Thornton v. Bussey
Thornton v. Bussey
Opinion of the Court
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
This is a bill by the administrators on the estate and effects; of Thomas F. Wooldridge, deceased, asking directions of the Court as to the distribution thereof. The intestate was a member of two mercantile firms, both of which were insolvent; he had a considerable property in his individual right, disconnected from the partnership, but he was insolvent also ; the partnership creditors claimed to have appropriated to the payment of their debts, the assets of the firms respectively, of which they were the creditors, and for unpaid balances to share ratably with the individual creditors of the deceased, his own estate. The presiding Judge charged the jury in accordance with this position, and one of the individual creditors excepted.
This is the first time, I believe, that this question has been presented to this Court in a cause arising on the chancery side of its jurisdiction ; it has been before the law side of the Court twice,and the last was, by special agreement,
The principle of the charge of the Court, to which exception is taken, is, that on the insolvency of a deceased partner, and two mercantile firms of which he was a member, the creditors of the firms respectively should divide among themselves, ratably, the assets, to the exclusion of the creditors of the individual deceased partners, and for unpaid balances they should share, ratably, with the individual creditors of such deceased partner. The rights of joint and separate creditors of mercantile and other partnerships, and of the individual members of such partnerships, have been much discussed, and variously determined. It has been held that the creditors of partnerships should come in, pari passu, with the individual creditors of an insolvent member of the partnership and share, ratably, his interest in the firm and his individual assets. Again, it has been decided, that the partnership effects should be applied to the payment of joint creditors, and the separate creditors should be entitled to the surplus only, if any ; and if there should be a deficiency, that the partnership creditors for their unpaid balances, should share, pro raia, with the individual creditors, while in other cases it has been adjudged that joint creditors should look for payment, in the first instance, to the partnership assets, and that individual creditors should be entitled to pay from the individual assets, and that, for unpaid balances, each class of creditors should be entitled to any surplus of assets which may remain after the class of creditors primarily entitled to pay, had been satisfied. It is manifest that a Court of Chancery has no jurisdiction of any of these matters, unless the partnership, or the indi j vidual member of it, whose creditors are endeavoring to collect their debts, be insolvent. If all are solvent, there can be no ground for the interference of a Court of Equity. In that event every right is manageable in a Court of law; that jurisdiction can afford an adequate remedy in every
The case before us is, indisputably, within the jurisdiction of a Court of Equity, and being so, it must be disposed of according to the principles of that Court which are most approved by our judgment. That the administrators of a deceased partner have brought the case before thé Court for its direction in the administration of the assets of their intestate, does not change the rule by which -the Court wül be .governed, in adjusting the rights of the parties, from that which would control it, if one or all of the creditors had been complainants; indeed, such bills are substantially the bills of the creditors, and the Court will so consider them. It is said that partnership contracts are joint and several, and that no equity in favor of a separate creditor can effect the rights of the contract of the partnership creditor; that the joint creditors can have execution against the separate, as well as the joint property, or take in execution the body of each member of the partnership, and that equity follows the law in such cases. There is some misapprehension in regard to what is meant when it is said that the contracts of partners are joint and several; such contracts are not joint and several at law; if they were, a separate action might be instituted at law against each partner, on the contract as his several contract; but that is not so. The partners must all be sued, and if one be omitted, it would be a good ground for a plea in abatement. That is the case in all joint con
Is there such an equity in favor of .the different classes of .creditors presented before us in this record? As already remarked, the parties .all are insolvent, and neither the partnership creditors, nor the individual creditors of complainant’s intestate, can be paid in full. The most just and
There is much equity in the rule, and as applicable to cases in which there has beemno fraud, it is unexceptionable. It must be presumed, that every partnership debt increases the partnership effects to the same amount, and it is but just that they .should be applied to their payment in preference to debts which contributed nothing to them, provided one or the other must go unpaid ; and the same .may .b.e said in regard to .the individual debts and effects of .a partner.
Circumstances may exis.t in.some cases which might .call for a strict scrutiny into t,he .conduct.of the partners, to ascertain whether a part of what appears to be joint effects, are
In the case of ex parte Hayden, 1 Brown 454. joint creditors were allowed to prove on a separate commission, and to receive a dividend pari passu with separate creditors. There was no joint estate in that case, and the report is very short. The joint estate may have been divided out among the partners, and in that, event, it would be one of the cases in which it would be proper to give effect to the rule, that the relative value of the joint estate, and the individual effects, as well as the amount of the joint and individual debts, should be ascertained. The case of ex parte Cobham, Ib. 576, was consented to.
The rule above laid down by us, prevails now in England, whether a joint debt be proved under a separate commission, or whether a separate debt be proved under a joint commission.
The case of Cleghorn vs. the Insurance Bank of Columbus, already referred to, was mainly decided on the ground that the parties were not in a Court of Equity, and the case being in a Court of law, the superior legal lien should prevail. The case in 19th Geo. Rep., was decided on the ground, that the above case was a precedent for it, although by agreement it was to be considered as though a bill in equity had been filed to adjust the fights of the parties. There is no question of lien in this case, but there can be no question, I apprehend, that if, in the two classes of creditors, some have Mens, and others have not, the liens must have the precedence of debts having no lien, in the distribution of that portion of the effects from which the debt was to be paid; but a judgment against the partnership cannot, on the
Judgment reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- B. A. Thornton, creditors, &c., in error v. N. J. Bussey & William Wooldridge, administrators, &c., in error
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published