35 N.H. 402 | N.H. | 1857
The claim of the plaintiff in this case is for damages against the defendant, a deputy sheriff, for neglecting to levy an execution recovered by the plaintiff against James Briggs and John Andrew, as surviving partners of Joshua and John Briggs, upon property claimed by the plaintiff to have belonged to the firm of James Briggs & Brothers, of which the four were members.
The property in question originally belonged to that firm as partnership property.
Upon the death of one of the members of a partnership, the title to the partnership property vests in the survivors, and the debts and liabilities of the partnership survive against the surviving members, as their proper personal debts and liabilities.
The grounds upon which these principles are held applicable to the cases of the conflicting claims of creditors of a partnership, and of one of its members, equally exist in the case of such conflict of claims between the respective creditors of two firms, one of which succeeds by survivorship to the right of property and liabilities of the other. The partnership property of the original firm is none the less subject to the lien of the creditors of that firm, because, by the consent and agreement of the survivors, it is held by them as the property of a new partnership which they have formed among themselves, as the successors of
Before proceeding to apply these principles to the present
It was contended by the defendant at the trial, that there was no competent evidence that the plaintiff’s execution was in the hands of the defendant at the time Merrill directed the levy. This objection has not been insisted upon in the argument, but we may not, perhaps, consider it as waived. We think there was competent evidence to be submitted to the jury upon that point in the proceedings which took place between Merrill and the defendant, as testified to by Smith and Hoit. The receipt by the defendant of the ten dollars as fees for levying, and of the bond to indemnify, containing the recital that the defendant had been requested to receive and serve the execution, and the want of any suggestion by the defendant at the time that the execution was not in his possession, tend to show that he had it in his possession, or under his control, and were sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that it had been put into his hands to be served.
Another objection taken at the trial was, that there was no evidence of a proper designation of the property on which to make the levy. The evidence showed that the defendant, residing in Meredith, at the distance of some miles from the mill in Holderness, where the property was situated, was requested by Merrill to come to his house in Holderness, which was but a few rods distant from the mill, and was told that he would point out to the defendant the particular articles on which he wished the levy made. It was necessary for the defendant, in order to ■make the levy, to go to the mill. Having accepted the money ■offered to him for this service, it was his duty, in reference to this point, to proceed and make the levy, unless, when he arrived ;at the mill, he should be at a loss to know upon what property
Another objection was, that there was no competent evidence of the authority of Merrill to direct the levy. The testimony of Hiram Cross, if competent, clearly proved such authority; but this was objected to as incompetent, on the ground of his interest in the suit. His answers purge him of all such interest. The suit was not brought for him, nor by his direction. He would have no control over the judgment, if one should be recovered by the plaintiff, nor any right to the avails of it. The alleged neglect of the defendant, on which the action is founded, did not arise upon any proceedings of his, nor upon any duty owing from the defendant to him. In the request to levy the execution, and in all the subsequent proceedings in instituting and prosecuting this action, Merrill was acting in his own behalf and for his own interest, and the witness would in no other sense gain or lose by the event of the suit than that one of his debtors, Merrill, might in the end be found to have more or less funds at command to pay the debt, according as he may or not succeed in recovering damages in this suit in Benson’s name.
Besides, it is too late for the defendant to make the objection that Merrill had no authority to direct the levy, after receiving from him the execution for service, with the bond of indemnity and fees, without at the time making any question of his authority.
If, then, in June, 1852, when Merrill requested the defendant to levy the execution upon the machinery in the mill, and informed him that upon his coming to make the levy he would point out to him the specific property upon which to make it, there was in fact any property in the mill upon which the plaintiff might legally require his execution to be levied, the defendant neglected his duty in this behalf, and for any damages resulting from that neglect the party in interest, having the right to prosecute in the name of Benson, is entitled to recover.
At the time of the attachments, then, in October, 1851, and from that time until after the request made by the plaintiff to the defendant to levy his execution, the property belonged to the judgment debtors, James Briggs and John Andrew, as surviving partners of the first and second firms, and it was also held by them as partnership property of the third firm, then existing. As such, it was subject in their hands to the claims of creditors of the original: firm, as the paramount lien; to those of the intermediate firm, as subordinate to that, but superior to the rights of creditors of the then existing firm, and to those of the existing firm in preference to the creditors of individual members ; and the question arises, how is it to be determined to which of the classes the three several attaching creditors in this case belonged ? Is it to be decided in each case upon the allegations of the writ and the indebtedness therein set forth, as the foundation of the suit ? Or is the question for the jury upon
This is not a question whether the judgment is or not, in reference to this point, conclusive upon the officer or the other creditors, according as it may be found upon legal principles that they are or are not parties or privy to it. It may be conceded that they are strangers to it, and therefore not bound by it as a judgment. Nevertheless, we think that considerations of great weight lead to the conclusion that, as between the judgment creditor, and others making claim to the property under their respective attachments, and as between them and the officer, they are to be considered as standing upon the same ground, in reference to this point, as though they were privy to the judgment, and therefore bound by it.
When the plaintiff, in a suit commenced by writ of attachment, declares against the defendant upon his sole promise, alleging the indebtedness upon which he counts as incurred by him alone, without setting it out as incurred by him jointly with his former partner, whom he has survived, we think he should be estopped thereby to claim, for the purpose of acquiring a lien to property under his attachment to which he would otherwise have no right, that the indebtedness upon which the action is founded was incurred in fact by the partnership. If the promise be such that he may declare upon it as joint or several, having elected in his declaration in which form to proceed, it must be understood that he has made his election with reference to the advantage, if any, to be secured by the attachment, either of the partnership property or of the private property of the partner. When he declares against the survivor as the sole promissor, he must be understood to do so because the indebtedness upon which he counts was contracted by the defendant solely and not jointly, with his former partner; and he proceeds in this form with a view to secure and perfect his lien upon the property of his debtor in his own right, and to obtain his priority over the
Neither Johnson & Dale, then, nor Shaw, are at liberty to prove that the plaintiff’s judgment is not in fact founded upon such a debt as is alleged in the writ. If they are thus estopped, it is clear that the defendant in this action, representing them as he does in this contest for the property, is also estopped. In answer to the claim of the plaintiff to the priority, he sets up their alleged superior right, and in maintaining their right he can not take ground which they would not be permitted to assume.
As to the different classes of creditors making claims to the property, and as to the officer levying upon it, the judgments must be regarded as conclusive in this respect. The plaintiff’s debt is shown by the judgment to have been contracted by the original firm, and was thus entitled to the preference in the application of the property.
It is clear that the right thus to be preferred was not lost or impaired by the facts offered to be proved in connection with the management of the property subsequently to the death of Joshua Briggs, and the proceedings of the administrators of Joshua and John in relation to it. In all cases the property of a partner