Van Alstyne v. Cook
Van Alstyne v. Cook
Opinion of the Court
The omission of the clerk to sign the judgment' roll on entering up the judgment of the Artisans’ Bank against Treadwells, Perry & Norton, does not affect the validity of the judgment. It was a clerical error, and a - mere question of practice and of. regularity, which the Supreme Court could and should at any time have allowed to have been amended, nunc . pro tunc. And the levy made by the plaintiff upon the execution issued on said judgment was entirely regular and valid, and created a perfect lien upon the property levied on in favor of the plaintiff in the execution, if the property at the time was subject to levy and sale at the instance of any single creditor of the partnership-. The levy, if otherwise valid, undoubtedly bound the whole partnership property, although the judgment was in form only against the general partners. This is in conformity to the 14th section of the statute relating to limited partnerships, which expressly provides that
If the property levied on. by the sheriff was at the time subject to be taken by any single creditor of the partnership, as against ordinary partnerships, the rights of the judgment creditors in pursuance of such levy were complete -at the time of the levy, and they thereby acquired an absolute lien upon such property which they were entitled to hold and enforce in preference to other creditors, and the plaintiff’s right to maintain this action to enforce such lien is clear and unquestionable. This brings us to the only disputable question in the case, which is, whether the property of a limited partnership, after the insolvency of the firm, is subject to be taken on execution by any single creditor, like the property of private persons or of general partnerships, or constitutes a fund for the payment of all the partnership debts in ratable proportion, as in the case of insolvent moneyed corporations. This brings to this court now for the first time the question of the construction of sections 20 and 21 of the statute providing for the formation of limited partnerships. (1 R. S.,766.) Section 20 declares that “ every sale, assignment or transfer of any of the property or effects of such partnership, made by such partnership when insolvent or in contemplation of insolvency, or after or in contemplation of the insolvency of any partner, with intent of giving a preference to any creditor of such partnership, and every judgment confessed, lien created or security given by such partnership under the like circumstances and with the like intent, shall be void as against the creditors of such partnership.”
Section 21 in like manner declares that every sale, assignment or transfer of the individual property or effects of any general or special partner, when insolvent or in contemplation of insolvency, or after or in contemplation of the insolvency
Under these sections the appellants claim that, whenever a limited partnership becomes insolvent, from that time its assets become trust funds for the benefit of all creditors; and no creditor, either by superior diligence or by the favor of the partners, can acquire any valid lien in preference to other creditors. This construction of this statute is based upon some passages in the opinion of the Chancellor in Innes v. Lansing (7 Paige, 583), where language to this apparent effect is used; and this case has been followed in Whitewright v. Stimpson (2 Barb., 379); Hayes v. Hayes (3 Sandf., 299); Jackson v. Sheldon (9 Abb., 127). Chancellor Walworth, in the case of Innes, says that he thinks “ the court is bound to carry out the principle of the statute, by treating the property of the limited partnership, after insolvency, as a trust fund for the benefit of all the creditors.” That, among creditors, equality is equity, is a favorite maxim in the courts of equity. The principle is a just and a sound one, and uniformly prevails where the courts of equity have control of the assets of insolvent persons or corporations, or of the manner of their distribution. Upon the insolvency of a moneyed corporation, j urisdiction is expressly given by the statute to the courts in equity to close up its affairs and distribute its assets; and the statute in respect to such corporations expressly declares that “no conveyance, assignment or transfer, nor any payment made, judgment suffered, lien created or security given, by any such corporation, when insolvent or in contemplation of insolvency, with the intent of giving a preference to any particular creditor over other creditors of the company, shall be valid in law;” and declares that any person obtaining such preference “shall be bound to account therefor to its creditors or stockholders, or their trustees, as the case shall require.”
Sections 20 and 24 of the statute in regard to limited partnerships are very different. They forbid all sales, assignments
The judgment of the Artisans’ Bank was, therefore, regularly and lawfully recovered, and was a perfectly valid judgment. Having a valid judgment, it is difficult for me to conceive upon what principle it can be held to be unlawful for the bank to proceed to enforce such judgment at law. It seems to me it was perfectly lawful for the bank to cause execution to be issued on their judgment and delivered to the sheriff; and. it was entirely lawful for the sheriff to levy such execution, and° his duty to do so, upon any property in the actual possession of the judgment debtors, or either of them, subject to levy.
It is true the partnership property of a limited partnership is a trust fund for the payment of the partnership debts; but so is the partnership property of all partnerships, general or special. The only difference between the property of a general and a special partnership, in this respect, is such as is made in the said 20th and 21st sections, forbidding the giving of
The levy under the execution in favor of the Artisans’ Bank, therefore, created a valid lien, unless it was forestalled by the commencement of the suit by John Cr. Treadwell, which ' presents the remaining question for consideration.
The referee finds that this suit was commenced by the service of the summons on two of the defendants at 2 o’clock P. 11., of the 15th of May, 1860, and that the levy was made by the sheriff of Albany at 5 .o’clock of the same day: that the suit was so commenced before the filing of the transcript upon the judgment in favor of the Artisans’ Bank in Albany county and before the issue of the execution thereon; that after service of the said summons all of the defendants appeared in said suit on the said 15th day of May, and admitted notices of an application for the appointment of a receiver for the next day, and that an order for the appointment of such receiver was made on the 16th of May, and said receiver duly appointed and qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties on that day, and at 2 p. M. took possession of the said partnership property so claimed to be levied on. The suit thus commenced by Treadwell was an action in equity, praying for an accounting among the partners and the closing up the affairs of the partnership and the distribution of its assets among all its creditors. The commencement of such suit, as between the parties thereto, created a Its pendens in respect to
The levy in this case- upon the property of the partnership was made before the order for the appointment of the receiver, was not overreached by such order, and was valid. The subsequent appointment of a receiver could not deprive the plaintiffs in the execution of the rights acquired by such levy. It follows that the plaintiff, in the, enforcement of the rights acquired by such levy, was entitled to recover the amount of the execution in his hands as sheriff, and the judgment of the court below should be affirmed, with costs,
Denio, Ch. J., did not sit on the case; all the other judges concurring,
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Van Alstyne, Sheriff, &c. v. Cook, Receiver
- Cited By
- 6 cases
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- Published