In August 2003, however, the Scottish Executive made a conditional offer of a grant of £312,000, which was accepted in October 2003 with the concurrence of the pursuers, the first pursuer signing the acceptance form. The fishing quota was transferred to a "dummy vessel", and was finally sold and transferred to the Scottish Fishermen's Organisation for £150,000 under a written agreement entered into in March and April 2005. It is averred that the sums of £312,000 and £150,000 were "paid into the partnership's account with the Bank of Scotland and applied by them to the extinction of partnership debts to the bank". After paying "partnership debts", a surplus of £41,688 remained. The defenders maintain that the deceased's share of that sum - £14,323 - is the amount due to the pursuers. In relation to the difference between the £462,000 received in total for the Marigold and its quota, and the £825,000 figure in the accounts prepared by Leiper & Summers, I was informed that the value of the quota had diminished considerably between 2000 and 2005 as a result of changes in the Common Fisheries Policy, and that the vessel itself had suffered wear and tear, having undergone an extensive refit (costing over £200,000) not long before the death of the deceased, and having continued to be used for fishing between 2000 and its eventual decommissioning. The defenders also aver that Leiper & Summers in any event overstated the value of the deceased's share.

[9] In response to the defenders' averments, the pursuers maintain that the correct construction to place upon the conduct of the defenders after the death of the deceased, in continuing to engage in commercial fishing using the Marigold, is that they formed a new partnership at will. That second partnership continued to use the assets of the original partnership. It borrowed additional amounts. Eventually, under pressure from its creditors, the second partnership decided to wind up its affairs, and proceeded to decommission the Marigold and to sell the quota. The executors were required to execute documentation in order for that process to be completed. It was the second partnership which received the resultant proceeds.

[10] In these circumstances, in addition to a capital sum of £133,537, the pursuers also seek a payment in respect of the use by the defenders of the deceased's share of the assets of the original partnership. The amount sought is calculated as 5 per cent per annum of the value of the deceased's share of the Marigold and its quota as at the date of death. In that regard, the pursuers aver that the value of the Marigold, and of the quota, were £422,300 and £618,730 respectively as at the date of death. These figures are higher than those in the accounts, and are based on valuations subsequently obtained. On the basis of those valuations, the amount due has been calculated as £53,678, and there is a conclusion for payment of that sum. It is acknowledged that the first pursuer has received certain payments from the defenders.

[11] In answer to this claim, the defenders aver:

"[F]rom the date of [the deceased's] death the first pursuer continued to receive his share [of earnings] until the cessation of fishing. On the occasion of each fishing trip settlement she was paid a sum equal to that of the crew members ....Esto, which is denied, the surviving partners comprised a new partnership (the Second Partnership) the first pursuer was a partner thereof and assumed her husband's share of the assets. In the course of a meeting with [one of the defenders] in the Autumn of 2001 she volunteered that she would 'step into his [the deceased's] shoes' until such time as her circumstances changed. She assumed his share as her own. On the hypothesis of a Second Partnership she contributed to the assets, as her own to give, the deceased's share of the assets in the former partnership. Thereafter she received all payments due to a partner in respect of that share.....The first pursuer has received the profit attributable to her husband's share of the partnership assets, and continued to do so until those assets ceased to be used".

[12] The defenders also maintain that, in the event that the contention that there was a second partnership is accepted, they have a right against the first pursuer:

"Esto, which is denied, the defenders are a Second Partnership and as such are obliged to account to the pursuers for the value of the deceased's capital account, the first pursuer is liable to account for her use thereof and dealings therein and the defenders are entitled to contribution et separatim relief from her to the extent of her rateable share thereof. Separatim, the first pursuer is the deceased's executor nominate. In the circumstances and on the hypothesis that, contrary to the defenders' contentions, there is such a Second Partnership and it assumed the assets of the former partnership the first pursuer is liable to account for her intromissions with the estate of the deceased and in particular for her actions in assuming her husband's share and contributing it to the Second Partnership as her share of its assets. She is liable to account to the estate for any diminution in its value following upon those intromissions. The pursuers should look to the first pursuer as an individual for her liability to them in respect of such intromissions. Accordingly the defenders are entitled to a contribution from the first pursuer to the extent that the defenders are held liable to the pursuers for any sum exceeding that deposited to the account of the deceased on the winding up of the business, namely £14,323.42".

 

The legal context

[13] The Scottish law of partnership has a number of aspects which are not altogether straightforward, and on which there is little modern authority. Several are relevant to the present case. The parties' submissions did not address these issues in depth. Rather than proceed directly to a discussion of the parties' submissions, it appears to me to be preferable to begin by attempting to understand, primarily with the assistance of the provisions and authorities cited by counsel, the overall structure of the relevant law. With that structure in mind, the submissions can then be considered in that context.

[14] Considering first the position prior to the death of the deceased, it is helpful to have at least some idea of the nature of the rights that existed in relation to the partnership's assets: in particular, the Marigold and its quota. In Scots law, "a firm is a legal person distinct from the partners of whom it is composed": Partnership Act 1890, section 4(2). It follows that, in general, a partnership is regarded in Scots law as being capable of owning property and of holding rights and assuming obligations.

[15] In the present case, notwithstanding an averment by the pursuers that the Marigold was owned by "the partners" in the proportions 22//64ths to the deceased, and 22/64ths, 10/64ths and 10/64ths respectively to the three other partners, it was made clear by counsel for both parties that their common position was that the Marigold was owned by the partnership; and that was said to be the intended meaning of the averment to which I have just referred. Counsel's submissions proceeded on the basis that the Marigold was owned by the partnership in the same way as other corporeal moveable property. The position is however not so simple. The ownership of ships (including fishing vessels) has long been the subject of special rules, by virtue of the provisions of the Merchant Shipping Acts. The relevant provisions are currently contained in the Merchant Shipping Act 1995 and the Merchant Shipping (Registration of Ships) Regulations 1993 (S.I.1993 No. 3138), as amended. The effect of those provisions is not however critical to my decision, which would be the same even if they did not apply. In the circumstances, I need say little about them, other than in general terms.

[16] Under the Merchant Shipping Acts, the property in a British ship registered in the United Kingdom is divided into sixty-four shares, the ownership of which must be registered. A distinction is drawn by the legislation between the legal title to the shares, which is held by the registered owner, and equitable interests (an expression employed in the 1995 Act, at paragraph 1(2) of Schedule 1), including beneficial ownership (an expression employed in the Regulations, at regulation 1(2)), which may be held by another person. No trust can be registered (regulation 6); and the registered owner has an absolute power of disposal of the shares held in his name, subject to any rights appearing from the register to be vested in any other person (paragraph 1(1) of Schedule 1 to the 1995 Act). A Scottish partnership is not qualified to be the registered owner of a British ship, including a fishing vessel (regulations 12 and 13). When, therefore, the parties to the present action are agreed that the Marigold was owned by the partnership, that would appear to mean that the shares were registered in the names of the partners but that they held the shares for the benefit of the partnership.

[17] So far as the licence and the quota are concerned, the parties' submissions proceeded on the basis that the licence and the quota were incorporeal moveable property owned by the partnership. Counsel were however unable to explain either the licensing system or the quota system. In the circumstances, it would be inappropriate to embark on a detailed analysis of these complex matters. As with the Marigold, however, it is helpful to have at least some idea of the legal position. In broad terms, a fishing boat requires a fishing licence, under the Sea Fish (Conservation) Act 1967 (as amended) and regulations made thereunder, for the purpose of fishing within specified areas. The licence is granted to the owner (or charterer, as the case may be) in respect of a named vessel. The quota system created by EU law for the conservation of fish stocks has been implemented in the United Kingdom in a way which makes use of this licensing system. In outline, a fixed quota allocation, consisting of a number of quota units in respect of each fish stock, is attached to the licence; and the quantity of each fish stock which can be caught by the vessel depends on the quota units. As the pleadings in the present case indicate, it is possible in practice for the quota units attached to the licence issued in respect of a given vessel to be transferred to another licence. Such a transfer may take place when a fishing vessel is decommissioned, and its licence therefore has to be surrendered. Such transfers commonly take place for value. Whether or not the quota units constitute any form of property known to the law (a matter on which I express no opinion), they have a value, as a matter of economic reality, which is capable of realisation by the holder of the licence to which they are attached. In the present case, it is implicit in the pleadings (and is apparent from productions to which reference was made in the course of parties' submissions) that the licence was held in the name of the four partners, presumably on the basis that they were the registered owners of the vessel. As with the vessel itself, the individual partners will have held the licence for the benefit of the partnership.

[18] It is necessary to consider next the position following the death of the deceased. It is a matter of admission that, immediately on the death of the deceased, the partnership was "brought to an end". The defenders' pleadings also refer to the "dissolution" of the partnership; and it is apparent from the submissions that both parties are proceeding on the basis that the partnership was dissolved. That is consistent with the agreed description of the partnership as a partnership at will, and with section 33(1) of the 1890 Act:

"Subject to any agreement between the partners, every partnership is dissolved as regards all the partners by the death or bankruptcy of any partner".

[19] The dissolution of the partnership has the consequence (unless otherwise agreed) that its affairs must be wound up and the assets distributed in accordance with section 44 of the 1890 Act. Although that proposition was disputed in the present case by counsel for the pursuers, it appears to me to be established by the authorities. As Romer L.J stated in Re Bourne [1906] 2 Ch.427 at pages 431-432:

"When a partner dies and the partnership comes to an end, it is not only the right, but the duty, of the surviving partner to realize the assets for the purpose of winding up the partnership affairs, including the payment of the partnership debts".

Although that case was concerned with a situation where there was only one surviving partner, and where there was therefore no possibility of the firm continuing (in the sense in which the relationship of partnership may continue between surviving partners, under their contract of partnership, notwithstanding the death, retirement or expulsion of a partner), the principle is not confined to that situation. It was, for example, expressed in general terms by Viscount Haldane in Hugh Stevenson & Sons Ltd v Aktiengesellschaft fűr Cartonnagen-Industrie [1918] A.C.239 at page 246:

"In the absence of a special agreement to the contrary, and there is none such in the contract before us, the rule is that on a dissolution of partnership all the property of the partnership shall be converted into money by a sale, and that the proceeds of the sale, after discharging all the partnership debts and liabilities, shall be divided among the partners according to their shares".

[20] These dicta do not depend on any special feature of English law. The necessity of a winding up (unless otherwise agreed) has also long been established in Scots law. Clark on Partnership, for example, states (at Vol. II, page 682):

"When a company [i.e. a partnership] is dissolved by death, the concern must, as in the case of dissolution from any other cause, be wound up with as little delay as possible. The whole company property must be realized, the debts constituted and collected, the personalty and heritable property brought to a sale; and even the good-will, when it is of a nature to go with the premises, must in like manner be disposed of".

[21] The duty to wind up the affairs of the partnership is reflected in section 39 of the 1890 Act:

"On the dissolution of a partnership every partner is entitled, as against the other partners in the firm, and all persons claiming through them in respect of their interests as partners, to have the property of the partnership applied in payment of the debts and liabilities of the firm, and to have the surplus assets after such payment applied in payment of what may be due to the partners respectively after deducting what may be due from them as partners to the firm; and for that purpose any partner or his representatives may, on the termination of the partnership, apply to the court to wind up the business and affairs of the firm".

[22] Winding up can be carried out in two ways: either by the former partners, as envisaged by section 38 of the 1890 Act, or by the court, under section 39. In the present case, it is the former provision which is relevant. Winding up can also take different forms. In some cases the business may be disposed of as a going concern; and in some such cases, the acquirers may be a new partnership, comprising the surviving partners of the dissolved partnership. In other cases, the business may have to be broken up and the assets sold.

[23] The dissolution of the partnership, and the consequent duty of the surviving partners to wind up its affairs, give rise to numerous possible questions, several of which are relevant to the present case. First, what happens to the rights and property of the partnership on dissolution, if the partnership then ceases to exist? Secondly, can the surviving partners continue to carry on the business of the dissolved partnership as part of the winding up? Thirdly, if they continue the business, whether as part of the winding up or otherwise, in what capacity do they do so? In particular, are they to be regarded as a new partnership (as counsel for the pursuers submitted in the present case), or as acting in some other capacity (for example, as trustees, as counsel for the defenders submitted)? Fourthly, how are post-dissolution profits (or losses) resulting from the use of partnership assets, and increases (or decreases) in the value of those assets, to be treated?

[24] In attempting to answer these questions, the starting point is the 1890 Act. It is important at the outset to understand the nature of that Act, and its relationship to the pre-existing common law. The 1890 Act began life in the form of a Private Member's Bill drafted by the young Frederick Pollock for the Associated Chambers of Commerce, following the publication of the first edition of his Digest of the Law of Partnership (as Pollock explained in the 2nd edition at pages xxv-xxvi, and in the 4th edition at pages 161-162). As Pollock later narrated (in the 5th edition, at page v), the Bill was:

"intended, first, to codify the general law of partnership; secondly, to authorize and regulate the formation of private partnerships with limited liability ....; and, thirdly, to establish universal and compulsory registration of firms".

The second and third of these objectives were later dropped, so that the provisions eventually enacted (which were substantially those of Pollock's Bill, subject to some amendments) were designed, for the most part, to codify the existing law.

[25] As Lord Rodger of Earlsferry explained in his 1991 Maccabaean Lecture,

"In its original form [the Bill] did not apply to Scotland but in the final stages of its passage through Parliament this was changed. The change was supported by the Faculty of Advocates who thought that the addition of a few words would be enough 'so to frame the Bill as to make it the means of effecting a complete assimilation of the laws of the two kingdoms on partnership'"

("The Codification of Commercial Law in Victorian Britain" (1992) 108 LQR 570 at page 578).

[26] The 1890 Act was not drafted in the manner of most modern statutes. As Pollock explained (e.g. in the introduction to the 2nd edition), he deliberately eschewed the style of the Parliamentary draftsman, and instead took as his model the Indian Codes of Macaulay and Stephen, which stated the central principles of the existing law in a series of general propositions. Nor did the Act purport to be an exhaustive statement of the law. As Pollock explained (in the 5th edition, at pages vii-viii):

"It will be observed that the Partnership Act does not purport to abrogate the case-law on the subject, but on the contrary declares that 'the rules of equity and common law applicable to partnership shall continue in force except so far as they are inconsistent with the express provisions of this Act' (section 46). The Act, therefore, will doubtless be read and applied in the light of the decisions which have built up the existing rules. Should any practitioner imagine that he might now relegate Lord Justice Lindley's book, for example, to an upper shelf, he would soon be undeceived".

The last sentence in that passage referred to Lindley on Partnership, the 5th edition of which had been published in 1888.

[27] As a measure designed to codify the law (albeit partially), the 1890 Act has to be approached, in the first instance, in the manner described by Lord Herschell in Bank of England v Vagliano Brothers [1891] A.C.107 at pages 144-145:

"I think the proper course is in the first instance to examine the language of the statute and to ask what is its natural meaning, uninfluenced by any considerations derived from the previous state of the law, and not to start with inquiring how the law previously stood, and then, assuming that it was probably intended to leave it unaltered, to see if the words of the enactment will bear an interpretation in conformity with this view".

At the same time, his Lordship said, at page 145:

"I am of course far from asserting that recourse may never be had to the previous state of the law for the purpose of aiding in the construction of the provisions of the code. If, for example, a provision be of doubtful import, such resort would be perfectly legitimate".

Those dicta related to the Bills of Exchange Act 1882 (which contained a provision similar to section 46 of the 1890 Act), but would appear to be equally applicable to the 1890 Act.

[28] Sections 32 to 44 of the 1890 Act, in particular, form a group of sections headed "Dissolution of Partnership, and its consequences". They are, in effect, the part of the partnership code contained in the 1890 Act concerned with dissolution and its consequences. As such, they should in my opinion be read together.

[29] The provision of the 1890 Act most directly concerned with the effect of dissolution upon the partnership is section 38. So far as material, section 38 provides:

"After the dissolution of a partnership the authority of each partner to bind the firm, and the other rights and obligations of the partners, continue notwithstanding the dissolution so far as may be necessary to wind up the affairs of the partnership, and to complete transactions begun but unfinished at the time of the dissolution, but not otherwise".

[30] Following Bank of England v Vagliano Brothers the starting point, in considering section 38, is the language of the section itself. The section provides for the continuation, notwithstanding the dissolution of the partnership, of "the authority of each partner to bind the firm, and the other rights and obligations of the partners". The authority of each partner to bind the firm, prior to dissolution, is succinctly described in section 5 (the sidenote to which is "Power of partner to bind the firm"):

"Every partner is an agent of the firm and his other partners for the purpose of the business of the partnership; and the acts of every partner who does any act for carrying on in the usual way business of the kind carried on by the firm ..... bind the firm and his partners.....".

[31] If the agency described in section 5 is not continued in force after dissolution by the reference in section 38 to "the authority of each partner to bind the firm" (on the view that the "firm", as defined by section 4 in relation to Scotland, ceases to exist on dissolution), it is in any event continued in force by the reference to "the other rights and obligations of the partners". The other rights and obligations which exist during the subsistence of a partnership are manifold. They include rights and obligations of partners in relation to third parties, such as the joint and several liability of individual partners for the debts and obligations of the firm, under section 9. They also include rights and obligations of partners as between one another, such as the obligation to render accounts, under section 28. Insofar as the continuation of those rights and obligations may be necessary to wind up the affairs of the partnership, and to complete unfinished transactions, that continuation is effected by section 38. As will appear, however, rights and obligations in respect of matters which are collateral to the winding up or the completion of unfinished transactions, such as the use of the partnership assets to derive private profits or to continue the business of the partnership, are dealt with by other provisions (sections 29 and 42 respectively, so far as those examples are concerned).

[32] The background to section 38, including the pre-existing law which it was intended to summarise, is consistent with this approach to its interpretation, and provides additional assistance in so far as section 38 can be described (for the reasons discussed below) as being, in Lord Herschell's words, "of doubtful import". Section 38 was modelled on clause 55 of Pollock's Bill, but was more widely expressed. Clause 55 had been in almost the same terms as section 38, but instead of the phrase "so far as may be necessary to wind up the affairs of the partnership", clause 55 had employed the phrase "so far as may be necessary to settle and liquidate existing demands". In that regard, clause 55 had followed almost verbatim a passage in the then current edition of Lindley on Partnership (4th edition, 1878, Vol.I at page 412) in which the continuing agency of a partner after the dissolution of the partnership was described:

"The doctrine now in question cannot, it is submitted, be carried further than this, viz, that notwithstanding dissolution, a partner has implied authority to bind the firm so far as may be necessary to settle and liquidate existing demands, and to complete transactions begun, but unfinished, at the time of the dissolution".

Lindley also acknowledged that a partner had the power to dispose of partnership assets following dissolution.

[33] As I have explained, section 38 adopted more general wording, resembling that of the corresponding provision (section 263) of the Indian Contract Act 1872 ("After a dissolution of partnership, the rights and obligations of the partners continue in all things necessary for winding up the business of the partnership"). As a result, section 38 might be interpreted (as it was by Lord Justice Clerk Scott Dickson in Dickson v National Bank of Scotland 1916 S.C.589 at page 594) as stating two alternative purposes for which a partner's rights and obligations would continue notwithstanding dissolution: first, "to wind up the affairs of the partnership", and secondly, "to complete transactions begun but unfinished at the time of the dissolution".

[34] It is apparent, both from Pollock's Digest and from a commentary on the 1890 Act, by Lord Lindley and others, which was published in 1891 as a Supplement to Lindley on Partnership, that section 38 was understood at the time to reflect the existing law. The Supplement is of particular interest as it contains separate commentaries on the 1890 Act from an English and a Scottish perspective, the author of the Scottish commentary being J.C. Lorimer, who had been a member of the Faculty of Advocates' Committee on the Bill.

[35] Lorimer's commentary on section 38 states that "this is the existing law" and refers to the decision in Douglas Heron & Co v Gordon (1795) 3 Paton 428, where the House of Lords had affirmed an interlocutor finding "that every copartnery must, from its nature, subsist after it has been dissolved, or the term for which it was entered into expired, to the effect of winding up its affairs". Lorimer also refers to Bell's Commentaries (Vol.2, page 527, in McLaren's edition):

"The partnership is dissolved in so far as the power of contracting new debts is concerned, but continued to the effect of levying the debts, paying the engagements of the company, and calling on the partners to answer the demands".

The position in Scots law prior to the 1890 Act is described more fully in Clark on Partnership, Vol.II, at pages 672-673:

"When a partnership is brought to a termination, it still continues to subsist for the purposes of winding up; and until this has been accomplished, the partnership relation cannot be said to have entirely ceased. In the absence of special agreement to the contrary, the former partners have the right and power of winding up. ....In the case of dissolution by death, the power vests in the surviving partners, to the exclusion of the representatives of the deceased partner .....

But the partnership, and with it the agency of the former partners to bind their fellows, at once ceases as to all future contracts; it subsists only for the purposes of winding up, which will be strictly construed to mean recovering of debts, fulfilling existing obligations, and calling on the former partners to contribute ....Such powers of agency as the partners retain is strictly confined to winding up or completing transactions begun, and not terminated at the date of dissolution".

[36] The effect of section 38, in relation to Scots law, was considered in Dickson v National Bank of Scotland 1917 S.C.(H.L.) 50, where Lord Finlay L.C. said, at page 52:

"Section 38 of the Partnership Act 1890, really embodied the old law relating to partnership derived originally from the Roman law, and it is this - that for certain purposes a partnership continues notwithstanding dissolution. There is an interesting passage quoted from Paulus in the Digest by Sir Frederick Pollock in his edition of the Partnership Act, where it is pointed out that, although when one of a firm dies the survivors cannot undertake new transactions on behalf of the firm, they can complete what is left unfinished, and that distinction is really what animates this section 38 and the law of which section 38 is the embodiment".

In relation to Paulus, the reference is to Justinian's Digest III 5.21:

"Si vivo Titio negotia eius administrare coepi, intermittere mortuo eo non debeo: nova tamen inchoare necesse mihi non est, vetera explicare ac conservare necessarium est. Ut accidit cum alter ex socius mortuus est: nam quaecumque prioris negotii explicandi causa geruntur, nihilum refert, quo tempore consummentur, sed quo tempore inchoarentur"

("If I began to manage Titius's affairs during his lifetime, I ought not to leave off at his death. However, there is no necessity for me to enter into new transactions, though it is necessary to complete and look after old ones. It is the same as when one of two partners has died; for as regards any transactions to complete previous business, the issue is not when these are finished, but when they were begun"). For present purposes, the important point to be taken from Lord Finlay's speech, with which Lord Dunedin, Lord Shaw of Dunfermline and Lord Parker of Waddington expressed their agreement, is that "the survivors cannot undertake new transactions on behalf of the firm".

[37] Section 38 was considered again by the House of Lords in Inland Revenue v Graham's Trustees 1971 S.C.(H.L.)1, where the issue was whether a non-assignable lease to a partnership continued in existence after the firm had been dissolved as a consequence of the death of one of the partners. One of the arguments was that the surviving partners were entitled to remain in occupation of the subjects under the lease (which had not been due to expire until a date subsequent to that of the death) by virtue of section 38, reliance being placed on the authority "to complete transactions begun but unfinished". Although no argument of that kind arises in the present case, the speeches contain some observations of wider relevance.

[38] As a matter of construction of the partnership agreement, Lord Reid concluded (at page 20) that the contract of co-partnery came to an end on the death of any of the partners, and that the partnership therefore ceased to exist. In relation to section 38, Lord Reid said (at page 21):

"It was argued that 'transactions' means bargains. But that would deprive this provision of all content, for it is clear that surviving partners have no right to bind the assets of the dissolved firm by making new bargains or contracts. Their right and duty is to wind up its affairs. In my view this must mean that the surviving partners have the right and duty to complete all unfinished operations necessary to fulfil contracts of the firm which were still in force when the firm was dissolved .....

In my opinion, section 38 does not make the surviving partners parties to the firm's contracts and so keep those contracts alive. That would involve a radical change in Scots law. But I see no difficulty in holding that this section does require unfinished operations to be completed under the conditions which would have applied if the contract had still existed".

Lord Upjohn similarly proceeded on the basis that the partnership ceased to exist on the date of death. In relation to section 38, his Lordship said (at pages 26-27):

"It seems to me that the primary purpose of that section is to enable the surviving partners to bind the deceased or outgoing partners or their estates in order that the affairs of the partnership may be properly wound up. In England it may be that it is not often that this section is required to justify the completion of contracts with other parties, because such rights and obligations can normally and usually be dealt with by reference to the general law. Thus, for example, if a firm contracts to build a bridge, that contract is not affected by its dissolution. The remaining partners and the outgoing or the estate of a deceased partner will normally remain both entitled and jointly and severally liable under the general law to complete the bargain. Section 38 makes it plain that the continuing partners can in doing so bind the ex-partners or their estates. But I can well understand that in Scots law, without giving it any different a construction, it may be necessary to invoke the section more often than under English law because of section 4(2) of the Partnership Act, and, the partnership having come to an end as a legal person on dissolution, the contract presumably must come to an end. But, nevertheless, this section makes it plain that the ex-partners will remain entitled and bound to carry out the contracts made in the name of the partnership and must complete all those contracts and other matters which are in medio when the partnership was a going concern. But their rights under section 38 are limited by the provision that they may do so only so far as it may be necessary to wind up the affairs of the partnership and - this is the important passage - to complete transactions begun but unfinished at the time of the dissolution".

[39] The approach adopted in Inland Revenue v Graham's Trustees was followed in Lujo Properties Limited v Green 1997 S.L.T. 225. The question in that case was whether an assignable lease remained an asset of the partnership, which could be assigned in the course of the winding up, notwithstanding that the tenant (the partnership) had ceased to exist. That question does not arise in the present case; but the opinion of Lord Penrose (at page 236) also contains observations concerned with the effect of dissolution on a partnership's interest in shares in a company, which are relevant in considering the effect of dissolution on a partnership's interest in shares in a vessel:

"Where a partnership was beneficial owner of shares in a private limited company whose articles restricted transfer, none of the former partners might be acceptable to the directors of the company as shareholders following dissolution. But the shares would not disappear simply because there was no subsisting member-company relationship involving the firm. The dissolution of the firm would imply that the persona recognised as beneficial owner perhaps under a trust registration had disappeared. But the shares would remain in existence and would be capable of transfer to someone acceptable to the directors as a member".

[40] The approach adopted in Inland Revenue v Graham's Trustees creates a difficulty in relation to property rights in partnership assets, following the dissolution of the partnership, which the earlier authorities avoided by deeming the partnership to continue in existence until the winding up had been completed. In the present case, it might be necessary to consider the question of property rights if the defenders' contention that the first pursuer had wrongfully intromitted with the estate of the deceased required to be examined: for the reasons explained below, however, it is unnecessary to examine that contention at present. The more relevant issue, for present purposes, concerns the "partnership assets" (or "assets of the firm") within the meaning of the 1890 Act (in particular, sections 42 and 44). Whatever the property rights might be following dissolution, it can hardly be doubted that the Marigold would continue to constitute an asset of the firm for the purposes of those provisions. Although, as explained earlier, the 64 shares in the Marigold appear to have been registered in the names of the partners, they held those shares for the benefit of the partnership. When the partnership was dissolved, it follows (on the approach adopted in Inland Revenue v Graham's Trustees and Lujo Properties Limited v Green) that the holder of the beneficial interest in the shares prior to dissolution ceased to exist. The shares would have to continue to be regarded as "partnership assets" for the purposes of the 1890 Act, and would be held by the registered owners for the purpose of winding up the affairs of the partnership. The quota units attached to the licence would equally fall to be realised as part of the winding up.

[41] Another question which arises, in the light of the authorities discussed, concerns whether the surviving partners are entitled under section 38 to carry on the partnership business. Lord Finlay L.C. said in Dickson v National Bank of Scotland that "the survivors cannot undertake new transactions on behalf of the firm", and Lord Reid said in Inland Revenue v Graham's Trustees, that "the surviving partners have no right to bind the assets of the dissolved firm by making new bargains or contracts". So construed, section 38 reflects the pre-existing Scots law, as stated in the passages from Bell's Commentaries and Clark on Partnership which were quoted earlier. At the same time, certain contracts may be "necessary to wind up the affairs of the partnership": a partner must, in particular, have authority to sell the partnership assets if the affairs of the partnership are to be wound up (cf. Hurst v Bryk [2002] 1 A.C.185, 196 per Lord Millett) and therefore must be authorised to some extent, by section 38, to make new contracts.

[42] Whether section 38 authorises the carrying on of the business of the dissolved partnership (other than the completion of unfinished transactions), in order to facilitate its eventual realisation, is not a straightforward question. In Re Bourne it was conceded that there is a duty to carry on the business if it is necessary to do so; but the court appears to have been of the view that the concession was correctly made, Vaughan Williams L.J. stating at pages 430-431:

"The real truth of the matter is that, leaving out all questions of legal estate, there is, as between the surviving partner and the representatives of the deceased partner, an overriding duty to wind up the partnership assets and to do such acts as are necessary for that purpose, and if it is necessary for that winding up either to continue the business or borrow money or to sell assets, whether those assets are real or personal, the right and the duty are co-extensive".

A similar approach was adopted by the Court of Appeal in Don King Productions Inc v Warren [2000] Ch.291, which was concerned with the renewal of management contracts by former partners in a dissolved firm of boxing promoters, prior to the completion of the winding up. Morritt L.J., with whose judgment the other members of the court agreed, referred (at paragraph 42) to:

"[t]he duty of a partner to renew a management or promotion agreement for the benefit of the partnership so as to facilitate the beneficial winding up of its affairs, cf section 38 of the Partnership Act 1890".

[43] From a practical point of view, there may be advantages in enabling the business of a dissolved partnership to be carried on during the twilight period of winding up: a business may be realised to best advantage as a going concern, and the continuation of trading may be necessary to maintain the value of the goodwill. On any view, however, section 38 cannot warrant the continuation of the business for more than a temporary period. On the approach adopted in Re Bourne and Don King Productions, it would appear to be necessary to examine the facts in order to determine whether a given transaction arose from the conduct of the business of the dissolved partnership by former partners for the purpose of winding up the affairs of the partnership, and was "necessary" for that purpose, or whether it was attributable to some other relationship between the former partners.

[44] In the light of the Scottish authorities, on the other hand, there appear to me to be doubts as to the extent of the surviving partners' authority under section 38 to enter into new contractual commitments: in particular, the authorities suggest that the surviving partners do not have authority under section 38 to enter into new trading contracts. That approach is arguably more consistent than the alternative with section 43 of the 1890 Act (discussed below), in terms of which the outgoing or deceased partner's share is a debt accruing at the date of the dissolution. Reading sections 38 and 43 together, they might be thought to suggest that winding up is a procedure whereby the amount of the debt which accrued at the date of dissolution is ascertained and paid, in which event the winding up would not be expected to encompass new trading contracts. That conclusion might also be thought to be consistent with section 42, under which profits earned through the continuation of the partnership business after dissolution are dealt with separately and on a different basis from pre-dissolution profits. It is however unnecessary to express any concluded view on these matters at present: for the reasons explained below, my decision does not turn on these matters, although they may require to be considered again once the issues between the parties come to be addressed on a proper footing.

[45] Where there is a delay in winding up the affairs of a partnership, sections 29 and 42 of the 1890 Act may also apply. Section 29 provides:

"(1) Every partner must account to the firm for any benefit derived by him without the consent of the other partners from any transaction concerning the partnership, or from any use by him of the partnership property, name, or business connection.

(2) This section applies also to transactions undertaken after a partnership has been dissolved by the death of a partner, and before the affairs thereof have been completely wound up, either by any surviving partner or by the representatives of the deceased partner".

The principle expressed in section 29(1) can be regarded as following from the relation of agency between each partner and the firm and his other partners, established in accordance with section 5, and the good faith which is required in all transactions between partners. The applicability of the same principle during the period between a dissolution and the completion of winding up is made clear by section 29(2), and reflects the pre-existing law in both England and Scotland. Indeed, although section 29(2) is concerned only with the situation where the dissolution has resulted from the death of a partner, section 29 also applies to other dissolutions (Pathirana v Pathirana [1967] 1 A.C.233).

[46] Section 42 of the 1890 Act deals with the situation where the surviving or continuing partners carry on the partnership business with its capital or assets without any final settlement of accounts with the outgoing partner or his estate. It applies not only where the partnership continues but also where the partnership assets are used by a new partnership (Chandroutie v Gajadhar [1987] A.C.147). It confers on the outgoing partner or his estate an option:

"to such share of the profits made since the dissolution as the court may find to be attributable to the use of his share of the partnership assets, or to interest at the rate of five per cent per annum on the amount of his share of the partnership assets".

This reflects the pre-existing Scots law (summarised in Lorimer's commentary on section 42), under which interest, or a share of the profits, was awarded in respect of the funds of the deceased or outgoing partner which were retained and employed in the business. The rationale is explained in Clark on Partnership (at page 669) as follows:

"If on the retirement, bankruptcy, or death of a partner, the others continue to carry on the business as before, without coming to any settlement with the late partner, they will be liable to account to him or his representatives for so much of the subsequent share of the profits as can be fairly attributed to such share of the capital as he was entitled to, but had not yet received. The principle upon which this doctrine is based is the very equitable one, that no one can make use of the capital of another for purposes of gain, especially involving risk of its loss, without the knowledge and consent of its owner; and that if this be done, the user must communicate the proceeds of the speculation to the true owner".

[47] Section 29(2) and section 42 may both apply in a situation where the partnership assets are used by surviving partners during the period between dissolution and the completion of winding up (Pathirana v Pathirana; John Taylors v Masons [2001] EWCA Civ.2106): section 29(2) is concerned with the obligation of the surviving partners to account for benefits which they have derived, and section 42 is concerned with the right of the representatives of the deceased partner to be compensated for the use of the deceased's capital.

[48] It is also necessary to consider section 43 of the 1890 Act, which provides:

"Subject to any agreement between the partners, the amount due from surviving or continuing partners to an outgoing partner or the representatives of a deceased partner in respect of the outgoing or deceased partner's share is a debt accruing at the date of the dissolution or death".

[49] The interpretation of this provision has given rise to difficulty. The current (18th) edition of Lindley & Banks on Partnership states (at paragraph 23-34):

"It is, however, difficult to see how this section can apply in the case of a general dissolution: if the outgoing/deceased partner's share is indeed converted into a debt, it is of a most unusual nature, since it is clear that he or his estate is entitled to a full share of any increase in the value of the partnership assets accruing in the period between the date of dissolution and the date of realisation and, conversely, must bear a full share of any diminution in value during that period".

[50] One conclusion which might be drawn is that section 43 is not intended to apply to a dissolution where there is to be a winding up. That was the view taken by Lorimer in his commentary on the 1890 Act (at page 111):

"This section proceeds on the footing that there is no winding up, but that by contract, the value of a deceased or retiring partner's share is to be ascertained and paid out. Accordingly the date, unless otherwise stipulated, at which the value falls to be ascertained will be the date of dissolution. The amount thus becomes a debt bearing interest from that date".

The same view is expressed in the current edition of Lindley & Banks on Partnership at paragraphs 23-34 and 26-04. The Law Commission and the Scottish Law Commission in their Joint Consultation Paper on Partnership Law (Law Commission Consultation Paper No.159, Scottish Law Commission Paper No.111, 2000) likewise distinguished between "the position where a partner leaves a continuing partnership and the position where the partnership comes to an end as regards all the partners", and expressed the view (at paragraph 7.5) that "section 43 seems to be confined to the continuing partnership".

[51] I have reservations about this approach to section 43. The language of the provision is general in its scope: it does not bear to be restricted to any particular type of dissolution of a partnership. It is concerned with "the amount due ....in respect of the outgoing or deceased partner's share". The share of a partner has long been understood to mean "his proportion of the partnership assets after they all have been realised and converted into money, and all the debts and liabilities have been paid and discharged" (Lindley & Banks on Partnership, paragraph 19-05). The amount due in respect of the outgoing or deceased partner's share is therefore an amount which (unless otherwise agreed) is ascertained by a realisation of the assets and the payment of partnership debts: in other words, by a winding up. The outgoing or deceased partner's share does not appear to include his interest in post-dissolution profits, which is covered instead by section 42, and possibly also by other provisions such as section 29. To describe the outgoing or deceased partner's share, so understood, as "a debt accruing at the date of the dissolution" does not appear to me to cause an insuperable difficulty. Where there is to be a winding up, the debt can be understood as being debitum in praesenti, solvendum in futuro, and also as being in an amount which is unascertained when the debt accrues but ascertainable through the procedure of winding up.

[52] A consideration of the background to section 43 tends to support the view that it applies to all dissolutions. The discussion of section 43 in Pollock's Digest suggests that an objective of the provision was to ensure that claims by an outgoing partner, or by the representatives of a deceased partner, were subject to the limitation period under English law (or, under Scots law, to the prescriptive period) applicable to ordinary debts, with time running from the date of dissolution. The section was regarded, in particular, as giving statutory effect to the decision of the House of Lords in Knox v Gye (1872) L.R. 5 H.L.656. In the leading speech in that case, Lord Westbury said (at page 675):

"In deciding this case, it must be recollected that the representative of a deceased partner has no specific interest in, or claim upon, any particular part of the partnership estate. The whole property therein accrues to the surviving partner, and he is the owner thereof both at law and in equity. The right of the deceased partner's representative consists in having an account of the property, of its collection and application, and in recovering that portion of the clear balance that accrues to the deceased's share and interest in the partnership.

Another source of error in this matter is the looseness with which the word 'trustee' is frequently used. The surviving partner is often called a 'trustee' but the term is used inaccurately. He is not a trustee, either expressly or by implication. On the death of a partner the law confers on his representatives certain rights as against the surviving partner, and imposes upon the latter correspondent obligations".

The intended significance of the use of the word "debt", in section 43, appears to have been to make it clear that the surviving partners were not trustees for the deceased partner's representatives in respect of his interest in the partnership, and that the claim of the representatives against the surviving partners was therefore subject to the Statute of Limitations. Lord Lindley's commentary on the section, in its application to English law (in the Supplement), is to the same effect. Interpreted as a provision concerned primarily with prescription and limitation, and with the related question whether the surviving partners should be regarded as trustees, section 43 can be understood as applicable to all dissolutions.

[53] Finally, section 44 of the 1890 Act sets out rules which are to be observed (subject to any agreement), "in settling accounts between the partners after a dissolution of partnership". These rules provide for the payment of losses, and then for the application of the assets of the firm, any surplus being divided between the partners.

 

The parties' submissions

The pursuers' claim based on accounts as at the date of death

[54] On behalf of the defenders, it was submitted in the first place that, in the absence of agreement, there was no basis for the deceased's share of the assets to be determined by accounts drawn up as at the date of his death: the affairs of the partnership had to be wound up by the surviving partners and distributed in accordance with section 44 of the 1890 Act. Reference was made to Thomson, Petitioner, 1893 S.L.T.59, Re Bourne, Hugh Stevenson & Sons Ltd v Aktiengesellschaft für Cartonnagen-Industrie and Hurst v Bryk. The pursuers' averments in support of their conclusion for declarator that they were entitled to payment of the sum brought out by the cessation accounts, and their conclusion for payment of that sum, were based on a valuation of the deceased's share as at the date of death rather than on the amount to which the estate was entitled under section 44, and were accordingly irrelevant. The defenders maintained that they had carried out a winding up, after they had attempted, unsuccessfully, to agree a negotiated settlement with the pursuers. If the pursuers were dissatisfied with the defenders' calculation of the amount due to the estate on winding up, their remedy lay in an action of count, reckoning and payment. Reference was made to Cruikshank v Sutherland (1923) 92 L.J.(Ch.)136, Noble v Noble 1965 S.L.T.415, 1983 S.L.T.339 (Appendix), Shaw v Shaw 1968 S.L.T.94 and Clark v Watson 1982 S.L.T.450.

[55] In response, counsel for the pursuers submitted that since the death of the deceased brought about the dissolution of the partnership, section 43 of the 1890 Act applied. The debt to the deceased's estate accrued as at the date of death. The deceased's entitlement must therefore be based on a valuation as at the date of death. Any change in value between the date of death and the date of realisation must be ignored. Reference was made to Noble v Noble, Shaw v Shaw, Clark v Watson, and Thom's Executors v Russell & Aitken 1983 S.L.T.335. Although section 39 conferred on an outgoing partner (or the representatives of a deceased partner) a right to have a winding up, there was no duty to carry out a winding up.

[56] In a brief reply on this aspect of the case, counsel for the defenders did not dispute that section 43 was applicable, but submitted that it was only at the end of the winding up that the amount of the debt due to the estate could be ascertained, notwithstanding that the debt accrued at the date of death.

[57] For the reasons I have explained, it appears to me that, unless otherwise agreed, there must be a winding up of the affairs of a partnership when the partnership is dissolved. As discussed earlier, there is room for argument as to whether section 43 is applicable to all dissolutions. I am content to proceed on the basis, adopted by counsel for both parties, that section 43 is so applicable: a basis which accords with my own provisional view. Even on that view, however, the proposition that, because section 43 characterises the amount due by the defenders in respect of the deceased's share as a debt accruing at the date of dissolution, that amount must therefore be ascertained by a valuation as at that date, rather than by a winding up, appears to me to be a non sequitur. In addition, as I have indicated, the proposition is inconsistent with the duty of the surviving partners to wind up the affairs of the partnership (unless otherwise agreed) and to distribute any surplus in accordance with section 44. It is also inconsistent with the principle that the outgoing partner, or the estate of the deceased partner, is entitled to a full share of any increase in the value of the partnership assets accruing in the period between the date of dissolution and the date of realisation: Barclays Bank Trust Co Ltd v Bluff [1982] 1 Ch.172, Chandroutie v Gajadhar and Popat v Shonchhatra [1997] 1 W.L.R.1367.

[58] A cessation account prepared as at the date of dissolution is not therefore (unless otherwise agreed) the measure of the amount due to the estate of a deceased partner. The balance due to the estate must (unless otherwise agreed) be ascertained by winding up the affairs of the partnership and following the rules prescribed in section 44. If the pursuers do not accept the defenders' calculation of the amount due to them under section 44, the appropriate remedy under Scots law is (normally, at least) an action of accounting.

[59] In the circumstances, I can deal briefly with a second basis on which the pursuers' case, so far as based on the cessation accounts, was challenged. It was argued that, since the defenders were under an obligation to account to the pursuers, the pursuers' remedy must inevitably be an action of count, reckoning and payment: the pursuers could not themselves produce an account and seek payment of the amount shown as being due to them (unless the account was agreed to be the measure of the defenders' liability). Reference was made to Green v Moran 2002 S.C.575.

[60] The latter case does not however support the proposition that an action of count, reckoning and payment must always be raised. On the contrary, Lord Macfadyen in that case accepted (at paragraph 12) that the pursuer could sue for payment of a specific sum, but must in that event make "relevant averments addressing the proper measure of his entitlement, and sufficiently specific averments giving fair notice to the defenders of the way in which he contends the valuation of the assets should be undertaken". It was because the pursuers' pleadings in that case did not measure up to that standard that the action was dismissed. Reference might also be made to Marchmont Ltd v Clayton 1989 S.L.T.725, where Lord President Emslie, delivering the Opinion of the Court, said (at page 728):

"where, as here, the actual sum allegedly due by the defender is known to the pursuers the appropriate remedy is an ordinary action for payment".

If, contrary to my view, this was a case in which the pursuers' entitlement could be established by accounts drawn up as at the date of death, I would not have refused to allow the pursuers' case to proceed to proof on the basis of the accounts produced.

 

The pursuers' claim under section 42 of the 1890 Act

[61] On behalf of the defenders, certain criticisms were made of the pursuers' pleadings in support of their claim under section 42 of the 1890 Act: that the pleadings as to the ownership of the vessel and the quota were unclear as to whether ownership was held by the partnership or by the individual partners, and that the pursuers had failed to take account of the payment made by the defenders to the first pursuer.

62] Although not perhaps a model of clarity, the pursuers' pleadings about these matters nevertheless appear to me to give fair notice of the pursuers' position. So far as the payments made to the first pursuer are concerned, counsel for the pursuers conceded that they ought to be taken into account. Any amount awarded under section 42 will therefore have to reflect those payments, once their amount has been established. Precisely how the payments ought to be taken into account - whether merely as payments on account of the sum due to the estate, or as reducing the deceased's share in the partnership assets - was not discussed in the present case. In the circumstances, I express no opinion on the matter, which I note was discussed in Sandhu v Gill [2005] EWCA Civ.1297, [2006] 2 W.L.R.8, to which reference was made by counsel.

[63] It was also noted during the discussion in the present case that the sum sued for has been calculated by taking five per cent per annum of the deceased's profit share and applying that fraction to the value of the capital assets of the firm, disregarding liabilities. The reference in section 42(1) to the outgoing or deceased partner's "share of the partnership assets" must however in my view be intended to refer to his share of the net assets of the partnership, rather than to a proportion of the gross assets: the object of section 42 is to compensate the outgoing partner or his estate for the retention and use of his funds, and it is therefore the amount of those funds which is relevant to the calculation of interest. I note that the same conclusion was reached by the Court of Appeal in Sandhu v Gill. As Neuberger L.J. observed in that case (at paragraph 35):

"[I]t would seem to me quite remarkable if the partner who carries on the business could be obliged to pay the excluded partner interest based on a sum equal to the value of the latter's interest in the gross assets of the partnership, i.e. his interest in the assets of the partnership, without taking into account the liabilities of the partnership".

One implication is that the amount payable under section 42 cannot be calculated until the amount of the outgoing or deceased partner's share of the partnership assets has first been determined: something which, in the present case, will have to be determined (in the absence of agreement) by an action of accounting.

 

The pursuers' averments of a second partnership
[64
] A further matter raised on behalf of the defenders concerned the pursuers' averments that, following the death of the deceased, the defenders formed a new partnership, which continued to use the Marigold and the quota to engage in commercial fishing. In her submissions, counsel for the pursuers argued that the existence of the new partnership supported her argument that the pursuers should receive the deceased's share of the assets of the original partnership as valued at the date of dissolution, rather than the lower value eventually realised. In essence, her argument was that, if the surviving partners elected to form a new partnership which traded using the assets of the original partnership, instead of winding up the affairs of the original partnership, that new partnership should bear the risk of any diminution in the value of the assets (including the diminution in value attributable to their use of the assets), rather than the deceased's estate having to bear any part of that loss.

[65] In response, counsel for the defenders argued that the pursuers' averments about a new partnership were insufficiently specific, and in any event irrelevant: the correct analysis, it was said, was that the defenders had acted as trustees of the assets of the original partnership, holding those assets in trust for those entitled to benefit from them, and for the creditors of the dissolved partnership. They had carried on the business in that capacity. In that regard, reliance was placed on a dictum of Lord Dunedin, in Hugh Stevenson & Sons Ltd v Aktiengesellschaft für Cartonnagen-Industrie (at page 248), in which the appellants were one of the partners of an Anglo-German partnership which had been dissolved by the outbreak of the First World War:

"The appellants have at their own hand continued the business. The result in law is that they carry on the business as trustees for the partners until the winding up is effected".

Counsel also referred to Barclays Bank Trust Co Ltd v Bluff, which concerned a farming partnership of a father and son, which was dissolved by the death of the father. The son continued the business, using the farm land and buildings. Counsel cited a short passage from the judgment of H E Francis, Q.C., sitting as a deputy judge, at page 182:

"After all, the [surviving partner] is not the sole beneficial owner of the farm. He is a trustee of it for the deceased's estate and himself".

In the present case, since the partnership assets were held by the defenders in trust, the pursuers as beneficiaries of the trust were affected, in the same way as the other beneficiaries (including the defenders), by any diminution in the value of the trust assets. Equally, if the defenders entered into new contracts, it followed from Inland Revenue v Graham's Trustees that they did not do so by virtue of section 38 of the 1890 Act: they must therefore be taken as entering into such contracts as trustees for all persons interested in the firm.

[66] Whether surviving or continuing partners who carry on the business of the firm using the assets of the partnership are to be regarded as having formed a new partnership, or as continuing to exercise the rights of partners in the original partnership by virtue of section 38 of the 1890 Act, depends on whether they are acting within the scope of section 38. As explained earlier, the scope of the powers conferred by section 38 is not entirely clear, particularly in relation to the undertaking of new transactions, and therefore to the continuation of a trading business. On the basis of the Scottish authorities discussed earlier, my provisional view is that the carrying on of commercial fishing by the defenders for a period of several years after the dissolution of the original partnership could not be regarded as falling within the scope of section 38, but would be consistent with the formation of a new partnership. It is however unnecessary to express a concluded view, since no question requires to be determined at this stage which appears to me to turn on whether a particular transaction entered into by the defenders fell within the scope of section 38, and was therefore binding on the pursuers, or not. If such an issue were to arise (e.g. in relation to the bank borrowings), it would require more detailed consideration. The contention actually advanced on behalf of the pursuers - that, if there was a new partnership, that partnership bore the risk of any diminution in the value of the assets of the original partnership - was unsupported by any reference to authority, and is in my opinion fallacious. On a winding up, the assets are to be realised and any surplus distributed in accordance with the relevant provisions of the 1890 Act. The operation of those provisions is not ousted by a delay in the winding up (subject to any question of prescription). If the executors of a deceased partner are concerned about such delay, their remedy is to seek an order for winding up under section 39, and (if need be) the appointment of a judicial factor to carry out the winding up. If, pending the winding up, the surviving partners continue the business, the estate of the deceased partner is entitled to share in the post-dissolution profits, and in any increase in the value of the partnership assets, in accordance with the relevant statutory provisions. As Neuberger L.J. noted in Sandhu v Gill (at paragraphs 37-39), those provisions are not concerned to penalise a partner who continues the business pending the completion of winding up. If an outgoing partner or his estate is entitled to a full share of any increase in the value of the partnership assets accruing in the period between the date of dissolution and the date of realisation (as is apparent from such authorities as Barclays Bank Trust Co Ltd v Bluff and Chandroutie v Gajadhar), the corollary is that they must equally bear a full share of any diminution in value during that period (subject to any liability of the surviving partners for losses due to their misconduct or negligence, of the kind considered in Ross Harper & Murphy v Banks 2000 S.C.500). If the executors wish to guard against the risk of a diminution in the value of the partnership assets, their remedy is again to seek an order for winding up, and (if need be) the appointment of a judicial factor.

[67] It is unnecessary in the circumstances to determine whether the defenders continued the business in the capacity of partners (whether in a new partnership, or by virtue of section 38) or in the capacity of trustees. It is not however in my view accurate in Scots law, in general at least, to describe surviving or continuing partners, who continue the business of a dissolved partnership pending its winding up, as doing so in the capacity of trustees. I refer in that regard to the earlier discussion of section 43 of the 1890 Act, and its background in Knox v Gye. There are of course situations where partnership assets are vested, prior to the dissolution of the partnership, in individual partners as trustees for the firm. Even in that situation, however, the partners carry on the business of the firm as partners and not in the capacity of trustees; and, on dissolution, section 38 will apply.

 

Other issues

[68] Counsel for the pursuers challenged the relevancy of the defenders' averments that, in the event that a second partnership was formed, the first pursuer was a partner in that firm and contributed the deceased's share of the assets of the original partnership to that firm. Counsel also challenged the relevancy of the consequential averments that the first pursuer had wrongfully intromitted with the estate of the deceased, and that the defenders were therefore entitled to a contribution from the first pursuer, as an individual, to the extent that they were found liable to the pursuers as executors for any sum exceeding the figure which they calculated as the deceased's share of the surplus on the winding up.

[69] In reply, counsel for the defenders said that the averments had been made as a basis for convening the first pursuer as a third party. It was accepted that, since no third party claim had in fact been made against the first pursuer, the averments were irrelevant to any issue presently before the court. In the circumstances, I need say nothing further about these matters.

 

Conclusion

[70] For the foregoing reasons, the action appears to me to be misconceived in so far as it seeks declarator that the pursuers are entitled to payment of the balance on the deceased's capital account brought out by the cessation accounts, and payment of that amount. The remaining substantive conclusion, for payment of the sums said to be due as interest under section 42 of the 1890 Act, proceeds on a basis (namely, that interest is due on a proportion of the gross assets of the partnership, as valued at the date of dissolution) which also appears to me to be misconceived. In the circumstances, I shall sustain the defenders' plea to the relevancy of the pursuers' averments and dismiss the action.


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_128.html