65 P. 247 | Kan. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was a garnishment proceeding brought by the National Wall-paper Company, the creditor, against William Kincaid, the garnishee. C. A. Garrett and H. O. Kincaid, as a partnership, owed
“While the partnership remains in existence and in a solvent condition, it may, upon a bona fide consideration, all the partners assenting, transfer and appropriate the firm property in payment of the individual debt of one of its members.”
In the opinion it was remarked:
“The decisions of the courts have gone farther than this, and, although not unanimous, the weight of authority seems to be that mere insolvency, where no actual fraud intervenes, will not deprive the partners of their legal control over the property and of the right to dispose of the same as they may choose; and where the separate creditor purchases from the firm in good faith, and the individual indebtedness is a*290 fair price for the property purchased, such purchase cannot, of itself, be held fraudulent as against the general creditors of the firm.”
In Berkley v. Tootle, supra, it does not clearly appear that the partnership was insolvent, but the case seems to have proceeded upon the assumption that it was, and the foregoing extract from the opinion in Woodmansie v. Holcomb was quoted as the law applicable to the facts under consideration. It is questionable, indeed, whether the remarks made in the case of Woodmansie v. Holcomb were necessary to the decision of that case, but subsequent cases, and especially that of Berkley v. Tootle, appear to have regarded with favor the rule announced.
We are of the opinion, now that the question is directly presented, that the members of an insolvent partnership, all the partners consenting, may, in good faith, appropriate their own interests in the partnership property to the payment of their individual debts in preference to those of the partnership. It has been loosely said that partnership creditors have a lien on the partnership property, but this is not true, and we think that no court has so decided, in the sense those words imply. The partners themselves have an equity in the partnership property to compel its appropriation to the payment of partnership debts, as against the debts of the individual members of the firm, and to this equity the partnership creditors succeed in cases and under circumstances which will enable them to enforce it, and that ordinarily, if not always, is when the partnership is in the control of the court, and its assets are in the course of administration by the court, either through the bankruptcy of the firm, or the creation of a trust in some mode.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, with directions' to proceed in accordance with this opinion.