The action is brought to settle the accounts of a copartnership, and also seeks to charge upon defendants an apparent deficiency of assets. The referee declined to hold either partner responsible for such deficiency, which he found to be rather apparent than real, and due to a faulty system of bookkeeping, and decided that the plaintiff, who was the liquidating partner, was indebted to the defendants upon a settlement of the accounts.
We have examined the grounds of both these results, and find them sustained by the evidence. The appellant claims that defendants were especially charged with the duty of keeping the books, and should be held responsible if any assets are missing. We do not find them to have assumed such responsibility. From 1872 to 1874, at the outset of the business, it seems that defendants’ representative in the firm did, in fact, keep the books; but, as the business grew, Ms attention was given to more active duties, and the accounts were kept by various subordinates, at least four having been thus employed, subject to the orders of all the partners. Nor is it clear that, had defendants kept the books, they would be held to make good any apparent loss. We also find that the evidence sustains the finding that the books were so kept as truthfully to rep
The referee was equally indulgent to plaintiff in respect to interest. The affairs were liquidated, and defendants should have been paid their shares in July, 1886, yet interest was only allowed from January, 1887.
There are no exceptions to evidence which have injured plaintiff, and the judgment is affirmed, with costs. All concur.