Wyatt v. Sweet

Graves, C. J.

A particular discussion of this case would be a waste of time. The citations made by defendant’s counsel cover every question and are conclusive. The court below erred in refusing to decree payment to defendant of the balance found to be his due.

The parties had carried on a joint enterprise in the nature of a partnership and complainant filed Iris bill for a mutual accounting according to the course and practice of the court. The defendant answered and submitted himself to the doctrine applicable to the class of cases in which he was impleaded. The parties were hence litigants under the head of jurisdiction where each is considered as an actor. After considerable evidence had been taken and all necessary preliminary information had been obtained and on the 3d of March, 1880, an interlocutory decretal order that the parties mutually account before a commissioner was regularly framed and entered by consent. It provided among other things that he should make all just allowances and report such *542balance as he should find to be due from either to the other. Both parties proceeded at much length under the order; but it finally appearing probable that the result would be adverse to the complainant he entered a common order purporting to dismiss the bill and frustrate the foreshadowed result. This was in September, 1880.

The defendant correctly assuming that the case being for a mutual accounting, a right had accrued to him, and especially after the consent order and the action taken under it, which could not be cut off by this summary expedient' of a common order, he accordingly disregarded the attempt, and went on with the reference; and on the 31st of December, afterwards, the commissioner made his report by which he found due to the defendant at that date the sum of $3750.56.

On the 18th of the succeeding January the complainant filed three exceptions to the report; the first being that the bill had been dismissed; but the other two were objections to matters of practice which had happened subsequent to the order for dismissing the bill. They were not legitimate objects of exceptions. In thus appearing, however, to except for irregularities claimed to have occurred after the order, the complainant seems to have wanted confidence in the efficacy of the order itself. If that was operative he could not be affected by irregularities afterwards. But this is not very important.

October 1, 1881, both parties appeared and were heard on the exceptions and the court made an order expressly overruling them and confirming the report. Whether by this practice the complainant might be held to have waived the order of dismissal is not material.

December 13, 1881, the cause was brought to final hearing and the court adjudged that there was due the defendant from complainant the said sum of $3750.56, with interest from December 31st, 1880, the date of the report. But this determination was followed by a declaration that the court doubted its authority to give affirmative relief to the defendant, and thereupon the bill was dismissed with costs *543from complainant to the defendant. The complainant acquiesced in the proceedings. But the defendant claiming that he ought to have a decree for the adjudged balance took an appeal.

It seems to have been thought by the circuit judge that a cross-bill was necessary to enable the court to order payment by complainant. In this the court labored under misapprehension. The case itself was a case of cross claims. The object of it was for each side to bring forward his demands and have them judicially liquidated and those on one side applied to compensate those on the other until a final balance should be obtained as due from defendant to complainant, or from complainant to defendant, no matter which, and for the court after ascertaining the true balance to proceed and close the controversy and do complete justice by ordering payment.

The decree must be modified by striking out so much thereof as refuses to grant relief to the defendant and orders a dismissal of the bill; and by inserting the relief which ought to have been given as herein explained, and the defendant will recover his costs of this court.

Campbell and Cooley, JJ. concurred.

Afterwards, at the October term, 1882, complainant moved for a re-hearing. Motion submitted October 3. Denied October 11.

Taggart for the motion.

Uhl against.

Per Curiam.

On full consideration we are satisfied that no ground exists for any revision of the view heretofore taken of this case. The parties construed their arrangement and relation when they entered into the consent order, and the authorities are full to show that they did not materially err in doing so.

The motion for re-hearing is denied with costs.