Brower v. His Creditors

11 La. Ann. 117 | La. | 1856

Lea, J.

The litigation in this case grows out of an opposition filed by 8. H. Moore S Go. to a claim of Mrs. Vanzandt for $9494, placed upon the tableau of distribution filed by the Syndic.

In the latter part of the year 1849 George G. Brower and William T. Van-zandt formed a copartnership in this city, which was carried on under the style of B. Brower & Go. until it was dissolved by a eessio ionorum made in 1855.

Another firm had previously existed under the same name, of which Baldwin Brower, the former husband of Mrs. Vanzandt, was the principal member. B. Brower died in 1845. The share of the legal representatives of the deceased was not withdrawn from the firm, but in pursuance of stipulations in the contract of partnership, it was continued until 1849, when the new firm was formed.

At the time the partnership was entered into between Geo. 0. Brower and Vanzandt there was due to Mrs. Vanzandt, formerly the widow of B. Brower, by the old firm, the sum of $9494 25.

In the contract of partnership between G. C. Brower and Vanzandt, Mrs. Vanzandt intervened, and consented that this balance, coming to her as widow in community of her late husband, should remain with the new firm as a loan upon which she was to receive interest, payable quarterly.

It appears from the evidence that the widow of B. Brower and wife of Van-zandt consented to look to the new firm as her debtor for the portion coming to her from the final liquidation of the succession of her deceased husband, which was in part effected by the very sale by which the new firm purchased the stock and took the place of the old firm.

Now, it is contended that Mrs. Vanzandt is not a creditor, for the reasons that she is a partner in the new firm, and liable for its debts, and that by her marriage with Vanzandt he became the absolute owner of her personal property wherever situated; and, moreover, that by her express act she has waived her right, if she ever had any, to receive a dividend.

We think the terms of the contract of partnership show conclusively that Mrs. Vanzandt was not a partner, but a creditor. That her right as such *118consisted in her then unliquidated interest in the succession of Baldwin Brower, and as such it was a chose in action, which up to that period had not been reduced to possession, and over which it does not appeer that her husband ever exercised any act of dominion or administration. See 2d Ann., 983; also Mercenaro v. Bertoli, lately decided ; also New York Statutes of 1848 and 1849.

Again, Mrs. Vanzandt did not lend or give money to her husband which was lent by him to the firm. By the very terms of the contract she was acknowledged as a creditor of the firm in her own right: this acknowledgment was based upon a good and valid consideration, and the only question to be determined is whether she has done any act or made any contract which debars her from urging her claim as a creditor.

We have been referred to a stipulation contained in the act of partnership, by which Mrs. Vanzandt agrees not to be considered as a creditor until all the other debts are provided for.

By whatever name such a stipulation may be called, it is nothing more nor less than a contract of suretyship for her husband, for the benefit of his creditors. It is a contract entered into by her, without any consideration enuring to her benefit, both for her husband and conjointly with him, by which she renounces her own rights as a creditor for the benefit of those who may thereafter become his creditors. Such a stipulation is repudiated by the spirit and letter of our laws. See Art. C. C., 2412.

We think there is no error in the judgment appealed from.

Judgment affirmed.

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