53 N.Y.S. 493 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
These actions were brought to compel the restitution by the defendant Hornthal of certain moneys received by him from the firm of Weiss Bros., composed of the defendants Albert and Robert Weiss, and from the defendant Lewy, as trustee, for the benefit of certain preferred creditors of said firm. The plaintiffs in each action recovered judgment, from which the defendants Hornthal and Lewy have appealed. The legal principles applicable to and controlling upon us in disposing of the questions presented were settled and declared by the Court of Appeals in Baily v. Hornthal (154 N. Y. 648), unless the facts established upon the trial of these actions are different than those established upon the trial of that action.
Hpon the trial it was made to appear, and the trial court found as a fact, that in April, 1886, the defendants Albert Weiss, Robert Weiss and the defendant Hornthal'formed, under the firm name of Weiss Bros., pursuant to the statute of the State of Texas, a limited copartnership, in which Hornthal was the special and the other two the general partners; that the capital contributed by Hornthal was $50,000; that the limited copartnership was renewed and continued from time to time until April 30, 1891, when it was succeeded by the general copartnership of Weiss Bros., composed of Albert and Robert Weiss 'alone. The general copartnership took all of the assets of the limited copartnership, and continued the business theretofore carried on by it without interruption or apparent change of any kind until November 5, 1891. On the 23d of May,-1891, the general copartnership paid to Hornthal $25,000, a portion of the capital contributed by him to the limited copartnership, On the 5th of November, 1891, being unable to pay its obligations, the general copartnership failed, its failure being first made known by the execution of a deed of trust delivered on that day to the defendant Lewy, as- trustee, for the benefit of certain creditors, whose claims aggre
The first two actions were brought in aid of judgments recovered by the plaintiffs, and the other one in aid of an attachment. A portion of the indebtedness was contracted before the expiration of the limited copartnérship, and a portion of it thereafter. As to the former, the theory of the plaintiffs is that, as creditors of the limited copartnership, they were entitled to payment before any of the special capital of Hornthal could be withdrawn; and, as to the latter, that the special copartnership being insolvent at the time of its dissolution, the new firm had no right to apply any of its assets, whether derived from the special copartnership or otherwise, to the reimbursement of Horntlial’s special capital, because he then had no enforcible claim for that capital, or any part of it. Upon examination of the record in the Baily case, it will be found that the rights of the plaintiffs to maintain these actions upon the theories referred to was there iiot only settled and determined, but that the facts there established were substantially the same as the facts established upon the trial of these cases. Upon the trial of these actions further evidence was given, tending to show the actual insolvency of the special copartnership at the time Hornthal withdrew. The books of
In the Badly case the court held-that the payment by the trustee to Hornthal was not justified inasmuch as the amount paid belonged to creditors, and that decision, in so far as it relates to that portion of the relief demanded here, is conclusive. The questión of Hornthal’s liability to restore the $25,000 paid to him in May, 1891, was not definitely determined in the Baily case inasniuch. as that ques-"
The defendant Lewy, in the answer interposed by him, alleges that the money paid by him to Hornthal under the trust deed was paid by mistake or under a misunderstanding of the facts, and that in equity he,, as trustee, is entitled to the return of that money in order that it may be disbursed by him in pursuance of the other provisions of the trust deed. The court below rejected his claim. There does not seem to be any proof of mistake or of any misunderstanding. The money was piaid under and in pmrsuance of the authority contained in the trust deed and not otherwise. The trustee
The Whiclier action-is different from the other two in that it is brought in aid of an attachment. The questions, however, involved are the same in all respects save that they relate to the form of the action. The plaintiff’s claim arises out of a contract antedating the dissolution of the limited copartnership, and we see no reason why the plaintiff is not entitled to the relief asked. By the provisions of the Code (§ 655, subd. 2) they are entitled, pursuant to an order 'of the court, to maintain, with the sheriff, against any person or persons any action “ which may now be maintained by a judgment creditor in a court of equity, either before the return of an execution in aid thereof or after the return of an execution unsatisfied.” The action is, as we have already seen, in aid of .an attachment, and the plaintiffs are entitled to reach whatever judgment creditors may reach in a judgment creditor’s action. As judgment creditors of Albert and Robert Weiss are entitled, upon the ground of insolvency of the limited copartnership, to complain of the attempt of the judgment debtors to prefer Horntlial out of their property, and to compel him to account for the money received, so the plaintiffs under the statute, having complied with all of its conditions, are entitled to similar relief.
After a careful consideration of the voluminous record before us we .have been unable to find. any material. difference between the facts established in these cases and those established in the Baily case. Indeed, the facts here are more unfavorable to the defendants than in that case. It, therefore, follows that each of the judgments appealed from must be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Rumsey and O’Brien, JJ., concurred.
Judgments affirmed, with costs.