Lead Opinion
This is an appeal by the defendants from a judgment for $335,098.43, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial under section 999 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
The plaintiff alleges that on or about the 9th day of September, 1907, the 2Etna Indemnity Company of Hartford, Conn.,
After the assignment to Robin, the defendants Otto C. Heinze and Max H. Schultze each filed a petition in bankruptcy and each was discharged as a bankrupt. In amended schedules filed in the bankruptcy proceeding by Otto C. Heinze, the plaintiff, Lansing Liquidation Corporation, as assignee of the iEtna Indemnity Company, appears as a creditor. Thé schedule also mentions the fact that the debt is on the alleged claim for $256,500, and that said claim is in dispute and still pending in the Supreme Court and undetermined. It, therefore, appears that as to Otto C. Heinze the claim which is the gravamen of this action was properly set up in the bankruptcy schedules, and that by the adjudication in bankruptcy he was individually discharged from said debt. This is not true, however, in respect to the bankruptcy schedules filed by the defendant Max H. Schultze. These schedules contain the name of the iEtna Indemnity Company as the creditor. It appears that at this time the claim had been assigned by the iEtna Indemnity Company and that said company was then no longer interested therein. Under the deci
The defendants set up payment in their respective answers, but failed to establish upon the trial such defense. That question, however, appears to have been properly submitted to the jury. The defendants claim on the issue of payment that during the numerous transactions between the parties a note was given by one Brunssen, who was a clerk in the employ of the United Copper Company, to the ./Etna Indemnity Company, which note was additional collateral security for the aforesaid $256,500 loan. The defendants endeavored to put in evidence an unsigned document, in form an agreement, and which purported to be a settlement of claims between Joseph G. Robin and the defendants, and provided, among other things, for the purchase by Heinze of the Brunssen note for $1,000. The theory upon which it was offered was that it contained declarations of Robin against interest. The trial court did not admit this instrument in evidence, and the testimony of the witness Arthur P. Heinze was not sufficient to warrant its admission. The instrument in question was executed by no one, and Heinze testified simply that, “ To the best of my recollection, I received this from Robin.” I do not think that under the circumstances the instrument in question had any probative force, and the same was properly excluded.
The main contention in the case, and the one which is urged by the appellants, is that the defendants Otto C. Heinze and Max H. Schultze were actually discharged in bankruptcy, and that the proof upon the trial of such discharge was sufficient to warrant a finding that the two defendants mentioned were each discharged from payment of the debt in
Some time prior to the commencement of this action creditors of Otto Heinze and Company, upon the allegation that said firm was insolvent, sought to put the firm into involuntary bankruptcy. That proceeding was contested and the petition was denied on the ground that the firm was not insolvent.
The law in bankruptcy cases in respect to partnerships is, that the assets of the individual partners must be first exhausted to pay individual debts, and that the property and assets of the partnership must be first exhausted to pay partnership debts. Upon the trial the defendants Schultze and Otto C. Heinze put in evidence their respective discharges in bankruptcy, which appear as exhibits in the case. Such discharges under .the Bankruptcy Law and under the decisions in the United States Supreme Court, provide that all provable debts existing at the date of the filing of the petition are discharged, except such as are by law excepted from the operation of a discharge in bankruptcy. The discharges in question, on their face, discharged said bankrupts individually and as members of said firm, with the exception that a certain claim in favor of the Mercantile National Bank against the defendants as such copartners was excepted from the discharge of said Schultze. It was urged, however, upon the trial, and proof was offered showing that the claim of the plaintiff against the defendant Max H. Schultze was not properly scheduled in that the schedule filed in his bankruptcy proceeding did not contain the name of the then owner of the claim in question. The proofs having disclosed the fact that such schedules were faulty, the burden then fell upon Schultze to show due diligence on his part to ascertain and state the true owner of the claim, that is, the name of his creditor. Schultze disclaimed knowledge of the assignment from the HCtna Indemnity Company, but failed to show diligence on his part to ascertain the facts. The evidence on the part of the plaintiff was to the effect that Schultze had such knowledge. Defendant Schultze having professed ignorance concerning the assignment of the claim in question, it is now claimed that the trial court erred in refusing to submit to the jury the question as to whether he had such knowledge
In the case last cited (Kreitlein v. Ferger), where the alleged deficiency in the schedules was a failure on the bankrupt’s part to state a correct street address in the city of Indianapolis, in his dissenting opinion, Mr. Justice Day, in discussing the duty of the bankrupt to use diligence in making up his schedules, says: “It is a question of due diligence in every case, with the burden of showing such diligence upon the bankrupt, and there is nothing in this
While the decision in that case (Kreitlein v. Ferger) was undoubtedly correct, yet the language of Mr. Justice Day, above quoted, and in which Mr. Justice McKenna concurs, beyond question correctly states the rule as to the diligence that a bankrupt is bound to exercise. (McKee v. Preble, 154 App. Div. 156.)
The defendants Otto C. Heinze and Max H. Schultze claim that their names should be stricken from the judgment, and that the judgment should stand against the defendant Arthur P. Heinze. This raises the question as to the form of the judgment to be taken against members of a copartnership one or more members of which have been adjudged a bankrupt.
It is admitted that the copartnership has never been actually dissolved, and still exists. The plaintiff had the right to sue the partnership and to exhaust the partnership assets in payment of its claim before the trustee in bankruptcy of either Heinze or Schultze could resort to such assets. The trustees of Heinze and Schultze would have a right merely to the equity in the partnership assets after all partnership debts had been paid. All suits against partnerships are brought against individual members with an allegation that such members are doing business under the firm name and style which they have adopted.
It seems, to me that as the firm has not actually been dissolved, and as it does not appear that such firm is without assets, but on the contrary that said firm has been adjudged solvent, the form of the action was proper, being brought against the several members of the firm, with the allegation that they were doing business as copartners under the firm name and style of Otto Heinze and Company, and that any judgment taken in the case at bar or in the case which was submitted with it, should be against Arthur P. Heinze, Otto C. Heinze and Max H. Schultze, doing business as copartners under the firm name and style of Otto Heinze and Company.
While a partnership may be dissolved so far as the partners themselves are concerned, still until the partnership assets
No embarrassing questions could arise should the plaintiff endeavor to collect the judgment from the firm assets. As to the defendant -Otto C. Heinze the judgment dismisses the complaint, and plaintiff has not appealed. So that said Heinze is protected by the judgment entered and cannot be heard to complain. In case the partnership assets should prove inadequate to satisfy the judgment and plaintiff should endeavor to collect from the individual property of Max H. Schultze, the latter could amply protect himself, if able to show his due discharge in bankruptcy.
Notwithstanding and in addition to the reasons hereinbefore stated, I am of the opinion that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed. The action is primarily against the firm of Otto Heinze and Company, the individuals comprising said firm being properly parties defendant. The judgment should establish the liability of the defendants as such copartners. It nowhere appears but that the judgment obtained will be satisfied from the firm assets, real and personal. If and only when such firm assets are found to be inadequate to discharge
Therefore, I do not think the question of the discharge in bankruptcy of either Otto C. Heinze or Schultze was a material issue in the action.
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling and Page, JJ., concurred; Smith, J., dissented in part.
Dissenting Opinion
I think the court should have submitted to the jury whether Schultze had knowledge, or used reasonable diligence to secure knowledge of the assignment of the claim in suit by the ACtna Indemnity Company to the Kilburn Syndicate at the time he filed hi's schedules in bankruptcy. He swears that he had no such knowledge. Robin swears that the Kilburn Syndicate Company’s claim was mentioned between him and Schultze. This is denied by Schultze. A bankrupt is not bound to inquire of all his creditors whether their claims have been assigned to others, but may assume that the claims are held by those creditors until notice of the assignment is in some way given to him. The fact that the claim was included in the schedules of his partner, Otto C. Heinze, in the name of the assignee has no significance. Those schedules were not filed until three years after Schultze filed his schedules and after this complaint was served. Otto Heinze swears that he had no knowledge of the assignment of the'claim until 1912 or 1913, and that he took the claim from the complaint in this action and inserted the same in his schedules. The Schultze schedules were filed in 1910, and this action was commenced in 1913. The trial court refused to permit Schultze to present this question to the jury, and for that reason, I think, he was improperly charged individually with the debt.
In the prevailing opinion herein it is stated that it nowhere
I can conceive of no proceeding which the defendant Schultze could then take to relieve himself from individual liability, and if such a proceeding were possible, it would be met by this adjudication of individual liability contained in this judgment.
I, therefore, advise a modification of the judgment and a new trial as to this issue.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.