Glazebrook's Ex'ors v. Harveys & Williams
Glazebrook's Ex'ors v. Harveys & Williams
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action of assumpsit, instituted on the 3d October, 1868, by the firm of Harveys & Williams against Mrs. America H. Glazebrook, executor of Larkin W. Glaze-brook, dec’d, for the recovery of a large balance alleged to be due to the plaintiffs from the firm of George W. Gilliam & Co., of which Larkin W. Glazebrook was a member at the time of his death.
The declaration contained only the common counts. The bill of particulars, which was in the shape of an account current, was composed of items of merchandise sold, a balance due on account rendered 1st July, 1866, and advances of cash, or acceptances of Harveys & Williams for a large amount, principally before the death of Glazebrook, which happened on the 28th of October, 1866. These advances
An arrangement was concluded in the early summer of 1866, between the firms of George W. Gilliam & Co., Harveys & Williams, and Wm. T. Coleman & Co., of New York, by which George W. Gilliam & Co. were to ship certain brands of tobacco manufactured by them to Wm. T. Coleman & Co., in New York, to be sent by them to a branch of their house in San Francisco, for sale. The New York house, upon these shipments being made, were to make advances, through Harveys & Williams, to the amount of sixty-five cents per pound on the brand of ££Winesap,5’ which was the highest grade, and proportionately on the lower grades. The tobacco was to be sold by the house of Wm. T. Coleman & Co., in San Francisco, to as much advantage as possible, and not to be sacrificed by hasty sales to meet advances, or by auction.
The nett proceeds of sales in gold to be remitted by telegraph transfers to Wm. T. Coleman & Co., in New York, who were to be allowed seven and a half commission for sale and guaranty of payment, and also seven per cent, (the New York rate) on advances, and payments made by them in New York for freight, insurance and other charges. If the nett proceeds should be insufficient to meet the advances, charges and interest, Harveys & Williams, who were allowed by Wm. T. Coleman & Co. two and a half of the seven and a half commission they were to receive were to pay the differences in New York.
After this arrangement was made, Gilliam & Co. shipped, in July and August, 1866, commencing on the 17th July, a large amount of tobacco to Coleman & Co. All of this tobacco was shipped to the house in San Francisco and was sold after the death of Glazebrook, the nett proceeds being remitted in gold by telegraph transfers as agreed.
The moneys received by them from Coleman & Co. were not entered to the credit of Gilliam & Co., even on their own books, but were put in bank to their own credit and mingled with their own funds.
The account of the tobacco shipped to San Francisco, was not closed until February, 1868, when it appeared that the nett proceeds of sale fell short of the advances made to Harveys & Williams, charges and interest by almost $10,000, which deficit was paid by them to Coleman & Co. • in New York.
After the death of Glazebrook, Harveys & Williams continued their dealings with Gilliam the surviving partner of George W. Gilliam & Co., making to him advances of money, now claimed to have been, to the extent of $3,650, the balance of the moneys on hand at Glazebrook’s death, received
The plaintiffs on the 3d August, 1868, had brought another action of assumpsit, on the same account current, against George W. Gilliam as the surviving partner of himself and Glazebrook composing the firm of George W. Gilliam &Co., in which judgment was entered by confession on the 16th November,' 1868, for the sum of $9,514.60 with interest from 18th February, 1868.
The jury in this case returned a verdict for exactly the same amount; thus holding Glazebrook’s estate liable precisely as the surviving partner was liable.
During the progress of the trial, various exceptions were taken to the rulings of the court in regard to evidence offered, instructions asked, and also, to the refusal of the court to set the verdict aside and grant a new trial.
Such of the questions presented by these bills of exceptions and in the argument before us, which was elaborate and able, as were deemed important, have been considered.
The fir.st of these questions is, Whether an action at law upon an unsettled account with a partnership can be maintained against the personal representative of a deceased partner ?
It is conceded, that it could not at common law, and can only be now, if at all, under the provision introduced into the Code of 1819, at the instance of the revisors, and now to be found in the 13th sec. of chap. Ill, page 629 of the Code of 1860, which is as follows : “The representative of one bound with another, either jointly or as a partner, by
The provision in the Rev. Code of 1819, ch. 98, sec. 3, 1st vol., page 359, for which the above was substituted, was as follows : ‘ ‘The representative of one jointly bound with another for the payment of a debt, or for the performance or forbearance of any act, or for any other thing, and dying in the lifetime of the latter, may be charged by virtue of such obligation in the same manner as such representative might have been charged if the obligors had been bound severally as well as jointly. ’ ’
The Revisors say in their report, p. 723, “there was some difficulty in Roane’s adm’r v. Drummond’s adm’r, 6 Ran. 182, upon the letter of the statute, as to a joint judgment. The section as drawn above, conforms in the letter to what the court, in that case, said was the spirit of the statute. Perhaps the words ‘bound’ and ‘obligors’ might by themselves furnish some ground for an argument that the statute did not extend to debts of less dignity than specialties. To remove all ground for any such question, the words ‘note or otherwise’ are inserted in the section as proposed above.”
This change in the language removes the difficulties referred to by the Revisors, and makes the statute apply to all joint contracts, whatever may be the form in which they are framed.
It will be seen that partners were not embraced in the provision of the Rev. Code of 1819. The Revisors say in their report, page 724 : “The opinion expressed in the court of appeals in Sale v. Dishman’s ex’ors, 3 Leigh 553, and
‘Considering that the estate of the surviving partner is, at all events, liable to the full satisfaction of the creditors,
Mr. Lindley says the principle has never been questioned since Sir Jno. Leach’s decision.
When it is thus established that a creditor of a firm is entitled in equity to a decree against the representative of a deceased partner, without proving the surviving partner to be insolvent, we can see no good reason for requiring the creditor to go into equity, when his demand is of such a nature that, but for the death which has occurred, he might have proceeded at law. Hence we propose to authorize a. debt due from a firm, to be recovered from the representative, of a deceased partner, at law or in equity, as it might have been recovered from the partner if he had not died.”
The general assembly having adopted this section as framed by the Revisors, it is clear that in this state the representative of a deceased partner may be sued at law for any legal demand for which the deceased partner might have been sued, if alive. If Grlazebrook had dissolved the partnership on
While the ultimate liability for legal demands of creditors of the retiring or surviving partner, and the estate of the deceased partner were the same ; before this statute that liability must have been enforced by different procedures, by a suit at law against the former, and in equity against the latter, which could not be maintained in Virginia until the insolvency of the surviving partner had been shown. Since this statute the procedure may be the same as well as the liability.
The creditor, however, is not required to proceed at law, for a legal demand against the personal representative of a deceased partner. The statute is permissive, not compulsory. The remedy in equity is, in many cases, the more convenient and complete, may secure more effectually the ends of justice, and prevent a multiplicity of suits, as resort would still be necessary to a court of equity after the judgment at law to obtain its satisfaction.
The case before us may serve for an example of the more
It is contended by. the counsel for the plaintiff in error, that the plaintiff in the court below having taken a judgment against the surviving partner for the same cause of action, that judgment was a merger of the debt of the partnership. It is only necessary in response to this to call attention to the terms of the statute, by which it is provided that the representative of a deceased partner may be charged in the same manner as if the obligation had been several at law as it always has been considered in equity. Ho such merger ever ensued at common law in the case of a judgment against one on a several obligation of more than one.
It is also contended, that under the agreement between the parties, the consideration for the guaranty of Harveys & Williams to Coleman & Co. passed solely from the latter firm, and that it is to be considered as an independent undertaking on their part, with which Gilliam & Co. had no connection, who were, therefore, not liable to any action founded upon its performance. 1
If that guarantee had been made under a separate and distinct contract with and upon a consideration passing solely from Coleman & Co., the conclusion sought might be conceded. But the guarantee of Harveys & Williams was one of the terms of the joint contract between three firms. It is impossible to make the complete separation necessary to the construction contended for, or to say, that the consideration passed solely from Coleman & Co.
The verdict of the jury upon which judgment was rendered was for the full amount claimed in the plaintiffs’ bill of particulars, after making some deductions agreed on in taking judgment against George W. Gilliam, the surviving partner.
The facts are not the same, nor are the legal principles, as to all the items. Those items begin with a balance per
. I do not think that either of these pretensions can be sustained.
It is universally conceded that a surviving partner has-no right to bind the estate of his deceased partner by any new transaction. And, whether the power is derived from the ‘‘continuance of the partnership, after dissolution in a qualified and limited sense’ ’ as it is usually expressed, or as suggested by Mr. Lindley as a more accurate expression from ‘ ‘an implied authority notwithstanding the dissolution, ’ ’ he has the power ‘ ‘to bind the firm so far as may be necessary to settle and liquidate existing demands, and to complete transactions begun, but unfinished, at the time of dissolution. Lindley on Parts. (333).
To illustrate this completion of a transaction, reference may be made to the case of Butchart v. Dresser, 10 Hare 153, which goes further, says Mr. Lindley, than any other
In his comments upon this case, Mr. Lindiey remarks, £ £It is to be observed that in Butchart v. Dresser, nothing was done except for the purpose of completing a transaction unfinished at the time of the dissolution. At the utmost, it decides that in the event of a dissolution, it is competent for •one partner to dispose of the partnership assets for partnership purposes. But neither Butchart v. Dresser, nor any other case, shows that a person who knows that a partnership is dissolved, can hold one partner liable for acts of his late co-partners done subsequently to the dissolution, and without authority ; and if in Butchart v. Dresser, the money to pay for the shares had been raised by a bill, it could not, •consistently with prior decisions, have been held that the
If in the case before us, George W. Gilliam & Co., before the dissolution, had sold a lot of tobacco, the surviving partner could have delivered it and received the purchase-money. If, after receiving the tobacco, one of the firm of Coleman & Co. had died before the advance they had .agreed to make had been fully made, the surviving partners would have been bound to complete them. If, after receiving the money from Coleman & Co., one of the firm of Harveys & Williams had died, the survivors would have been bound to pay the money received to Gilliam & Co., and would have continued liable on their guarantee. And the estate of the deceased partner would have been bound by the acts of the survivors, for they would have been liabilities existing at the time of the dissolution. By the agreement and course of business, Gilliam & Co. had given implied, if not express authority to Harveys & Williams, to receive the full amount of the advances agreed on. And the estate of the deceased partner was liable to Coleman & Co. for the whole amount which had been received by Harveys & Williams as their agents, at the time of the dissolution. That was an existing debt to Coleman & Co. But the case of Harveys & Williams, is different. They are not suing the right of Coleman & Co. , but for the advances made by themselves. They cannot occupy inconsistent positions. They received the money from Coleman & Co. not only, not at the special instance of Gilliam & Co., but without their knowledge. They did not act as the bankers of the latter. The money received by them was not placed to the credit of Gilliam & Co. on then-books, to be drawn by check. But they placed it to their own credit, as received, and mingled it with their own funds ; and nearly a month after the last was received, instead of meeting a demand of Gilliam & Co. for §2,000 in money, they gave an acceptance at sixty days.
The most they can say is, that they were under an agreement to lend. The loan made afterwards was a new transaction as far as Glazebrook’s estate was concerned. The surviving partner had no right to borrow money and bind the estate of the deceased partner for its repayment. It was not the less a ‘loan’ because it had been previously-agreed to be made, nor even if that agreement to lend was for consideration passed. Even in the extreme case of Butchart v. Dresser, it was only held that after the dissolution one partner had the right to pledge specific personal property to raise its purchase-money, which was properly applied. It was not suggested that he could bind the other partner personally for the money raised. In this case it is not even shown that the money borrowed by the surviving partner, after the dissolution, was applied to partnership purposes.
To hold the estate of the deceased partner bound for .the money thus advanced to the surviving partner, would extend the responsibility of partners for the acts of each other performed after dissolution, beyond what has ever been heretofore done, and to a dangerous and pernicious degree. If a surviving partner pays more than his share of the debts, his creditors may, perhaps, by proper procedure in equity, obtain relief against the estate of a deceased partner. But such creditor cannot proceed in a court of law against the representative of a deceased partner, even though the money borrowed from him had been applied by his debtor to the
But it is contended that Harveys & Williams having received subsequently to these advances to the. surviving partner, moneys of George W. Gilliam &Co., have the right to apply those moneys first, to the payment of those advances.
If, upon the death of Glazebrook, they had opened a separate account with the surviving partner, and had received individual moneys of his, such claim could be sustained. Instead of that, however, they kept no separate accounts, but blended the old and new transactions in the same account in which this suit is brought; and if they had received individual money from the survivor, which was credited generally in the account, such credits would be applied to the oldest items of debt. See Clayton’s case, in Devaynes v. Noble, 1 Mer. 604; Simpson v. Ingham, 2 B. & Cr. 29.
But in this case the money received by them was the proceeds of partnership assets, and not the individual property of the survivor, which it would have been a fraud upon the deceased partner to apply to the individual debt of the survivor.
It is contended for the plaintiff in error that Harveys & Williams having continued their dealings with the surviving partner as if no change had taken place, such dealings discharged the estate of the deceased partner from all liability.
As a general rule, the estate of the deceased partner remains liable to the debts which affected him at the time of his death. Vulliamy v. Noble, 3 Mer. 619; Sleech’s Case, in Devaynes v. Noble, 1 Mer. 566.
It may be exonerated from this liability, if the subsequent dealings of the creditors with the surviving partner have been of such a nature as to show that they have consented
There is nothing in this case from which any such inference can be drawn. It was clearly not the intention of the parties to discharge the estate of Glazebrook, and look to Gilliam as their sole debtor. So far from it, the mode of dealing, of keeping, the accounts, and the other incidents of the case, show the purpose and intention, not only to hold the estate of the deceased partner liable for the debt existing at the time of his death, but to extend that liability to all the subsequent transactions.
The defendant below objected to an item in the account of $171.35, with the evidence to support it being allowed to go to the jury. The facts stated in the bill of exceptions show that in the lifetime of Glazebrook, Harveys & Williams, as the agents of Gilliam & Co., sold a lot of tobacco to Snowden & Rives, receiving the purchase money, for which they accounted to Gilliam & Co.
After Glazebrook’s death, Snowden & Rives made reclamation upon Harveys & Williams for damage to the tobacco. After investigation by the surviving partner, the claim was admitted by him to be just. Harveys & Williams thereupon paid the money and charged it in their account with Gilliam & Co. This claim was properly allowed to go to the jury. It was a liability existing, though not asserted, and possibly not known, at the time of the dissolution. And the adjustment of such liabilities is within the authority of the surviving member of the firm, which was ultimately liable.
There is another feature in the account on which this suit
I think the judgment should be reversed, the verdict set-aside, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Wingfield, P., and McLaughlin, J., concurred in the opinion of Barton, J.
Judgment reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.