Magoon v. Ahmi

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

JUDD, C.J.

This action, being assumpsit, was begun in 1890 and was finally, in March, 1897, submitted to Circuit Judge Carter sitting without a jury. The court found on the evidence ‘that plaintiff was entitled to judgment for $2,109.26 and interest. The decedent Chun Lung, received in January, 1887, the exclusive franchise to sell opium in this country and placed the defendant in charge of the business on the Island of Maui. The suit in question arises upon the accounts between the licensee and defendant. The licensee, Chun Lung, died August 11, 1889. The accounts presented by the respective parties and much of the correspondence between the decedent and defendant are in the Chinese language, but are translated by the official translator. The action was for $8,128.00, being the balance claimed to be due decedent’s administrator. The defendant claims that decedent owed him $4,843.24. Much testimony was introduced by both sides. The court found that neither account was correct in all particulars. The main ques*257tion in controversy is as follows: Tbe opium licensee capitalized. tbe opium business at $100,000 and let several Chinese friends into a co-partnership with him in the business. The-defendant claims that he was given by Chun Lung a one-tenth, or a $10,000 interest at the inception of the business, defendant paying nothing for it. The plaintiff claims that defendant’s-interest was only $2,500, and that it was given him some months after the business was in operation and had proved to be profitable. The business continued thirteen months and its net profits were 110 per cent. Defendant’s- account admits a balance* in favor of the licensee of $6,156.76, but claims that he should! be credited with the amount of “one-tenth share of the opium firm, profits amounting to” $11,000, which would bring the estate of the licensee $4,843.24 in debt to him.

The trial judge placed but little reliance upon the plaintiff’s account, it appearing to be not an original account but made up from different books and containing some charges which the evidence proved to be incorrect. The main point of controversy being whether the defendant’s interest was $10,000 or $2,500, the court found as a fact that it was the latter and not the former sum.

The court then took the amount admitted by defendant to be due the decedent ....................... $6,156 76

and added interest on two amounts, found from the accounts to be chargable to defendant, $202.50 and $375.00 577 50

$6,734 26

and credited defendant with 13 months’ salary at $125 per month. .$1,625 00

and 120% profit on defendant’s $2,-500 interest on the business........ 3,000 0Ó 4,625 00

which leaves a balance of....!..... $2,109 26

due the decedent’s estate and ordered judgment for this amount and interest.

Kinney & Ballou for plaintiff, Thurston & Stanley for defendant.

In a letter to the plaintiff, dated May 10, 1890, the defendant states that he owed the estate over three thousand dollars, but if Ms commission of $1,700 (salary probably) be deducted it would -leave bfm owing less than $2,000, and that he would try and ¡settle all the balance within the next two or three months. This and other statements of defendant can hardly be reconciled with the position taken at the trial that he was a creditor of the decedent to the amount of $4,843.24, to say nothing of the extreme improbability that decedent would have presented to defendant, then a stranger to him, one-tenth of the business. On the whole showing, so far from the judgment being without evidence to support it or being against the weight of evidence, wé find it abundantly sustained and order the exceptions to be ■overruled.