58 Miss. 253 | Miss. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the court.
The parties to the controversy were partners in a general mercantile business, and on the sixth day of March, a. d. 1876, they owned a stock of goods worth at first cost about $2,200, and had outstanding and due them debts to the amount of $20,000, part of which was good and part worthless. The firm also owed debts, and among them a debt to plaintiff in error, Ivy, amounting to six or seven thousand dollars. On that day a sale of the stock of goods was made to one Morgan, at the invoice price ; and the question at issue in this case is whether the circumstances connected with said sale authorized the inference that Ivy, prior to the sale to Morgan, bought the interest of Walker in the goods for a specific sum, which was to be paid directly by Ivy to Walker. The evidence shows that a day or two before the said 6th of March, Ivy, and Morgan, the purchaser, had some negotiations about a sale of the stock to Morgan, in which Morgan proposed to take the stock at invoice price if he could sell to Ivy or the firm a tract of land at a price named by him, and which exceeded in amount the value of the goods. Ivy was unwilling to make the trade without the consent of Walker, and he mentioned to Walker the negotiations, and asked him if he was willing to take an interest in the laud. Walker said he was not. Ivy then said that the price demanded by Morgan for the land was high, and asked Walker if he was willing for him to take the stock of goods at ten per cent less than invoice price ; to which Walker assented. Ivy thereupon sold the stock to
On this state of facts the jury found for the plaintiff; and, a' motion for a new trial being overruled, the cause is brought here for review.
We think the learned judge who presided in the court below erred in refusing a new trial, and also in some of the charges given at the instance of the plaintiff.
It is well settled that no action at law can be maintained by one partner against his associate for money arising out of and connected with partnership business, until there has been a settlement of the partnership accounts. This results from the principle that a partner’s interest in the partnership effects is not his aliquot part thereof, or of any particular portion of them, but is his proper share in the balance or surplus remaining after the payment of the partnership debts and after a settlement of the accounts between the several partners.' A debt due by the firm to oue of the partners is a partnership liability, and must be paid, like other debts, before a division of the surplus among the partners can been forced by judicial proceedings. The remedy of a partner to reach this surplus Avhere no settlement of the accounts has taken place, is by bill in equity.
This is the general rule, but there is an exception to it Avhich
The transaction in controversy here does not come within this exception. It was but a sale by the partners, both consenting, to one of them, who by the purchase became a debtor to the firm, and not to the other partner separately and as an individual. There is nothing to suggest that the partners intended to separate the proceeds of the sale from the partnership effects or the firm accounts. There was no sale of the separate interest of Walker to Ivy, and no promise by the latter to the former to pay hiqi separately the price of the goods, or any part of it.' On the contrary, all the circumstances point to the opposite conclusion. The sale was of the whole stock to one of the partners, who, through the purchase, became the separate owner by the transfer to him of the title of the firm. There was no express promise to pay for the goods,
The first charge given for the.plaintiff is erroneous, because there is no evidence which tends to show that Ivy agreed to pay Walker individually a certain sum for his share in the goods. The third charge is erroneous for the same reason.
Judgment reversed and a new trial granted.