314 N.E.2d 188 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1974
This case comes here on appeal1 after denial of a motion to vacate judgment under Civ. Rule 60(B).2 The *2 judgment for which vacation was sought was a judgment in foreclosure to enforce a lien imposed on a partner's undivided interest in partnership real estate after the appellee had secured an individual judgment in a separate proceeding against one of the partners, Appellant Louis Goldblatt.3
"1. The Court erred in overruling the Motion to Vacate Judgment for the reasons that the findings and order of sale based thereon in the judgment rendered on June 30, 1972 are contrary to law.
"2. The Court erred in finding that a partner by reason of his partnership interest owns an undivided interest in partnership owned real estate.
"3. The Court erred in imposing a judgment against a partner individually against partnership owned real estate.
"4. The Court erred in ordering such claimed interest in partnership owned real estate sold to satisfy an individual creditor of one of the partners.
"5. The Court was without jurisdiction to enter such judgment."
The first four assignments of error involve essentially the same issue, that is, the propriety of levying execution by foreclosing on the real estate of a partnership to satisfy the judgment debt of an individual partner. The fifth assignment argues that the court below was without jurisdiction to enter a judgment of foreclosure.
The first four assignments of error are well taken. The fifth has no merit. We reverse.
Foreclosure proceedings are within the subject matter jurisdiction of any Ohio Court of Common Pleas, and in this case appellant does not attack the trial court's jurisdiction of the persons or partnership involved nor is there a claim that the proper venue was not laid. For these reasons the fifth assignment of error must fail.
R. C.
"(A) A partner is co-owner with his partners of specific partnership property holding as a tenant in partnership.4
"(B)
"(3) A partner's right in specific partnership property isnot subject to attachment or execution, except on a claim against the partnership. . . ."5
R. C.
"A partner's interest in the partnership is his share of the profits and surplus, and the same is personal property."
The consequence of these statutory enactments is to immunize partnership assets against direct attachment or levy, cf.Farm Bureau v. Dicke (1972),
The immunization purpose is assisted and emphasized by the definition in R. C.
"(A) On due application to a competent court by any judgment creditor of a partner, the court which entered the judgment, order, or decree, or any other court, may charge the interest ofthe debtor partner with payment of the unsatisfied amount of such judgment debt with interest thereon; and may then or later appoint a receiver of his share of the profits, and of any othermoney due or to fall due to him in respect of the partnership, and make all other orders, directions, accounts, and inquiries which the debtor partner might have made, or which the circumstances of the case may require.
"(B) The interest charged may be redeemed at any time before foreclosure,7 or in case of a sale being directed by the court may be purchased without thereby causing a dissolution;. . . ." *5
The interest subjected to the charging order in R. C.
The denial of the motion to vacate is reversed, the judgment in foreclosure vacated, the appellee's judgment lien against the appellant partnership's real estate is dissolved without prejudice to appellee's pursuit of the remedies available to him under R. C.
Judgment accordingly.
KRENZLER, P. J., and JACKSON, J., concur.