7 Paige Ch. 583 | New York Court of Chancery | 1839
The defendants are premature in their application to stay the proceedings in this suit, as there has as yet been no decree in the other cause, for the benefit of all the creditors of the firm, under which this complainant could come in and prove his debt. And until such decree
The question then arises whether either suit is properly instituted, by a creditor at large of the insolvent copartnership. For if this court has no jurisdiction of the case the injunction must be dissolved, although the application to stay the proceedings is refused. The title of the revised statutes relative to limited partnerships, (1 R. S. 764,) appears to have constituted the effects of the firm a special fund for the benefit of all the creditors ; which fund, in case of insolvency, is to be distributed among such creditors rate-ably, in proportion to the amount of their respective debts. By the fifteenth section, the special partner is prohibited from withdrawing any part of the capital of the firm, or any of its effects except actual profits made upon the original capital. And by the 20th and 21st sections, every sale, assignment, or transfer, of any of the property or effects of the firm, or of the property or effects of a general or special partner, after the firm or himself has become insolvent, or in contemplation of such insolvency, with the intention of giving a preference, either to a creditor of the firm or to a creditor of the general or special partner, is declared to be
I regret that I am obliged to extend the jurisdiction of this court to this new class of cases. But whenex'er the legislature creates new rights in parties, for the protection and enforcement of which rights the common law affords no effectual remedy, and the statute itself does not prescribe the mode in which such rights are to be protected, this court, in