The judgment of the court was pronounced by
Preston, J.In 1836, L. G. Hilligsherg and the defendant sold fifty-nine lots of ground, in the rear of the Second Municipality, to Richard Hagan, for the price of sixty thousand dollars, payable one-sixth in cash, and the balance at a credit of one, two and three years. For the credit payments, a large number of notes were taken, secured by special mortgage, representing the price of the separate lots. The cash payment was divided, and the notes provisionally. Some of the drawers and endorsers of the notes failed; many of them were protested, and an attorney was employed by the parties to collect them on their joint account.
It required much time to realize the proceeds; many of the lots were purchased under the special mortgages and re-sold. Considerable expenses were incurred and taxes and municipal dues paid.
The executors of Hilligsherg and the defendant having disagreed as to the final settlement and division between them and the proceeds of the notes, this suit was instituted for that purpose. The parties respectively filed accounts, which differed materially; and the court, considering that the case involved the investigation of long and intricate accounts, very properly referred them to auditors.
The auditors received all the evidence offered by the parties; examined the accounts with great care, and made a very clear and detailed report. Both *171parties opposed it. Nevertheless, the court after a full examination of the evidence and report, homologated it by judgment, from which the executors of Hilligsberg have appealed ; and the defendant also claims that the judgment be amended in conformity to his opposition to the auditors’ report.
We have carefully examined the opposition of the defendant to the report, and the evidence and argument of his counsel in support of it, but do not think it tenable. The items charged to the defendant by the auditors, but objected to, were admitted by him in the original account filed with his answer. The fact that he and Hilligsberg both signed an act acknowledging payment of the notes and raising the special mortgage, does not destroy the weight of this admission. It is very possible the act of acquittance and release of mortgage was signed by them at different times, and that one of them alone received the sums paid.
On the other hand, some of the grounds of opposition to the report filed by the plaintiffs are well founded, and the amendments claimed should have been allowed by the court.
As has been stated, many of the notes given for the property could only be collected by suits, and for this purpose, a common attorney was employed by the parties, being the son of the defendant. He brought many suits, and collected money, and purchased back for the parties property to the amount of upwards of thirty thousand dollai-s; for which he was paid fees by the parties to the amount of twenty-five hundred dollars. He paid over the money collected, sometimes to one and sometimes to the other party, and rendered them a final account of his collections.
The plaintiffs offered the account rendered by him in evidence, which was objected by to defendant’s counsel, and rejected by the court, on the ground that it was res inter alios acta, and not binding upon the defendant; and because further, it emanated from a son who could not be a witness against his father. It was an account of the common agent of the business of both parties, rendered. long before there was any controversy between them. It was not, therefore, res inter alios acta, but binding upon both parties until proved to be incorrect. 1 Starkie on Evidence, 42.
In this account, a sum of four hundred and twenty-one dollars forty-nine cents is charged, as having been handed over to the defendant. It being thus ascertained that the money was paid to Mr. Burthe, the auditors presume he handed it over to Mr. Hilligsberg, because the note of which it was the proceeds fell to him in the provisional partition. The suits also on this and some other notes was instituted in the name of Hilligsberg alone. These were sufficient reasons to have induced the attorney to have handed the proceeds to the latter, rather than the defendant; but as he did not, we do not see sufficient reason to presume that the defendant did so, and think he should be charged with this sum.
The defendant admitted in the account filed with his answer, the receipt of $1646 38 8-9, being part of the proceeds of lots eight, nine, twenty-six and twenty-seven; but the auditors charge him with only $1368 61, making a difference of $277 77. This is evidently an error. The counsel of the defendant has endeavored to show that there was an error only to the amount of $107 ; but he omits in his calculations two items brought to our notice by the plaintiffs, which increase the sum to the amount admitted by the defendant to have been received by him.
The defendant charged himself, in the account first rendered by him, with $1604 21 for proceeds of lots forty-six and fifty-seven. A notarial acquittance was given by both him and Hilligsberg, in order to release the special mortgage *172upon the lots. The light presumption arising from the act that each received jla¡£ ^0 money¡ jg not sufficient to counteract the admission by the defendant made long afterwards, that he received the whole, and not the half, as has been done by the auditors.
The defendant admitted, in his first account, a sum of $1150 received from the attorney charged with the collection of the notes. It is not stated in his account from what lots this sum proceeded. But it appears from the account of the attorney, that he paid to the defendant the sum of $938 08, being part of the proceeds of lot thirty-seven received by him, and which is not specifically mentioned in defendant’s account. The auditors charge him with the last amount. The evidence shows that the lot sold for $1050, leaving $111 92 unaccounted for. The full amount of the order of seizure for debt, interest and costs of lot number thirty-two was made, amounting to $634, whilst but $534 was accounted for, leaving a deficiency of $100. These two items, added to the sum with which the auditors have charged the defendant, make the $1150 admitted by him to have been received from the attorney, and he should be charged with the whole amount, increasing his account $211 92.
It is impossible for us to establish an interest account, or to say that the auditors erred in not doing so. The testator and his executors, if they suffer on this account, should have sought an earlier liquidation of their claims; and as the suit has been protracted by their claiming more than they have been able to establish, we think interest should be allowed to run only from the present time. •
The article 2829 of the code refers to sums drawn by a partner from the firm, not to sums received by the partner in the course of the business of the firm, and the partner receiving such sums cannot be considered a defaulter as to the share of his partner in such sums, so as to be embraced within the provisions of article 2984 of the code, until there is a liquidation of the partnership.
We think $1468 43 should be added to the balance found by the auditors against the defendant.
The judgment of the district court is therefore reversed ; and it is decreed, that the plaintiffs recover from the defendant the sum of one thousand nine hundred and fifty-three dollars fifty cents, with interest from this date, and costs.