55 Wis. 129 | Wis. | 1882
1. One of the controlling questions in this case is, Was the lot in controversy partnership property when Mairet conveyed it to the appellant, Pichardott, to secure his indebtedness to the latter? The testimony satisfies us that the question must be answered in the affirmative. We think the following facts are established by the proofs: The firm of Mairet, Le Boef & Co., composed of the plaintiffs and the defendant Mairet, was the successor of the firm of Mairet, Allen & Co. The members of the latter firm were one Allen, the plaintiffs Le Boef and Etier and the defendant Mairet. Allen retired from that finn, and the plaintiff Bergeron took his place, whereupon the firm name was changed to Mairet, Le Boef & Co. Bergeron paid in, as his part of the capital of the firm, $4,000 in cash, and the other partners put in their interest in the property of the old firm, as their share of the capital stock, $4,000 by Mairet, and $4,000 by Le Boef and Ftier jointly. The lot in controversy was charged to the firm of Mairet, Allen & Co. on the books of that firm, and credited to Mairet. Hence, although no formal conveyance of it was made to the firm, it was essentially firm property, and a court of equity will so regard it. See cases cited in brief of counsel for plaintiffs. Soon after the new firm was formed, the lot was entered on its books at an increased price to the credit of the old firm. Mairet must have known of these entries, for he was the manager of the business of the firm; yet it does not appear that he ever objected to them. Moreover, he twice executed
2. But it is claimed that in a former suit between the same parties it was determined that the firm had no interest in the lot in controversy, and the doctrine of res ad/judicata is invoked to defeat the claim of the plaintiffs. That action was brought by the appellant against the firm on two promissory notes of the firm. The firm answered, alleging payment of the notes. On the trial the defendants relied upon the'conveyance of the store lot by Mairet to the appellant as payment of the notes. The court instructed the jury that if the lot was partnership property, “ and was so conveyed in payment of the notes,” the appellant could not recover. There was a general verdict for the appellant for the amount of the notes, on which judgment was entered against the firm. From this statement of the former suit it appears that two questions of fact were submitted to the jury. These are: (1) "Was the lot partnership property? and (2) Was it conveyed to the appellant in payment of his notes against the firm? The jury may have found that the lot was partnership property, but that it was not so conveyed in payment of the notes. An affirmative finding on the first question and a negative finding on the second would have resulted in a verdict for the appellant. Hence, the verdict is entirely consistent with a finding either way on the question of ownership; and this brings the case within the rule of Van Valkenburgh v. Milwaukee, 43 Wis., 574. "We conclude that
8. It only remains to determine whether the appellant took the conveyance from Mairet in good, faith, and without notice that the firm was the equitable owner of the lot conveyed to him. "When the appellant made the loan to Mairet in the spring of 1814, to secure which the conveyance was executed, the firm was in the actual, open and notorious possession of the lot, its place of business being the store situated upon it. This was constructive notice to all the world of the interest of the firm in the property, and deprives the appellant of the character of a purchaser without notice of the interest of the firm in the property, whether it was a legal or a purely equitable interest. True, the conveyance was not executed until after the firm ceased to occupy the premises; but the agreement for the conveyance was made, and the money advanced on the faith of such agreement, when the firm were in the actual possession and occupancy of the lots. A court of equity will regard the conveyance as executed when under the agreement it should have been executed, and will consider the rights of all parties as fixed and established by the conditions which existed when the loan and agreement for the conveyance were made. On this basis the appellant is not a bona fide purchaser of the lot without notice of the interest of the firm therein. Were it held that the rights of the parties are fixed and established by the conditions existing ■when the conveyance was actually executed, the same result would follow. In that case the conveyance would be merely a security for a pre-existing debt, and all the authorities here and elsewhere agree that such a conveyance would only transfer the interest of Mairet, without affecting the legal or equitable title of the firm. The circuit judge seems to have taken the latter view, for he found that the conveyance was made as a security for a pre-existing debt. Whether it
Eor reasons which he deemed sufficient, the learned counsel for the defendant -earnestly urged us to disregard the findings of the court below, and to decide the case upon the proofs as we would if there were no findings in the record. While we have not felt at liberty to comply fully with this request, we have examined the case from a somewhat different standpoint than that from which the circuit judge considered it; and whatever we may think of some of his findings, we are of the opinion that the evidence supports the judgment. The judgment must therefore be affirmed.
By the Gourt.— Judgment affirmed.