The plaintiff and defendant are members of the bar of this State, and on or prior to January 1, 1900, entered into an agreement for the formation of a partnership for the practice of law. The defendant made certain representations to the plaintiff, who was a young and inexperienced member of the bar as to the extent of his (the defendant’s) practice, and plaintiff paid to defendant in the shape of a bonus or premium for the privilege of being taken into partnership with the defendant the sum of $4,000, $2,000 of which was in cash and $2,000 in notes indorsed by the plaintiff. The plaintiff asks judgment for a dissolution of the partnership and for the return of the sum which he paid to the defendant. The defendant contends in the first place that this action is not one properly cognizable in equity, claiming it is simply an action to recover a Sum of money. In this I think he is in error. An action for a partnership dissolution is a most familiar ground of equitable jurisdiction. If the dissolution be determined to be proper the money judgment may follow, but it follows only through the exercise of the equitable jurisdiction in ascertaining that the partnership' should be dissolved. Fischer-Hansen v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co., 173 N. Y. 492; N. Y. L. J., March 5, 1903. I come next to a consideration of whether or not the plaintiff has sustained his contention that a dissolution of the partnership is proper, and I have reached the conclusion that he has. The plaintiff was known to the defendant to have had but little experience in the practice of law. He came into the defendant’s office as a stranger, not familiar with the defendant’s methods of doing business nor with the workings of his office. It is quite evident that almost from the start the treatment accorded the plaintiff by the defendant was not such as it should have been between two persons bearing the relationship of partners. Certain it is that in the month of April following the formation of the partnership the relations between the partners had grown so strained that the continuance of the partnership became a farce. It could not continue, and the plaintiff terminated it by leaving. The question to be determined is, Who was at fault? It would *266serve no useful purpose to enter into a discussion of the details of the life of this1 partnership. Between partners there should be confidence. There was none here. The defendant treated the plaintiff with but scant, courtesy. The defendant concedes he may have spoken harshly to the plaintiff, but claims he was justified. I do not think so. Defendant should have considered plaintiff’s inexperience. The defendant possessing the clientele, the knowledge of the law and the workings of the office failed to bestow any confidence in the plaintiff, and failed to put him in possession of the details of the office, which might have made him a useful member of the partnership and a colaborer in the work of the partnership. In my judgment the defendant was at fault and a dissolution should be decreed.
, The plaintiff in this'ca’se-waives any right to an accounting,, which he may have, and asks in lieu thereof for the return of a proportionate amount of the bonus or premium which he paid to the defendant upon entering into the partnership. I am referred to no American authority where a return of a proportionate amount of the premium has been decreed upon a dissolution of the partnership. The principle has been worked out quite thoroughly in England, and is there well recognized, and I see no reason why it should not be adopted by our courts of equity. It is in accordance with the justice of a situation such as is presented in the present case. A premium of $4,000 was paid by the plaintiff tP the defendant in consideration of the, defendant entering into a partnership with the plaintiff for a period of five years. It is true plaintiff claimed that defendant made certain representations as to the extent of his income from his practice, and these were falsely and fraudulently made, but I find no proof to warrant this contention. The premium must, however, be assumed to have been paid in expectation of the continuance of the partnership for the term agréed upon, and where, as here, the expected benefit was not realized through the fault of one of the partners, and the other partner finds it necessary to terminate the partnership because thereof, and is justified in so doing, it would be inequitable to permit the partn&r at fault to retain the premium paid to him. The subject is well treated in Bindley on Partnership. (p. 65 et seq.) and the notes to the second American edition will be found to contain the English authorities on the subject. It is there said: “ If a person re*267-ceives a premium for taking another into partnership, which is to endure for a certain time, and then himself does anything which determines the partnership before that time has elapsed, he may be fairly considered as having precluded himself from insisting on his strict right to retain or be paid his whole premium,” and again (at p. 68): “ The tendency of modern decisions is to apportion the premium in these cases not only where neither partner is to blame, but a fortiori where the partner receiving the premium has so misconducted himself as to give the partner paying it a right to have the .partnership dissolved.” As to the amount to be returned (p. 69) “ the rule generally adopted is to apportion the premium with reference to the agreed and actual duration of the partnership.” See also Bates Part., § 802. 'The partnership endured for but one-fifteenth of the time agreed ” upon,' and I therefore conclude that plaintiff is entitled to the return of fourteen-fifteenths of the premium paid.
Ordered accordingly.