59 Miss. 305 | Miss. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the court.
The complainants exhibited their bill in the Chancery Court of Chickasaw County, against Greenwood Ligón as executor of Simon Meyers deceased, and against him personally, and against him as trustee under the will of Meyers, for Mrs. Alice Foster and Mrs. Lelia Ligón, and as guardian for Kate and Lizzie Meyers, and against Morris Houseman, George W. Bean, Mrs. Zelda Bean, his wife, and Charles
We will first examine the demurrers interposed by Ligón as trustee, executor and guardian under the will of Meyers. The object of the bill, as against the representative of the estate of Meyers, is twofold : first, to charge the estate of Meyers with the debts; and, secondly, to set aside the assignment made by the surviving partners, and to appropriate the property assigned to the payment thereof. The facts charged by the bill do not entitle the complainants to the payment of their claims from the estate of Meyers, for, by his death, the firm of which he was a member was dissolved, and thereafter the surviving partners had no authority to bind his estate by the execution of the notes sued on, even if they were given for a debt existing at the time of his death. For the purpose of liquidating the affairs of the firm, they were entitled to the possession of all its assets, to collect all debts due to the firm, and to pay all debts due by it. For the purpose of realizing funds for the payment of such debts, they could sell all the property of the firm. But beyond this they had no authority
' The demurrer interposed by Ligón personally ought not to have been sustained. When an executor or an administrator embarks or continues the property of the estate in a partnership, without directions from the Chancery Court or authority in the will of the testator, he himself becomes personally liable as a partner in the firm ; for, since the estate is not bound by his unauthorized acts, he himself is, for the protection of those
The Chancery Court has jurisdiction in this cause, because of the alleged fraudulent character of the deed of assignment. Before the adoption of the Code of 1881, it was necessary for a creditor, seeking to subject to the payment of his debt property fraudulently conveyed by his debtor, first, to recover a judgment at law, and to either exhaust his remedy at law or to show the interposition of an obstacle to its enforcement which required the intervention of a court of equity for its removal. But by the Code, § 1843, it is provided that chancery courts “ shall have jurisdiction of bills exhibited by creditors, who have not obtained judgments at law, or having judgments, have not had executions returned unsatisfied, to set aside fraudulent conveyances of property, or other devices resorted to for the purpose of hindering, delaying or defrauding creditors; and may subject the property to the satisfaction of the demands of such creditors, as if complainant had a judgment and execution thereon returned ‘ no property found.’ ” The object of this statute was to prevent the necessity of a creditor resorting first to a court of law, to recover a judgment, and then going into equity to secure its satisfaction. The effect of this section, in connection with § 1845, which provides that the creditor in such bill shall have a lien on the property described in the bill, from the filing thereof, except as against bona fide purchasers, before the service of process on the defendant, is to give to the attacking creditor a statutory lien on the property fraudulently conveyed, and a foreclosure thereof in the same proceeding in which it is established. We see no reason why the court having acquired jurisdiction for the purpose of affording this relief, should stop short of giving to the parties all the relief which their case requires, according to the well-settled rule of equity, that the court once having taken jurisdiction will not cease until full justice has been done. If therefore it shall appear that the conveyances attacked by the bill were fraudulently made, and the same shall be annulled by the court, there is no reason why it may not render a personal decree against the defendants, for any balance of the debt which may
The motion for the appointment of a receiver was properly overruled. The decree sustaining the demurrers is reversed, the demurrers are overruled, and the cause remanded, with leave to the demurrant to answer within sixty days after the mandate in this cause shall have been filed in the court below.
Decree accordingly.