Hutchinson v. Dubois

45 Mich. 143 | Mich. | 1881

Cooley, J.

In the circuit court, where the positions of the parties were reversed, Dubois had brought replevin for a number of horses, carriages and other property constituting a livery stock in Williamston, and he gave evidence tending to show that he was sole owner of all the property at the time the suit was commenced; that a few days previously the defendant seized it and took it out of his possession and removed it from the barn and premises where it had constituted the stock of a livery for some three years, to another bam some thirty rods away, on another street, and had and exercised exclusive control over it, and refused to deliver it to plaintiff on demand.

The defendant justified as deputy sheriff under a judgment and execution against one Yan Etten, by virtue of which he had made & levy upon the property, and he gave evidence tending to show that Yan Etten “ had an interest in such property as a partner or part owner with the plaintiff.” And the evidence being closed the defendant requested the court to charge the jury that “if the defendant in the execution, Yan Etten, owned any undivided portion of the property replevied when the execution was levied, the verdict must be for the defendant.” The court declined this request, and instructed the jury that the plaintiff, if sole owner, was entitled to recover, and that he was also entitled to recover even though Yan Etten had an interest in the property, at the time of the levy, as a partner or joint owner with the plaintiff. Under this instruction the plaintiff had judgment.

It is to be observed that defendant did not give evidence tending to show that Yan Etten was tenant in common with the plaintiff in the livery stock, nor evidence tending to show that he was partner with the plaintiff. He aimed to show that he was one or the other, but without distinguishing which, and the jury had no basis for determining that Yan Etten was tenant in common rather than partner, or partner rather than tenant in common. At most the jury could only *145say he had an interest of some sort, if they believed the defendant’s evidence; bnt it was not their province to guess what the interest was when the evidence afforded no basis for a judgment. The defendant, therefore, has no ground •of complaint of the instructions unless it shall appear that whether Van Etten’s interest was that of tenant in common or of partner a levy might be made and possession taken as was done in this case.

There is no doubt whatever that if Van Etten had an interest it was subject to his debts. The question is, how it may be reached. If he was a partner, he was presumptively an equal partner with Dubois, and had an equal right to share with him in the property when the partnership should be dissolved. But his interest would not be an interest in the specific articles belonging to the firm, but only an interest in the surplus that should remain after the debts of the firm were paid. Hankey v. Garratt 1 Ves. Jr. 236; Taylor v. Fields 4 Ves. 396 ; Shipp v. Harwood 2 Swanst. 586. Meantime his share is not separable from the share of his copartner, for he has no separate property in the assets of the firm. Newman v. Bean 21 N. H. 93, 98. Ilis share is also subject to the final adjustment of accounts between the partners themselves. Sirrine v. Briggs 31 Mich. 443. And it may appear on that accounting that his interest is insignificant, or is nothing.

If any levy of an execution upon such an interest can be made, it must be so made and enforced as to protect all rights of others. One man’s interest must not be sacrificed because another who is associated with him in .business happens to be in debt. Specific chattels must not be taken on the execution, because the specific chattels are owned by the firm and not by either of the partner's. Gibson v. Stevens 7 N. H. 352; Morrison v. Blodgett 8 N. H. 238 ; Treadwell v. Brown 43 N. H. 290; Brewster, v. Hammet 4 Conn. 540; Matter of Smith 16 Johns. 102; Wiles v. Maddox 26 Mo. 77. The utmost extent of the officer’s right — if he can levy at all — must be, to seize the interest of the partner, whatever it may be, subject to all the partnership debts and to the *146final accounting. Church v. Knox 2 Conn. 514; Tappan v. Blaisdell 5 N. H. 193; Sirrine v. Briggs 31 Mich. 443; Reinheimer v. Hemingway 35 Penn. St. 432 ; Knerr v. Hoffman 65 Penn. St. 126. Whether in such a case the accounting should not be had before a sale, or whether on the other hand the officer might at once proceed to sell that which he has levied upon, namely, the undivided, unsettled and undetermined interest of the judgment debtor, is a question that has troubled many courts before this case arose, but which is not involved in this case and will not be discussed until a record is before us presenting it, and counsel have had an opportunity to be heard upon it.

The sheriff in this case seized and took possession of specific articles and removed them altogether from plaintiff’s control. It seems probable, though the evidence does not distinctly show, that he took possession of the whole livery stock, and broke up the plaintiff’s business. But whether he took the whole or only part is immaterial; in either case he seized specific articles when he had a right to seize an undivided and indefinite interest only. He did this also in total disregard of the plaintiff’s rights; for whereas the judgment debtor as partner could only have had joint possession with the plaintiff, the officer, levying on his right, assumed to take exclusive possession and remove the property to another place. As was said by Mr. Justice Campbell in Haynes v. Knowles 36 Mich. 407, 410 : “ The partner not sued cannot on any principle of justice be placed in any worse condition by a creditor of his partner than he could have been by his own partner.” At most for the purposes-of his writ the officer only takes the debtor’s place, and seizes an interest that can only be measured by final account. Vandike v. Rosskam 65 Penn. St. 330.

But it is said that if this be admitted the action must still fail, for the plaintiff is but part owner, and only one having ownership of the whole may bring replevin. The mistake here is in supposing a partner to be merely a part owner. Each partner has. an entire as well as joint interest in the whole of the joint property. A levy, then, to affect the *147interest of a partner, cannot touch a specific proportion of the goods, nor the whole, because others have property in every part, as well as the whole, coupled with a right, resting in contract, to use them for the purposes for which the partnership was instituted.” Deal v. Bogue 20 Penn. St. 228, 233. And see Atkins v. Saxton 77 N. Y. 195. Moreover the partnership assets constitute a trust fund for the payment of creditors, and each partner is in a sense tnistee of the fund until the creditors themselves intervene. If Yan Etten is a partner, it might perhaps have been proper to join him as plaintiff in the case, but Dubois does not concede that Yan Etten has any interest whatever, and therefore could not join Mm. There is no plea of non-joinder, and the plaintiff, if he recovers, and if in fact he is a partner, will hold the property as he did before, in trust for the parties whose claims are paramount' to those of the creditors of either partner. Newman v. Bean 21 N. H. 98.

How far the case would be different if Dubois and Yan Etten were tenants in common is immaterial.

The judgment must be affirmed with costs.

The other Justices concurred.
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