63 Miss. 362 | Miss. | 1885
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a bill filed by the appellees, creditors of the firm of H. Lewenthall, which firm was composed of H. & L. Lewenthall, against the members of that firm and also against the firm of Hyman, Lichenstein & Co. The purpose of the bill is to charge Hyman, Lichenstein & Co., as trustees of certain assets of the firm of H. Lewenthall, for the creditors of that firm.
The allegations of the bill, in effect, are: That in January, 1884, the firm of H. Lewenthall was indebted to Hyman, Lichenstein & Co. in about the sum of four thousand dollars and no more; that Hyman, Lichenstein & Co. and L. Lewenthall, conspiring and confederating to defraud the other creditors of the firm of H. Lewenthall and impoverish Henry Lewenthall, agreed that Hyman, Lichenstein & Co. should sue out an attachment against H. Lewenthall, and under it seize all the property of the firm and by a forced sale for cash obtain the assets of that firm at much less than their real value, and thus make a profit which was to be divided between them that in pursuance of this scheme an attachment was sued out and levied on the entire assets, worth not less than thirteen thousand dollars; that Henry Lewenthall, against whom alone
Complainants submit to the court that by proceeding against Henry Lewenthall alone, Hyman, Lichenstein & Co. merged their
Hyman, Lichenstein & Co., answering the bill, admitted the proceedings in the federal court as stated, and that the sale and purchase of the goods was made. They deny all fraudulent combination, or that their attachment was sued out by collusion with L. Lewenthall; they aver that their sole object in suing out the attachment was to collect their debt.; that the purchase of the goods was made in good faith and solely for the purpose of getting the money due them, and that at the sale a fair price was paid and the money realized was applied by the order of the court. They admit that by the verdict of the jury it was determined that their attachment was wrongfully sued out, but deny that it was decided that there was a fraudulent collusion between them and L. Lewenthall, and insist that by their purchase they became owners of all the assets of the firm without liability to be called to account by other creditors of the firm of H. Lewenthall.
From this statement of the material allegations of the bill and answer it appears that the complainants base their right to recover on two propositions; first, that there was a fraudulent scheme between L. Lewenthall and Hyman, Lichenstein & Co., or, secondly, that by purchasing at the sale made under the attachment proceedings the defendants acquired only the interest of H. Lewenthall in the firm property, and by reason of the fact that they have disposed of the same are liable to the creditors of the firm to the extent of the sum realized out of the firm assets.
A careful examination of the very voluminous record fails to disclose any evidence to support the allegation of a fraudulent combination between Hyman, Lichenstein & Co. and L. Lewenthall. It does appear that L. Lewenthall desired to secure the payment of the sum due to them in preference to debts due to others, and had agreed at the commencement of the business between his
That Henry Lewenthall, the defendant in the writ, did not act in collusion with the attaching creditors is evident; he successfully defended the issue, and claimed and recovered heavy damages against them. Nor was there any fraud in the sale of the assets of the firm under the order of the court. The goods seized under the writ were many of them of a perishable nature, and it was within the discretion and power of the court to direct their sale to prevent loss; the sale was public, made by the order of the court having jurisdiction, and in conformity with the agreement of the parties and the directions of the court. If the purchase was in good faith the purchasers held as their own whatever interest in the property could pass by a sale made under such circumstances,
The remaining question is whether at the sale the purchasers acquired only the interest of Henry Lewentháll in the partnership assets, becoming tenants in common therein with Lewis Lewenthall and holding the partnership effects subject to the prior right of partnership creditors. The rule is well settled, that under an execution sale against one partner for his individual debt a purchaser acquires only such rights as the defendant has, becomes tenant in common with the other partners, and takes in distribution only what remains after a settlement of the partnership accounts. Formerly, before the equities of the partners were well established, a purchaser of a partner’s interest took as tenant in common with the other partners a relative portion of the partnership property regardless of the debts of the firm, but the equity of the other partners to have the firm property applied first to the payment of firm debts was soon recognized by courts of equity and has always since been steadily preserved and enforced. We cannot concur in the view urged by counsel for appellees that a firm creditor who proceeds to judgment against' one member of the debtor firm
It is not true, therefore, that the' partnership property was, by the proceedings in the federal court, applied to the payment of the individual debt of H. Lewenthall. It was applied to the satisfaction of a firm debt, for the payment of which the partner not sued remained as before bound, notwithstanding the judgment which had been rendered against his partner. It is well settled in this State that the right of partnership creditors to priority of payment out of partnership assets is not an original, independent right existing in the creditor, but is derivative and springs from the equity of the partners. Freeman v. Stewart, 41 Miss. 138; Schmidlapp v. Currie, 55 Miss. 597.
After the sale under the order of the court, H. Lewenthall had no right to insist upon an application of the partnership property to the debts due the appellees, for his entire interest in the partnership property passed by the sale ; nor could Lewis Lewenthall insist upon such application, for the reason that he had by his conduct and approval consented to its application to the payment of the debt due to Hyman, Lichenstein & Co., which was a debt due by his firm. He assigned to them his supposed interest in the excess of the proceeds of the sale after payment of their judgment against H. Lewenthall, and though this assignment was not recognized by the court, it was, in connection with his other acts, a waiver of any supposed equity which he had to divert the property from them to other creditors. As there is no equity in either of the partners to fix upon the property which passed into the hands of Hyman, Lichenstein & Co. a liability to other firm debts, there cannot be, in the absence of fraud, an independent right in the creditors themselves to such priority. As we have said, we see nothing in the transaction except an endeavor on the part of Hyman, Lichenstein & Co. to secure priority over other creditors.
The decree is reversed and bill dismissed.