2 N.Y.S. 89 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1888
When John McDonnell died, February 5,1878, he was, and since 1863 had been, a member of the partnership firm of McDonnell, Kline & Co., consisting of McDonnell, Perry ICline, and Thomas Harvey, manufacturers of knit goods. His death dissolved that firm. The firm hada large manufacturing establishment, built upon real estate which had been purchased in parcels from time to time, the title to which stood in the individual names of the several members of the firm as tenants in common, except á small strip used for a right of way, the deed for which was taken in the name of the firm. The erections upon the real estate and the machinery were made and obtained by the firm by means of the firm funds and credit. If this action were in behalf of the creditors of the firm, or of its surviving members, to enforce their demands against it, or claims to contribution, it might be important to ascertain whether the entire property should not be regarded as partnership property, if necessary so to treat it, to protect either creditors or surviving members. But on the -25th day of February, 1878, the administrators of John McDonnell made an inventory of the machinery, fixtures, shafting, and stock in the mill, and estimated the one-third surplus over all liabilities at $4,443.66. The administrators on the same day, by an assignment under seal, in consideration of $4,440, sold the interest owned by the late John McDonnell in the firm, not including real estate, to one O’Brien, subject to the payment of one-third of the debts and liabilities of the firm. O’Brien on the same day transferred the same to Lucy McDonnell, the widow of John, and to their son, Willard, and the sum of $4,440 was then paid to the administrators. The court finds that the firm was solvent upon John McDonnell’s death. Ho account was then taken of the real estate and buildings, because they were incumbered by a mortgage for $25,000, then and still outstanding, and were not supposed to be worth any surplus. The indebtedness of the firm, independent of the mortgage, was then estimated at $95,681.72, and probably was larger. Lucy and Willard McDonnell now entered into copartnership with the surviving members of the first firm, and formed a new or second firm, but with the name of the first firm; they agreeing to pay John McDonnell’s share of the old firm’s liabilities. In Hovember, 1878, Willard McDonnell died, and Lucy succeeded to his property; and she, with ICline and Harvey, formed a new or third firm, under the old name, the third firm assuming the obligations of the preceding firms. In October, 1879, it appearing that John McDonnell’s individual estate was insolvent, his real estate was, under the surrogate’s decree, sold to pay his debts, and under such sale his interest in the real estate used by the firm was sold to Edward McDonnell for $25, and a conveyance given him. Edward never joined the firm. The firm continued business, paying up old debts, and making new ones, and buying new machinery, and making improvements, until August, 1883, when Lucy McDonnell sold all her interest in the firm and property of the third firm to Augustus Clark; he assuming her share of the firm liabilities. Edward McDonnell at the same time sold Clark the real estate he had acquired upon the surrogate’s sale. Clark agreed to pay $20,500 for both Lucy’s and Edward’s interests. He paid $10,500 cash, and gave Edward a mortgage for $10,000. This is the mortgage now held by the defendant McConihe, who became its owner through successive assignments. The conveyance by Edward, and the mortgage, are of an undivided one-third of the mill premises. The third firm was solvent when Clark bought Lucy Me-
We think the judgment should be affirmed. The very question whether this mortgage was a valid and subsisting lien upon the premises described in it was tried and determined in the action brought to foreclose the mortgage by the defendant McOonihe against Fales and this plaintiff. It was there determined that, as between the parties to that action, it was a valid lieu to some extent. That issue cannot be again litigated between the same parties in this action. McConihe v. Fales, 107 N. Y. 404, 14 N. E. Rep. 285. Consaulus, the plaintiff here and the defendant there, tendered to McOonihe, the owner of the mortgage, certain issues respecting the extent of the property covered by the mortgage. One of those issues was whether the machinery and fixtures in the mills were covered by the mortgage, and the decision was they were. Another issue was whether the real estate itself, including all the improvements upon it, was not partnership property, subject to the partnership debts of the first firm, it being insolvent, and was therefore purchased by Edward McDonnell, and sold by him to Clark, and by Clark mortgaged to McDonnell, subject to the lien of the creditors of the firm, which debts, having been assumed and renewed by the succeeding firms, were still liens upon the property, prior to the mortgage, to an extent that left no surplus to which the lien of the mortgage could attach. That issue was decided against this plaintiff. That case was tried before a referee. Had the referee decided against this plaintiff in the former action upon the ground that, in such an action, the issue tendered by him could not be tried, then this plaintiff could now urge
Whatever right the plaintiff might have as a creditor of Clark & Kline, he would have to obtain through their assignees. Crouse v. Frothingham, 97 N. Y. 105. He has not made them parties. If it were true, therefore, that the improvements upon the real estate were partnership property purchased by Clark of Lucy McDonnell, and the real estate were only the naked one-third of the land purchased by Clark of Edward McDonnell, the plaintiff, in order to draw that line of distinction between the two properties, would need to do it through the assignees for the benefit of the creditors at large. Clark, as the owner of both the land and the improvements thereon, gave a mortgage, which covered both, so far as, between mortgagor and mortgagee, the improvements formed part of the real estate; and this plaintiff purchased the real estate subject to this mortgage. He stands in the same position as any other purchaser purchasing upon like conditions. Bor aught we know, this mortgage reduced the consideration he paid for the property. At any rate, he has no title to the sole benefit of the equities due to the creditors at large; and, as this action is an unwarranted attempt to appropriate to himself the sole benefit of them, it must fail. It is not improbable that, if an exact account could be taken of the condition of these successive firms at the time of their successive dissolution, it would be found that they were insolvent, and that Edward McDonnell, when he purchased the interest of John McDonnell’s estate in the partnership real estate, really purchased only a legal title, subject to be wholly defeated in equity if the affairs of the first firm had been
Hor does any equity survive to the creditor of the first firm. Equity follows the law. The first firm, we may assume, was indebted to this plaintiff for wool. When the second firm succeeded the first, the plaintiff sold it more wool; and the second firm, with the proceeds of this second installment of wool, paid him what the first firm owed him; or we may assume he took the paper of the second firm for the debt of the first. However it was arranged, he was content to substitute a new creditor or a new credit for the old, and to repeat such transactions with the successive firms. The first firm had been dissolved more than seven years before this action was commenced. Ho legal representative of any member of that firm, or of any of the firms, is a party to this action. The provision made by the first and successive firms for the payment of debts is, so far as we know, a provision accepted and ratified by the creditors, including this plaintiff. That provision may have been adequate or not; it may have failed through the misfortunes of the last firm, after complete ratification and acceptance, by the creditors, of the provisions in their favor. Be this as it may, the burden would rest upon the creditor, if this were a proper action in which to do it, to show that he still has an equity, and that, although he accepted his legal remedy against each firm, he did not thereby waive his equity against any of them. It is not only shown that he accepted a new creditor for the old, that he delayed pursuing his remedy against him until it became impaired, but that new rights intervened, and this mortgage was placed on the market, and new parties sunk their fortunes in trying to provide for the old debts, under the belief, which his acceptance of the new creditors induced, that the real estate purchased of Edward McDonnell was free from old equities, and worth the obligations assumed in consideration of its purchase. Clearly, this plaintiff, as creditor, must stand upon his old equity against the first firm, or upon the new obligations of subsequent firms, given upon the faith that, because the new obligation is pledged, the old equity is superseded.
But this plaintiff recites in his complaint that he has placed his demands in a judgment against the latest firm. The remedies are inconsistent; for, if the equity survives, the consideration upon which the judgment rests fails. We do not overlook the fact that Lucy McDonnell, in succeeding to the interest of John McDonnell in the first firm, was probably understood to succeed to all the interest in the improvements upon the real estate which the firm property or credit created; that Edward McDonnell, in purchasing the real estate interest for $25, was supposed to be purchasing a naked title which embraced little or no actual value. These interests stood separate until Clark bought them both. “They might well have been a source of disquietude to the other members of the firm and to its creditors. But upon such purchase they were merged in one owner, subject to this mortgage of $10,000. Clark did not purchase without inquiry. His purchase apparently placed the creditors and members of the new firm, of which he was a member, in an improved condition. The disquieting condition was removed. All the property was now merged in the firm. Whether that was a good transaction or not is not material; it was competently made, and it brought to the creditors new sec
Learned, P. J., and Ingalls, J., concur.