20 Mo. 174 | Mo. | 1854
delivered the opinion of the court.
1. It' will not be necessary, in our opinion, to consider all the-points and questions raised by the parties on this record. Both
The defendant insists that plaintiff has not, and never had any right to dower in the lot, because it was purchased by the firm of Williams & Duhring as partnership property; was used as such; paid for, in part, by the cash of the firm, and the notes of the firm given for the balance of the consideration. There can be little doubt that the purchase was made by the firm of Williams & Duhring. They were partners, doing business as merchants in St. Louis, in 1834, and were so engaged in 1836, when they bought the lot of Bouju. The deed from Bouju to them shows the purchase by the firm. The witness, Williams, says it was a purchase by the partnership ; says, “ the purchase took the shape of a partnership transaction on the books of .said firm. There was a property account, and this lot was entered into that account. The cash paid was entered into the cash account, and the notes' given for the purchase, were entered into the books under the head of “ bills payable.” There were two stores on the lot; one was rented out by the firm, the other was occupied by it. He says “the lot was bought as an investment, to keep until we closed business.”
The partners, Williams & Duhring, executed a mortgage, which was also signed and executed by the plaintiff, the wife of Duhring, to Bouju, to secure the payment of the balance of -the purchase money, being seventeen thousand five hundred ■dollars. The plaintiff was a minor when this mortgage was executed by her.
The firm of Williams & Duhring being largely indebted to Henry Duhring, the defendant, sold him the lot in 1839, and
The firm of Williams & Duhring became insolvent, wholly unable to pay the debts of the firm. Some of these debts still remain due and unpaid. The firm was insolvent when the deed ■ was made to Henry Duhring in 1839.
Now is the widow entitled to dower in real estate bought by the firm, paid for with the funds of the firm, and bought for the use of the firm ? If she is not, it will be useless to consider any other question in this case. I lay out of consideration the fact that there were two store houses on the lot, one of which was rented out by the firm ; and the remark of the witness, that the lot was bought as an investment, to keep until the close of the concern. These, taken together, cannot warrant the court in saying it was not partnership property — was not bought for the use of the firm. It was purchased for the stand or store of the firm ; and renting out a part of the real estate, not necessary for the immediate occupation of the firm, did not and cannot change the nature or design of the purchase. I will remark further, before I proceed to consider this question, that the court below was not warranted in finding “ that the purchase was regarded by the parties, at the time of making the same, as a mere investment, with the view and intention of ultimately keeping the same.” There is nothing preserved in the record to warrant this finding. It would be a strange conclusion that, if a mercantile firm should buy a lot for the purpose of carrying on their business as merchants in a city, some thirty or fifty feet front, running a hundred and fifty feet back, and there should happen to be a store house on the front
. Tbe main question, however, must now be considered. Is the widow dowable in real estate belonging to the firm', which' was purchased by the partners for partnership purposes, with partnership funds’? There is no question here between heirs,' personal representatives and widow. The debts of the firm would have swallowed up the partnership 'property here, and still demanded more.
I answer that the widow, in this case, is not entitled to dower. The real estate purchased by the partners must be considered, so far as is necessary to pay the debts of the firm, partnership stock, and liable to the rules and regulations incident to personal property.
It was held in Thornton v. Dixon, 3 Brown’s Ch. Rep. 199, that real estate, used for purposes of a partnership trade, shall go to the heir, and' not to the executor. This case and some others, more modern, (this casé was decided' in 1791,) (see Bell v. Phyn, 7 Vesey, 453. Balmain v. Shore, 9 Vesey, 500,) militate against the' rule above laid down, that such estate becomes partnership stock. But the authority of these decisions has been much questioned.
The general principle now declared in the English law is, that real estate, acquired for the purpose of a trading concern, is to be considered as partnership property, and to be first applied-in satisfaction of the demands of the partnership. In Fereday v. Wightwick, 1 Russell & Mylne, 45, the Master of the Rolls, Sir John Leach,' said: “The general principle is, that all property acquired for the purpose of a trading concern, whether it be of a real or personal nature, is to be considered as partnership property, and is to be first applied accordingly in satisfaction of the demands of the partnership. It is true, á mining concern differs, in some particulars, from a common partnership ; the shares are assignable, and the death or bank
In Hoxie s. Carr, 1 Sumner, 183, Justice Story said : “A question often arises whether real estate, purchased for a partnership, is to be deemed, for all purposes, personal estate, like other effects. That it is so as to the payment of the partnership debts, and the adjustment of partnership rights, and winding up the partnership concerns, is clear, at least in view of a
Chanceller Kent, (3 Com. 37,) says : “If partnership capital be invested in land for the benefit of' the company, though it may be a joint tenancy at law, yet equity will hold it to be a tenancy in common, and as forming a part of the partnership fund ; and the better opinion would seem to be, that equity will consider the person in whom the legal estate is vested, as trustee for the whole concern, and the property will be entitled to be distributed as personal estate. In the case of Sigourney v. Munn, (7 Conn. Rep. 11,) the English and American authorities were fully examined, and the subject discussed, and
In Richardson v. Wyatt, (2 Dessaus. 471,) the widow of a deceased partner, in South Carolina, was denied her dower in lands purchased with partnership funds and held in the names of all the partners. In Pierce, v. Trigg, (10 Leigh, 406,) Judge Tucker, in pronouncing the opinion of the court, laid down the doctrine, that lands purchased by partners, with partnership funds, for partnership purposes, and used as a part of the stock in trade, are to be regarded in equity as partnership property, and though, if the conveyance has been made to both partners, there will, upon the death of one, pass to his heirs a legal title, yet the whole beneficial interest devolves upon the survivor, and he may sue the heirs, compela sale, and dispose of the proceeds as he would' of the personal estate of the firm. I know that there have been some decisions to the contrary, which gave the wife dower to land, but from a very general and careful review of the various decisions, from that of Thornton v. Dixon, down to the present time, I come to the conclusion, that the policy of the law and principles of justice are against the right of the wife to dower in such lands, where they are necessary to pay the demands of the firm, and the weight of authority, both English and American, is decidedly against such right.
I could have contented myself with reference to the views of this court, lately expressed in the case cf. Carlisle’s Adm’r v. Mulhern & Keyser, (19 Mo. Rep. 56.) The principles of that decision mainly settle this case.
The court below having declared the plaintiff, as widow of Andrew Duhring, entitled to dower in one half of the lot, upon certain terms, its decision upon the facts found is erroneous, and its judgment is reversed, with the concurrence of the other judges.