87 Ala. 642 | Ala. | 1888
On motion of appellees, the Circuit Court made -an order, that the proceeds of the sale of personal
At common law, one partnership can maintain no action against another, when one of the partners is a member of both firms. The reason is, that the common partner must necessarily be the plaintiff and defendant, and that a judgment can not be rendered in favor of himself against himself. But, by statute, “any one of the associates, or his legal representative, may be sued for the obligation of all.” Code, 1886, § 2605. This statute has been construed to give a creditor the right to sue any one of the partners, for a debt contracted by the firm, whether due by account or otherwise; and that the effect of a suit so commenced is to change, for the purposes of such suit, the obligation of the partners from joint to joint and several. The creditor may declare on the debt, as the individual liability of the partner sued. —Duramus v. Harrison, 26 Ala. 326; Hall v. Cook, 69 Ala. 87. Under a statute in Mississippi, declaring the notes of partners joint and several, it was held, that a member of a partnership may be co-plaintiff with the other partners, in a suit on a promissory note against the members of- another firm, of which he is also a partner, provided he is not joined as a defendant; and that the others can not set up his liability as a defense. —Morris v. Hillery, 7 How. 61. In Lacy v. LeBruce, 6 Ala. 904, it was held, that the death of a common partner removed the impediment to a sjiit at law to recover a demand due by one firm to the other, and that the survivor of the one may sue the survivor of the other. The reason of the rule at common law having ceased by operation of the statute, it would seem that the rule also should cease. But this we need not decide.
The order from which the appeal is taken can not be maip
Reversed and remanded.