12 N.Y.S. 678 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
The debt to Clark, evidenced by the notes preferred in the appellants’ assignment, was in no sense the debt or obligation of the firm of Williams & Co. It was not incurred in the business of .jfche firm, or for its benefit, and the firm had not in any manner become obligated to pay it. Durant v. Pierson, 11 N. Y. Supp. 842. It was the debt of the firm of M. C. Williams & Co., which, by agreement between the members of that firm, M. C. Williams had obligated himself to pay. Before discharging this obligation said M. C. Williams died, leaving his entire estate (subject to the payment of his debts) to the appellant Helen A. Williams, who was in no manner personally'liable for the payment of this debt. She, however, elected to retain the estate of her deceased husband, and to free the same from this Clark debt, by individually assuming and paying the same. Accordingly the notes referred to were made and signed by the said Helen A. Williams as principal, and by the appellant L. Sophia Williams as surety, and in that form delivered to Clark, and the obligation of M. C. Williams & Co. retired. The acceptance by Clark of the notes of a third party was, within all of the cases, under the circumstances, a payment of the firm debt of M. C. Williams & Co., and discharged the appellant L. Sophia Williams from any liability thereon to Clark; thus leaving Clark in the same situation as though he had made a loan to Helen A. Williams upon the notes,—i. e., the holder of the joint and several obligation of the appellants, and, as between the appellants, leaving Helen A. Williams the principal debtor, and L. Sophia her surety, with all the rights pertaining to that relation. Such being the situation, the question whether the appellants could, in their assignment, devote the firm property to the payment of this debt, is sharply presented, and the affirmative of the proposition strenuously urged by the appellants. As we understand the appellants’ claim, it is, not that the firm could, in their assignment, prefer the individual debt of one of the partners, but that, both of the partners being liable upon these joint and several obligations, the same might therefore be preferred and paid from the firm property to the exclusion of the firm creditors; and Saunders v. Reilly, 105 N. Y. 12, 12 N. E. Rep. 170, and Davis v. Canal Co., 109 N. Y. 47, 15 N. E. Rep. 878, are cited in support of this contention. In Saunders v. Reilly it was held that the title to firm property would pass under a sale upon a joint execution against all the partners, issued upon a judgment recovered for any joint debt whatever, and this conclusion was reached after a careful examination of the principles underlying the law applicable to the rights and obligations of copartners as between themselves and between such firms and their creditors. Barl, J., who delivered the opinion of the court, at page 19, 105 N. Y., and page 172, 12 N. E. Rep., says: “After this sale of the firm property upon a joint judgment against both members of the firm no equity was left in either member of the firm to have the property thereafter applied in discharge of the firm debts. Having been applied in discharge of the joint debt against both members of the firm, all the equities of both members in the property, as against each other, were wiped out; and it is only through the equity which one member of a firm has in the firm property or against his copartners that firm creditors, on the principle of subrogation, can enforce their claims against firm property. ” It will be observed from this language of the learned judge that the decision in that case proceeds upon the ground that the equity of the copartners had been “wiped out” by" the sale of the partnership assets, and that they were not, as
It is, however, contended by the appellant that the affidavits upon which the attachment was granted contain no proof of an intent on their part to defraud their creditors, and therefore the judge was without jurisdiction to grant the same. The Code of Civil Procedure, (omitting provisions not important to be considered here,) § 636, provides as follows: “To entitle the plaintiff to such warrant he must show by affidavit, to the satisfaction of the judge granting the same, as follows: * * * That the defendant * * * has assigned, disposed of, or secreted, or is about to assign, dispose of, or secrete, property * * * with intent to defraud his creditors.” In considering the purpose of the legislature in enacting this statute, we cannot express our views more clearly than to quote from the appellants’ brief as follows: “The
■This question has been discussed and determined in this court in several reported cases, of which it is only necessary to cite Vletor v. Eenlein, 34 Hun, 562. The case of Shotwell v. Bank, (Minn.) 45 N. AV. Rep. 842, cited by ap