Plaintiff is the assignee of one Oppenheimer, who, prior to the 1st day of May, 1911, was a copartner of the defendants. He claims that this copartnership was dissolved, and that upon the dissolution it was agreed that, if a certain piece of property was thereafter sold by either, all, or any of the partners, the commissions earned were to be divided equally among the said partners. The'defendants have sold this property, and earned and received a commission, of which the plaintiff claims a share. At the close of the plaintiff’s case the trial justice dismissed the complaint, on the ground that this was a partnership transaction, over which the court had no jurisdiction.
'In reaching this decision the court was undoubtedly principally influenced by the fact that the plaintiff’s assignor on cross-examination testified that at the dissolution the partners agreed that the partnership was to continue as to this sale of these particular premises, and that, if there were any expenses in connection with the sale, these expenses should be deducted. He testified, however, that there could be no expenses. In my opinion, if the testimony of the plaintiff, taken as a whole, is-given the most favorable or in fact a reasonable inference, he has established that there was a complete accounting and dissolution of the copartnership, leaving only one matter in which there was to be thereafter a division of the net earnings obtained by any one of *314the previous partners. The relations of the parties in regard to the sale of these premises was not in any strict sense a partnership. It was merely an agreement with each other that; whichever party earned and received a sum of money, he would divide this sum with the others. There is no partnership left which can be dissolved, and apparently no accounting is necessary. The defendants have agreed to pay over a certain sum of money on a contingency which has arisen, and 1 the plaintiff has a right to bring this action in assumpsit on the promise.
Judgment should therefore be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event. All concur.