2 So. 268 | Ala. | 1887
PARTNERSHIP — POWER OF PARTNER — SUBMISSION TO ARBITRATION — ESTOPPEL.
A partner, by agreement, without the previous consent or subsequent ratification of his copartners, submitted matters affecting the partnership affairs involved in a pending suit to arbitration.Held, that the submission was not binding on the partners who did not participate, and the partnership was not estopped from prosecuting the suit. The principle of law that, where two or more unite in bringing an action, all must recover, or none can, has no application to the law of partnership.
A partnership consisted of three members, but had been dissolved. Two suits were pending in favor and in the names of all the partners suing as partners. One of these suits had been commenced before, and the other after, the dissolution. They were consolidated, and became one suit. One of the partners, by agreement made out of court, without the concurrence or assent of the others, but against the protest of the one who alone was consulted, entered into an agreement to submit the matters in controversy to the arbitrament of three named arbitrators. The arbitrators acted, attended by the partner who had entered into the agreement of submission, and made their award in favor of the defendant. The dissent of the other *269
partner was not known to the defendant until after the award was made. Is this a defense to the action? Both reason and the weight of authority hold that the submission was not binding on the partners who did not participate. 1 Colly. Partn. § 441; Story, Partn. § 114; Pars. Partn. *176 et seq.; Morse, Arb. Award, 7; note to Hutchins v.Johnson, 30 Amer. Dec. 630; Scarborough v. Reynolds,
There is a principle of law that, when two or more unite in bringing an action, all must recover, or none can; that, if one has disabled himself to maintain the suit, this precludes the others from recovering, for they can only have a joint recovery; and there are authorities which hold that this principle applies to suits by partners. Salmon v.Davis, 5 Amer. Dec. 410. There is one case in this state which seems to recognize that doctrine. Cochran v. Cunningham,
It results from these peculiar characteristics of partnership property that no individual member should be able, beyond the sphere of his admitted powers, to defeat the purposes of the trust, or to hinder the utilization of the effects in discharging the liens which each partner has upon them. If one member can sell, remit, or incumber his interest in a part of the effects, and thereby destroy or impair the customary methods and remedies for reducing them to actual possession that they may be administered, a better reason should be given for such pernicious power than we have heard suggested, or can conjecture. Set-off of a partner's individual debt is not allowed against a partnership demand.Watts v. Sayre,
The purchaser acquires no title to any specific property. He purchases only the ultimate interest of the execution debtor, which is his share of the residuum, after the partnership debts are paid, and the accounts among the partners equalized. Andrews v. Keith,
The rulings on this question in this state are not in harmony. As we have said, the case of Cochran v. Cunningham,
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded. *5