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Facts:
Plaintiff is the industrial partner, while deceased is the capitalist partner Plaintiff sued the administratrix of the estate of the deceased Santos to recover sum of P9,534, alleged to be the net profits due the plaintiff in a partnership business conducted under the name of "Taller Sinukuan” Respondent admitted existence of partnership. Consequently, she filed a counterclaim praying that the plaintiff be ordered to render an accounting of the partnership business and to pay to the estate of the deceased the sum of P25,000 as net profits, credits, and property pertaining to said deceased. Guidote called several witnesses and introduced a so-called accounting and a mass of documentary evidence which hopelessly and inextricably confused that the court could not consider it of much probative value. However, court ordered that respondent be absolved from the action and to render an account thereof to the administratrix of Santos' estate since plaintiff failed to liquidate the affairs of the partnership Defendant Borja then presented an account and liquidation prepared by a public accountant, Santiago A. Lindaya, showing a balance of P29,088.95 in favor of the defendant. In addition, defendant introduced the public accountant Jose Turiano Santiago to testify as to the results of an audit made by him of the accounts of the partnership. The plaintiff presented Tomas Alfonso and the bookkeeper, Pio Gaudier, as witnesses in his favor to contradict defendant’s witnesses. TC: these two witnesses is so unreliable that the court can place no reliance thereon. Alfonso is the same public accountant who filed the liquidation Exhibit O on behalf of the plaintiff, in relation to the partnership business, which liquidation was disapproved by this court in its decision of August 20, 1923. Gaudier is the same bookkeeper who prepared three entirely separate and distinct liquidation for the same partnership business all of which were repeated by the court in its decisions of September 1, 1922 and the court finds that the testimony given by him at the last hearing is confusing, contradictory and unreliable.1aw As to other witness: Chua Chak – testified and identified the documents shown by counsel for plaintiff can neither read nor write Claro Reyes – testified as to the originality of an exhibit claims that he was forced to admit that it was a mere copy. Hence, the conclusions reached by Santiago A. Lindaya as modified by Jose Turinao Santiago were just and correct and ordered the plaintiff to pay the defendant the sum of P26,020.89 Petitioner’s argument: Since the deceased up to the time of his death generally took care of the payments and collections of the partnership, his legal representatives were under the obligation to render accounts of the operations of the partnership, notwithstanding the fact that the plaintiff was in charge of the business subsequent to the death of Santos. Issues: Whether or not the court erred in ordering the plaintiff and appellant to pay to the defendant and appellee the sum of P26,020.89. Held: No,There may be some merit in Guidote’s contention that the dismissal of his complaint was premature. The better practice would been to let the complaint stand until the result of the liquidation of the partnership affairs was known. But under the circumstances, no harm was done by the dismissal of Guidote’s complaint. However, in Wahl vs. Donaldson Sim & Co. death of one of the partners dissolves the partnership, but that the liquidation of its affairs is by law entrusted, not to the executors of the deceased partner, but to the surviving partners or the liquidators appointed by them In equity surviving partners are treated as trustees of the representatives of the deceased partner, in regard to the interest of the deceased partner in the firm. As a consequence of this trusteeship, surviving partners are held in their dealings with the firm assets and the representatives of the deceased to that nicety of dealing and that strictness of accountability required of and incident to the position of one occupying a confidential relation. It is the duty of surviving partners to render an account of the performance of their trust to the personal representatives of the deceased partner, and to pay over to them the share of such deceased member in the surplus of firm property, whether it consists of real or personal assets. Perhaps the court could have more inclined to question the conclusions of Lindaya and Santiago if the plaintiff had shown a disposition to render an honest account of the business and to affect a fair liquidation of the partnership but instead of doing so, he has by means of very questionable, and apparently false, evidence sought to mulct his deceased partner's estate to the extent of over P9,000.
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