90 Ky. 308 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1890
delivered the opinion .oe the court.
Tlie appellees were partners, engaged in the sale of goods, wares and merchandise, and while conducting the firm business the appellant obtained an attachment that resulted in their closing their establishment, and
The assignment was made between the issual of the attachment and the levy, and it is apparent from the proof that insolvency was inevitable, and the effect of the attachment was only to hasten the time for making it. It is claimed by the appellant that, as the right of action was an injury to the partnership, whether to its property or. to its credit, the claim, if any, passed by the assignment to the assignee, and being firm assets when collected, as the right of recovery existed before the assignment, the recovery should go to the assignee for. creditors, and that, therefore, the assignee must sue. It may be a tort, and yet, if an injury to the firm property, it passed to the assignee, and if an injury to the firm credit, the same result would follow. If the cause of action would survive, then, as said in Francis v. Burnett, 84 Ky., 23, it would pass to the personal representative. By our statute so much of the action for malicious prosecution as is intended to recover for the personal injury dies with the person. (Ch. 10, General Statutes.)
There was nothing sought to be recovered for personal injury in this case, because they sue as partners for an injury to the firm credit and business. This is the gravamen of- the complaint, and none other existed upon the facts alleged. The inquiry is, how could the firm be exposed in any other way than as to its property or its credit or its business ? It affects the partnership, and not the individual member, only
The judgment is reversed, and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.