8 Mont. 482 | Mont. | 1889
—The appellant (plaintiff) brought his action in the District Court against the defendant, as surviving partner of the firm of Speith and Krug, upon four promissory notes made by the firm prior to the death of Charles Krug, one of the members of the firm.
The plaintiff, at the time of bringing his action, also applied for a writ of attachment against the property of the defendant,
A motion was made to discharge this attachment, on the following grounds: First. There is no law of this Territory authorizing the issuing or levying of an attachment against a representative person. Second. This court has not yet acquired jurisdiction of the subject-matter of this action.
The motion was heard and decided by the judge at chambers, and an order made dissolving the attachment, upon the first ground stated in the motion. An appeal was taken from the order of the judge, and the only question presented by the record is, the correctness of this order.
The question is an important one, affecting, as it does, the rights of creditors, the rights of a surviving partner, and the rights of the heirs and representatives of a deceased partner; and we will try and give the questions involved the consideration which their importance demands.
The learned judge, who dissolved the attachment in the ease, based his decision on two grounds : First, because a surviving partner holds partnership property as a trustee, and in pursuance of a statute which vests him with the possession, for the sole purpose of settling up the business of the partnership and accounting for the residue to the heirs or representatives of the deceased partner, an attachment against the property will prevent the due execution of this trust; second, because the creditor of the partnership has a lien on partnership property, which can be enforced in equity, and under the law of this Territory, an attachment does not lie when a lien exists. The principle is undoubtedly correct, that upon the death of a partner, the survivor or survivors become in a certain sense trustees of a partnership property, and become liable for its misapplication.
Judge Story, in his treatise on Partnership, thus defines the duties and liabilities of a surviving partner: “ The survivors are entitled to close up the affairs of the firm, to collect and adjust the debts due it, and to pay its debts and discharge its liabilities.
Section 229 of the Probate Practice Act, which is the one defining these rights and duties, is as follows: “ When a partnership exists between the decedent, at the time of his death, and any other person, the surviving partner .has the right to continue in possession of the partnership, and to settle its business, but the interest of the decedent in the partnership must be included in the inventory, and be appraised and appropriated as other property. The surviving partner must settle the affairs of the partnership without delay, and account with the executor or administrator, and pay over such balances as may from time to time be
In Williams v. Whedon, 109 N. Y. 333, the court held that a surviving partner did not hold partnership property as a trustee, but held by virtue of his own rights as survivor. In the case of Knox v. Gye, 5 Law R. H. L. C. 656, the court, speaking by Lord Westbury, says: “Another source of error is the looseness with which the word ‘trustee' is frequently used. The surviving partner is often called a trustee, but the term is used inaccurately; he is not a trustee either expressly or by implication. On the death of a partner the law confers on his representatives certain rights as against the surviving partner, and imposes on the latter corresponding obligations. The surviving partner may be called, so far as these obligations extend, a trustee for the deceased partner; but when these obligations have been fulfilled, or are discharged, or terminate by law, the supposed trust is at end.....There is nothing fiduciary between the surviving partner and the dead partner's representative, except that they may respectively sue each other in equity. There are certain legal rights and duties which attach to them, but it is a mistake to apply the word ‘trust’ to the legal relation thereby created.” The same doctrine is thus stated in Bates on Partnership, volume 2, section 718: “The surviving partner is in law the owner of the chattel property as well as the choses in action. The representatives of the deceased partner have a right to the balance that will be found to belong to the decedent; they also have a right to compel the surviving partner to apply the
In Theller v. Such, 57 Cal. 447, in construing a statute like ours, the court says: “The Probate Court has no more jurisdiction to provide for a partnership account and decree a balance where a partnership has been dissolved by the death of a partner, than when it has been dissolved by any other cause.” The assets which pass to the executor or administrator consist of the individual estate of the deceased; partnership assets, as such, form no part of such individual estate. The residuum only, after satisfying liabilities and advances, if any, made by the survivor, becomes the property of the estate. (So, also, Andrade v. Superior Court of San Francisco, 75 Cal. 459.)
If it was otherwise, immediately on the death of one of the members of a partnership, the partnership estate would be in custodia legis, and would have to be administered and settled like any private or individual estate. Our statute does not contemplate a proceeding like this, and while it requires the inventory to include the interest of the decedent in a partnership, it also gives to the surviving partner full power over the partnership estate and property for the purpose of settling and accounting, and subjects him to legal proceedings, only when he fails to perform his duty within a reasonable time. He gives no bond such as is required to be given by an administrator, nor do accounts against the partnership require the formal proofs or allowance which the law requires in the case of claims against an estate. Hone of the requirements with which the law surrounds an administrator are required of a surviving partner in the settlement of a partnership estate, but all such matters are left to the judgment and presumed knowledge of the surviving partner, and his acts, if done in good faith, bind alike his own and the interest of the representatives of the deceased partner in the partnership property. (Story on Partnership, § 328.)
The authorities to which we have referred, settle the question,
The order dissolving the attachment is also based on the further ground, that the attaching creditor had a lien upon the partnership property of the firm, and under the statute relating to attachments, an attachment did not lie, or could not issue, if the creditor had a lien. Section 181 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as far as it relates to liens, is as follows: “Ho writ of attachment shall be issued until the plaintiff, his agent or attorney, shall file with the clerk an affidavit, showing that the defendant is indebted to the plaintiff, upon a contract, express or implied, for the payment of money, gold dust, or other property then due, which is not secured by a mortgage, lien, or pledge upon real or personal property, or is so secured that the security has become insufficient by the act of the defendant, or by any means has become nugatory.” The word “lien” is used here with the words “mortgage” and “pledge." All these words, wdiile having a different legal signification, are somewhat analogous, and the use of them in connection, and in the same sentence, serves to explain their meaning, and the sense in which they were intended in the act. Bouvier defines the word “lien” as follows: '“In its most extensive signification, this term includes every case in which real or personal property is
In one sense every creditor has a lien on the entire property of his debtor (not exempt from execution). He may sue his debtor, and when he obtains judgment, may subject his property to the payment of the judgment; and this, or something like it, was evidently what the court had in view when holding that a creditor of a partnership had a lien on partnership property as security for his debt. The court, in its opinion, refers to Story on Partnership, sections 360 and 361, as upholding a lien on partnership property for firm creditors. Both of these sections referred to, deny that a creditor as such has any lien upon the partnership property, but both sections lay down the principle that upon a dissolution of the partnership “the partners themselves have a lien upon the partnership effects for the discharge of all the debts and obligations thereof; and that lien may, in many cases, be made available for the benefit of creditors. But then the equities of the creditors must be worked out through the medium of that of the partners. They (the creditors) have indeed no lien, but, as has been said, they have something approaching to a lien, of which, with the assent of the partners entitled to the lien, they may avail themselves in a court of equity against the partnership effects.....It is thus, through the operation of administering the equities between the partners themselves, that the creditors have the opportunity of enforcing this quasi lien.” (§ 360.) Again, in section 361, the author says: “It is only in cases where there is a dissolution by the
In Case v. Beauregard, 99 U. S. 119, two of three members of a partnership sold, and by separate assignments transferred their interests in the partnership property to private creditors. The interest so assigned wás a second time sold and assigned to other parties. tThe last assignee and the third member of the original firm transferred their interest in the firm property and formed a new partnership. Upon a suit by a creditor to subject the property of the last firm to the payment of the debts of the original firm, the court held that it could not be done, as the property had passed out of the ownership and control of the first firm, although one of its members had an interest in the second partnership. From the authorities above (and many others might be added), we think the plaintiff in this action had no lien which deprived him of the right to an attachment against the partnership property as security for any judgment he might obtain. Drake, in his work on Attachment, section 671, says: “When the partnership has been dissolved by the death of one or more partners, leaving one survivor, it is considered that, as the sole surviving partner is in law the owner of all the partnership effects, a debt due to the late partnership may be attached in an action against the survivor.”
This is what was done in the present case, and from every view we have been able to take of the law, we think that the court erred in sustaining the motion to discharge the attachment.
The order discharging it is therefore reversed, and the causé
Order reversed and cause remanded.
Judgment reversed.