Von Schmidt v. Von Schmidt
Synopsis
Appeal from Judgment Favorable to Appellant. —Where a judgment-appealed from is clearly favorable to appellant, it should not be reversed unless for some material error which is quite clear and palpable.
Partnership—Accounting—Improvement of Land—Proceeds—Family Expenses.—In an action for an accounting and settlement of a partnership between a father and son for the purchase, improvement, development, and cultivation of land, where the father was to advance the purchase money for the land, for which he was to be reimbursed, and was also to advance from his individual resources all the outside independent capital and money that should be necessary to the development and cultivation of the land as an offset against the care and services of the son in its development, and not that the proceeds of the land should not be used in its future development and cultivation, and there was no agreement that the son was to be entitled to support for himself and family, it is not error for the court to refuse the son a credit for one-half of the proceeds of the land, where there is no finding as to the amount of his family expenses, and it is evident that that amount would exceed one-half of such proceeds.
The Court. This action is for an accounting of the affairs and business of an alleged partnership. The court found that upon the accounting defendant was indebted to plaintiff, on account of said partnership, in the sum of $3,200, and also interest for a certain period upon the sum of $1,600, making in all $4,616. Defendant appeals from the judgment. There is also in the transcript a notice of an appeal from an order denying a motion for a new trial; but there is no bill of exceptions, or statement, and this latter appeal has been abandoned. The appeal from the judgment rests entirely upon the judgment-roll, which includes findings of the court below, where the case was tried without a jury. Appellant does not make any point upon the pleadings; but he contends that under the findings there should have been a balance decreed to him of something over $5,000 against plaintiff, instead of a balance of $4,616 in favor of plaintiff.
The judgment is so clearly favorable to the appellant that it should not be reversed, unless for some material error which is quite clear and palpable. The court finds that in 1881 one Alexey W. Von Schmidt, the father of appellant, and the appellant entered into a partnership for the purchase, improvement, development, and cultivation of certain described land; that the land was purchased by the said father, and the deed taken in the name of the son, appellant herein, who afterward redeeded one undivided half thereof to his father; that the father was to be reimbursed for the amount expended by him in the said purchase; that [241]the appellant was to superintend and assist in the development and improvement of said property, and that the father should advance the expenses therefor, and that the services of the appellant should be a setoff against the money that should be advanced by the father; that the father from time to time advanced, over and above what was received by him upon the sale of some of the property, the net sum of $63,938.33; that the appellant advanced the sum of $93.50, and no more; that the appellant devoted his time, skill, and labor, personally to the dévelopment, etc., of said lands, and planting and improving the same, since about the 27th of February, 1881; and that, with the exception of about $2,400 diverted by appellant to other uses, and “a reasonable amount for the support and maintenance of the defendant and his family upon said premises,” the appellant has devoted the proceeds and product of said property toward the expenses and improvement thereof, which proceeds aggregate the sum of $20,838. (The father afterward assigned the interest to. plaintiff.)
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