Bussey v. Porter
Bussey v. Porter
Opinion of the Court
The first assignment of error complains that the court decreed that Porter was in equity the purchaser of the Blakely paper, and was given a judgment against Bussey-Mabry Manufacturing Company and against both Mabry and Bussey, with a superior lien on the property covered by the Blakely bill of sale. In the action instituted by Zachry, in which he asked that his bill of sale be foreclosed in equity, and for a decree. establishing in his favor a special lien on the property, Bussey intervened and set up that he and Mabry had been partners under the name of Bussey-Mabry Manufacturing Company, but that the partnership had been dissolved, and that there had been no accounting between him and Mabry, and no division of the partnership effects; that Mabry secured his individual debts by pledge of the partnership assets to Zachry, .and also to the Industrial Loan & Investment Company, and that each of these creditors of Mabry individually was asserting a lien against this partnership property. He prayed for an accounting, and for a decree that neither Zachry uot Industrial Loan & Investment Company should assert any claim to the partnership property described in their respective bills of sale superior to Bussey’s rights as a member of the partnership. The intervention of Porter set up that Bussey-Mabry Manufacturing Company owed Blakely a note of a thousand dollars secured by a bill of sale to certain personal property, practically the same as described in the bills of sale to Zachry and the Industrial Loan & Investment Company; that Mabry had proposed to Porter that if Porter would loan or secure for Mabry the money with which to pay Blakely, Mabry in .paying the same to Blakely would get him to transfer and assign the bill of sale as security to Porter, and this was agreed to; that Porter indorsed a note for $1000 for Mabry (Porter being solvent and Mabry insolvent), on which Mabry obtained the $1000 and paid it to Blakely, but there was never any written transfer or assignment of the note or security. Porter praj^ed that the court treat the transfer and assignment as having been made, and that he have a prior lien on the property secured thereby.
It is earnestly insisted by eminent counsel for the plaintiff in error that a stranger who, at the request of one partner after the dissolution of the copartnership, indorses the individual note of a former partner and thereby enables him to procure a sum
In our opinion, the ruling upon these points is controlled by the decision in Patterson v. Clark, 96 Ga. 494 (23 S. E. 496). It is to be noted that in- the Porter intervention there is no prayer for subrogation. Porter’s case is based on equitable principles entirely independent of subrogation, but practically identical with those involved in the Patterson case. This point has been distinctly held by this court in Colonial Hill Co. v. Mortgage Bond & Trust Co., 174 Ga. 204, 210 (162 S. E. 531), where Mr. Justice Gilbert said: “This is particularly so when, in transactions like that with which we are now dealing, parties lending money with which other liens are to be discharged have the perfectly obvious method open to them of having the liens transferred or assigned and kept alive for their benefit.” See also Hiers v. Exum, 158 Ga. 19 (122 S. E. 784). The motion to review and overrule the Patterson case, presented by so profound a lawyer as counsel for the plaintiff in error in this case, carries with it the necessary implication that unless the ruling in the Patterson case is overruled,
So we are of the opinion that in the case at bar the agreement to which both Porter and Mabry testified (that Porter would go security for Mabry, so that he could borrow from the bank $1000 with which to pay Blakely, with the distinct understanding and agreement that when Blakely was paid the note would not be treated as paid, but that the thousand dollars would be used to effect a transfer of the note and bill of sale held by Blakely to Porter as security against loss in future) created an equity of the same nature in favor of Porter as rose in Patterson’s case in favor of Clark. Bussey testified that the debt was one of the partnership, and that it was paid. The payment by Mabry was evidenced by a check for $1000 drawn on the bank to which the note of Mabry indorsed by Porter was given. So there can be no question that the partnership got the benefit of the transaction. The principle that when one of two innocent parties must suffer by the act of a third person, he who put it in the power of the third person to inflict the injury must bear the loss, has no application in this case, because there is no complaint from either Blakely or the bank that they have sustained any loss. The evidence is sufficient to warrant the decree, for the reason that it appears that the transfer and assignment which Mabry promised he would have made to Porter was never in fact made. Upon this feature of the case the decree of the court was correct under the principle that equity considers that as done which ought to be done, and will enter nunc pro tunc on Blakely’s bill of sale a transfer to Porter in conformity with Mabry’s agreement. The fact that the chancellor directs the receiver to pay Porter a thousand dollars will not relieve Mabry from liability on the note; and since it is established that Mabry is insolvent, Porter will get nothing more under the decree than he would get if Mabry were solvent. If Mabry pays the note to the bank, he will have a right to recover from Porter the amount Porter received by reason of the decree. On this principle the court declines to review or overrule Patterson v. Clark, supra.
We do not think the judge erred in that part of the decree in. which he held that the patent was partnership property. It is true that it appears in the record that the patent right (more properly denominated as an application for a patent) was at first the joint property of Bussey and Mabry, by reason of the fact that Bussey had bought an undivided half interest therein from Mabry. But there also appear in the record articles of partnership, which show that Bussey and Mabry did form a partnership; and there being nothing in the evidence to show that the partnership, under the contentions of Bussey, has ever been properly dissolved, the patent right must necessarily remain as the partnership property. The articles of partnership signed by both - parties covered by mutual agreement, with meticulous precision, every detail embraced within the partnership, defining the respective duties of the parties, providing for Bussey’s expenses for his transportation as general salesman of the partnership, and that Mabry was to have charge of the supervision of manufacturing washboards. In these circumstances there is no merit in the contention made in the fourth assignment of error, that it was erroneous to hold that the patent was the property of the partnership.
The fifth ,and final assignment of error is as follows: “Plaintiff in error here and now excepts as a matter of law to said final decree, and to the failure of the court to include therein a provision in respect to prayer ‘d’ of his intervention, which was as follows: ‘(d) That the said W. H. Zachry and the said Industrial Loan and Investment Company nor any other creditor be decreed to have any claim on said property except such as is decreed to be inferior to the claim and rights of your intervenor.’ And he specially assigns as error the failure of the court to find, particularly in view of, first, an express prayer in his intervention praying that the property seized by the receiver, pointed out by him in his intervention, be decreed to be the property of the partnership, arid, second, the finding of the court in the first part of the decree, ‘that the assets now in the hands of the receiver appointed in this case are assets of the said partnership,’ he was entitled to a decree that neither Zachry nor the Industrial Loan & Investment
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.