Engel v. Bailey
Engel v. Bailey
Opinion of the Court
The principal defendants in each of these cases were copartners doing business in the firm name of Bailey & Parker.
In August, 1887, Parker, by the direction of Bailey, filed a petition in insolvency in the court of insolvency, signed in the name of the firm. A warrant thereupon issued without any official notice on Bailey, and the persons named as trustees in this action were appointed assignees of the estate.
The assignees received several hundred dollars of assets from which they paid out about $800 on claims entitled to priority.
In Engel’s case, the plaintiff did not appear or prove his claim, but after the priority claims had been paid, he sued on his claim by this trustee process and summoned the assignees as trustees who disclosed the sum of $452.27 in their hands.
In Wheelwright’s case the plaintiffs did appear, filed and proved their claim and objected to Parker’s discharge.
The plaintiffs, in both actions, now claim that the assignees shall be charged on the ground that, as no notice was given to Bailey prior to the issuing of the warrant, the court of insolvency had no jurisdiction, which objection is collaterally open to them in their respective actions against the firm.
The statutory provision on which the objection to the jurisdiction is based, provides: “Either partner may file his petition” containing certain specific averments, “but no warrant shall issue until such notice as the judge directs has been given to the remaining partners.” R. S., c. 70, § 57.
“Notice to the remaining partners” is predicated only at the filing of the petition by a number of partners less than all; for, if all sign, notice of their own averments would be idle and senseless. Thompson v. Thompson, 4 Met. 133. The obvious purpose of the required notice is founded on the first principles of natural justice, — that persons shall not be precluded by legal proceedings
But, we do not think it essential that every one of the partners should individually sign the petition, for one may apply in behalf of himself and the other partners named. Thompson v. Thompson, supra; Hanson v. Paige, 8 Gray, 289. Moreover, while from the mere partnership relation the law implies no power in one partner to assign Tire partnership property for the benefit of creditors (Kirby v. Ingersoll, 1 Doug. 477; Havens v. Hussey, 5 Paige, 30; Ormsby v. Davis, 5 R. I., 442) such a power may be expressly conferred by one partner upon another, or may bo even inferred from the conduct of the parties. Kirby v. Ingersoll, supra; 3 Kent’s Com., *44, cases in note b ; 1 Lindl. Part. (Ewell’s ed.) 266 and eases in nolis. So in principle are Pike v. Bacon, 21 Maine, 287 ; Cady v. Shepherd, 11 Pick. 400 ; Dictum, Merrill v. Wilson, 29 Maine, 59.
in the ease at bar, the application was made by one partner in the name of the firm by the express direction of the only other partner; and why should he have official notice of what he expressly directed and has never objected to ?
Moreover, if notice were necessary its omission was but an irregularity at most, — a deviation from the statutory directions and did not go so deep as to reach juris diction. Cobbossee Nat. Bank v. Rich, 81 Maine, 164.
An additional reason why Wheelwright should not prevail is found in Fogler v. Clark, 80 Maine, 241.
Trustees discharged, in each case.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William Engel v. Dexter S. Bailey and Joseph H. Parker, and Trustees Joseph S. Wheelwright, and others v. Same
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published