107 Pa. 590 | Pa. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the court October 2d, 1883.
If the instrument of 23d November, 1875, constituted a valid equitable pledge of the interest which produced the fund for distribution, the other contentions in the case become immaterial and will not require consideration. Of course there is no pretence of a legal lien, but a pledge in equity available to the pledgee, does not depend upon the considerations which are requisite to the creation of a lien at law. The chief objection'to the operation of the instrument in question as a pledge, is that “the thing proposed to be pledged, that is, Hulse’s interest in a partnership between him and Alexander W. Wister, never came into existence,” and therefore there was nothing upon which the paper could operate. Designated with precision, and by its legal name, the interest which produced the fund was á one-half interest in the capital stock of a limited partnership called the Centennial Rolling Chair Company, limited. The partnership was organized under the Act of 2d June, 1874, and the persons who composed it were Charles F. Iiulse, Thomas C. Rice, Alexander W. Wister, William B. Rodgers, Jr., Langhorne Wister and Isaac Collins. The capital stock was twenty-five thousand dollars, of which Charles F. Hulse held $12,500, and the others, different sums aggregating $12,500. The agreement creating the partnership was dated, signed and acknowledged on February 9th, 1876, and recorded on the 11th, two days later. Tiie certificate of organization recites that the parties, naming them all, “ have entered into a limited partnership association for the business of furnishing for hire, rolling chairs for the accommodation and conveyance of persons within the grounds and buildings of the Centennial Exhibition, under and "by virtue of the Act of Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, approved the second day of June, A. D. 1874.”
The fifth Clause of the certificate is in the following words: “ The general nature and character of the business intended to be transacted by the said partnership association, is the furnishing for hire of rolling chairs for the accommodation and conveyance of persons within the grounds and buildings of the Centennial Exhibition, and the office of the said association is to be located in the city of Philadelphia.” There is nothing in the other parts of the certificate which conflicts in any manner with the foregoing description of the purpose, character and object of the undertaking or enterprise in which the parties to it engaged.
Now the material part of the description of the subject of the pledge, contained in the paper of November 23d, 1875, is “ capital in an undertaking to furnish rolling chairs for the Centennial Exhibition.” This is a description of the thing itself, and it is literally complied with by the subject matter which produced the fund in court. The subsequent language is rather of reference than description, thus: “ The said Hulse’s interest in the said partnership 4 limited ’ of Hulse & Wister.” There was no “partnership limited” previously described, and the only antecedent of the whole phrase is the “undertaking” to furnish rolling chairs. It is perfectly plain to us that the second phrase is a mere careless and inartistic reference to the actual subject more accurately described in the first sentence. The two are not necessarily inconsistent. They were intended to relate to, and indicate, the same thing. Moreover, the parties may then have supposed that the partnership when formed would be named “Hulse & Wister,” and therefore referred to it by that name, and yet when it came to be established may have decided to give it another
This raises the only remaining question, to wit, whether a valid and binding pledge can be given of the interest of tlio pledgor, in a partnership to be subsequently created, so as to secure to the pledgee a priority of lien as against other unsecured creditors. In such a case the subject of the pledge is necessarily incapable of manual possession or of actual delivery. It is in no sense a specific chattel, and oven as a chose in action it cannot be enjoyed in possession until after the partnership Las been closed, the debts paid, the rights of the partners as between themselves adjusted, and the resulting amouutdue the pledgor ascertained. The interest comes into existence as soon ¡is the partnership is created, but it is an uncertain quantity until dissolution and final settlement. It is intangible as a rets. It may be something or it may be nothing. But in legal and in equitable contemplation it is an entity which may be subject to any kind of contract relation which is possible to such forms of property. Partnership interests are of infinite variety and of enormous extent and value. In the business world they are the subjects of daily transactions in all civilized societies. Within the limitations which arise out of their peculiar characteristics they may be dealt with as other personal property. One objection to the validity of the pledge in the present case is that the interest in question had no existence at the date of the instrument creating the pledge, and for this reason also there was nothing upon which it could operate. Indeed, that was the ground upon which the learned court below decided the case against the appellant. But in other forms of property that objection does not avail. In the case of Railroad Co. v. Woelpper, 14 P. F. S. 366, Sharswood, J., said : “But it is objected that no person, natural or artifi
These principles have been recognized and enforced in this court. In McWilliams v. Nisly, 2 S. & R. 518, Gibson, J., said : “In equity a grantor conveying land for which he has no title at the time, shall be considered a trustee for tbe grantee, in case at any time afterwards he should acquire title.” In Chew v. Barnet, 11 S. & R. 391, it was said: “ The facts presented constitute the ordinary case of a conveyance before the grantor has acquired the title, in which the conveyance operates as an agreement to convey, which when the title has been subsequently acquired may bo enforced in chancery.” In Baylor v. The Commonwealth, 4 Wright 43, Strong, J., says : “But though a conveyance of an expectancy as such is impossible at law, it may be enforced in equity as an executory agreement to convey, if it be sustained by a sufficient consideration. This has often been decided.”
It is unnecessary to prolong these citations. They prove clearly that the existence of the subject of tbe pledge at tbe time the contract of pledge is made, is not at all necessary. If it comes into existence afterwards it is affected, in equity, at once by the lien stipulated for. There is no doubt that the principles illustrated by the foregoing decisions are applicable to cases of sales, absolute assignments and mortgages. But owing to the peculiar character of the instrument executed by Hulse in this case we have bad much doubt whether they were applicable to this particular contract.
The difficulty has been that while there is a distinct pledge, in terms of present operation, of the interest of Hulse in the contemplated undertaking and partnership, there is no actual assignment and no provision for an absolute assignment. An assignment is provided for and wo could readily hold it to be an equitable assignment, if it were not for tbe fact that the obligation of Hulse to make it only arose after demand made
The question then recurs, can the lien of the appellant be enforced as a technical pledge of Hulse’s interest in the partnership? His equity is very great. The testimony proves distinctly that the money loaned by him to Hulse went directly into the partnership, and formed part of its capital and therefore was the means, the sole means, of producing the fund to be now distributed. At the time it was loaned it was upon a distinct and absolute pledge of Hulse’s interest in terms of present operation. It could not operate immediately because the subject of the pledge was not then in existence, but as we have heretofore seen that circumstance is, in equity, immaterial, and it became operative, as soon as the interest was created. It is effective therefore so far as such a pledge of such a subject can be effective. Is it sufficiently so to give the appellant the money which is the product of the interest pledged, as against the appellee ? The appellee is not a purchaser. He is but a creditor and he has not the rights which could be asserted by a purchaser for value and without notice. He is not a creditor subsequent to the creation of the partnership, but anterior thereto, and therefore cannot assert that his credit was given on the faith of the apparent ownership of this interest by Hulse. He is not a creditor who had levied on the interest of Hulse and sold it upon execution and purchased it at such sale. He is but a general creditor of Hulse without any equity except such as all creditors of that class have upon the assets of their debtor. Notwithstanding all this he is entitled to share this fund pro rata with
*The only difficulty that lies in the appellant’s way in this respect grows out of the consideration that possession of the subject of the pledge is an almost universal requirement in the law of pledge, to perfect the pledgee’s title. It may be dispensed with in certain cases, but the current of the authorities is that in such cases there must be a substitute for it in the way of a transfer of the title in such manner that the pledgee can exercise a right of possession without any further act of the pledgor. Formerly no distinction was taken between a [hedge and a mortgage of chattels. They were both regarded as a security for a debt, and the title of the pledgee was considered as substantially the same in both oases. In the ease of Cortelyou v. Lansing, 2 Caines’ Cases in Error 200, Chancellor Kent points out an important distinction which was then but recently observed, to wit, that in a pledge, the general property remains with the pledgor and only a special property passes to the pledgee, and hence on a failure to redeem, the pledgee has no right to sell or appropriate the pledge, while a mortgage of a chattel passes the absolute title subject to a defeasance, and upon a failure to redeem, the title of the pledgee becomes perfect. Not stopping to inquire whether this would be the law in Pennsylvania at this day it is nevertheless the fact that a mortgage in its ordinary form contains an absolute transfer or assignment of the title, with a provision for a defeasance upon payment of the debt, added. In this respect therefore, there being an actual assignment of the title, there is sufficient, in equity, to create an available lien in the mortgagee. Nothing further remains to be done by the mortgagor to perfect the mortgagee’s title. But in the case of a hare pledge, Avithout an assignment, or at least an unqualified agreement to assign, the title of the pledgee seems to be defective Avithout a further act of the pledgor. The distinction is doubtless refined but it appears to be substantial.
'There is, however, a class of eases in which it is disregarded. They are cases in which the’possession of the pledge is, by the agreement of the parties, to remain with the pledgor. It is held that as the pledgor is bound, notwithstanding this provision of the contract, so all are bound who claim under him, except purchasers for value and without notice. The doctrine has been applied in the case of specific chattels, and it would apply with much more force in the case of expectancies or intangible interests.
Thus in the case of Reeves v. Capper, 5 Bingh. N. C. 136, one Wilson, the captain of a ship, pledged his chronometer which was then in the possession of the makers, to the Messrs.
In Macomber v. Parker, 14 Pick. 497, which was a case of a pledge by a brick-maker, of bricks to be made in the future, to the lessees of the yard to secure them for advances, Ike lien
The foregoing cases all relate to liens upon specific chattels, as to which it is almost universally necessary that possession should accompany the pledge in the hands of the pledgee in order to validate his lien. But we have seen that this requirement may be dispensed with if such is the agreement of the parties, and the lien of the pledgee may be enforced by virtue of the contract. It seems to us that this doctrine applies with much greater force to cases where the subject of the pledge is a mere intangible right, incapable of delivery or of manual occupancy, and especially where it is to come into existence after the contract of pledge is made, and where the personal effort of the pledgor is necessary, both to its subsequent existence and its actual.maintenance. All these features ■concur in the present case.
The thing pledged is an interest in a partnership to be created in the future. Such an interest is described by Sharswood, J., in Whigham’s Appeal, 13 P. F. S. on p. 198, as “ an incorporeal, intangible thing, a right to an account and to their share of the balance after all the debts are paid, and all equities between the partners are adjusted.” By the very terms of the paper of 23d November, 1875, this proposed partnership was to be created by the act of Hulse and others, and of course it could only be maintained by the joint acts of himself and his partners. Now it is an inevitable inference, both from the character of the transaction and the words of the paper, that it was the understanding and agreement of Hulse and Collins that Hulse should be in possession of this partnership interest, because Hulse contracts that he will assign and deliver possession of the interest to.Collins at any. time on demand of the latter, and thereafter Collins should assume and execute the business of the partnership in place
Wo hold, therefore, that the appellant is entitled to- take out of the fund for distribution the sum of ten thousand dollars, with interest from the date of the loan, by virtue of his equitable lien upon Hulse’s partnership interest, the proceeds of which constitute the fund. As to the remaining $2410 of his claim he is an unsecured creditor, and can only take a dividend pro rata with the appellees and other creditors, if there are any.
Decree reversed and record remitted, with directions to the court below to distribute the fund in the hands of the accountant in accordance with the foregoing opinion, the costs of this appeal to be paid by the appellees»