99 Ala. 114 | Ala. | 1892
The bill alleges that the partnership between the complainant Burnum, and Robert Caskey, the in
So long as a partner retains his interest in the partnership he has a lien on the partnership effects to secure their' application to the full payment and discharge of all debts and liabilities of the partnership, before any partner or his representative, or any individual creditor of such partner, can claim any right or title thereto; and, also, for the amount of his share, after the partnership debts have been paid, and for moneys advanced by him beyond that amount for the use of the partnership. For the enforcement of such a lien the aid of a court of equity may be invoked. But when one partner sells, without a reservation, his interest in the partnership to a co-partner, this lien is extinguished, and the effects become the exclusive property of the purchasing partner. When such a sale is made there is no longer a lien for the enforcement of which resort must be had to a court of equity. This ground of equitable interposition for the settlement of the partnership affairs no longer exists. Hart v. Clark, 54 Ala. 490; Levy v. Williams, 79 Ala. 171; Reese v. Bradford, 13 Ala. 837.
In McGown v. Sprague, 23 Ala. 524, it was held, that the selling partner was equitably entitled to be reinvested with his original rights as partner, when the purchasing partner, who had undertaken to pay all the partnership debts, instead of performing his agreement, left the debts unpaid, and absconded, leaving numerous individual creditors claiming the right to subject to their demands the property which had belonged to the partnership. The conduct of the purchasing partner in that case was treated as a fraud upon the selling partner which equitably entitled the latter to a rescission of the contract of sale, so far as it operated to deprive him of a lien upon the partnership effects to have them applied to the payment of the partnership debts. The
The sale of his interest in the partnership by one partner to another, unless it is otherwise provided by the terms of the contract of sale, operates such a change in the position of the seller that he no longer has any claim based upon the existence of the partnership relation, which from its very nature, as each partner is liable for all the debts of the partnership and is entitled to a distributive share of the effects only after a sufficiency thereof has been applied to satisfy and discharge the firm liabilities, requires an accounting and a final closing of the partnership affairs, to ascertain what, if any, balance is due to each partner; but in the place of such a claim, for the enforcement of which legal remedies are inadequate, he acquires rights against the purchaser which are defined by the terms of the contract of sale, and for the ascertainment and enforcement of which a settlement and winding up of the partnership affairs may be wholly unnecessary. The contract rights of parties must be enforced by legal remedies, unless the inadequacy of such remedies is shown. An action at law can be maintained for any violation of an agreement by a purchasing partner to pay a stipulated price for the interest of the selling partner, to discharge and satisfy the outstanding debts of the dissolved partnership, and to pay the selling partner the value of services rendered by him and the amounts paid out by him for the firm while it was in existence.—Peacey v. Peacey, 27 Ala. 683; Hogan v. Calvert, 21 Ala. 194; Rowland v. Boozer, 10 Ala. 690; Clark v. Clark, 5 Porter, 9; McCall v. Oliver, 1 Stewart, 510; Hunt v. Rogers, 7 Allen, 469; 2 Bates on Partnership, § 634. No ground of equitable interposition is disclosed by the circumstance that the seller, if his claim of damages for breaches of the contract of sale is controverted, must prove the existence and amount of the firm debts remaining unpaid, and also numerous items of expenses incurred, or disbursements made, by himself. In
Beversed and remanded.