80 N.Y.S. 327 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The case comes up upon exceptions taken by the defendant and ordered to be heard in the first instance at the Appellate Division. The action was brought to recover a balance upon two promissory notes made in 1892 by the copartnership of Leggat Brothers. The firm consisted of Andrew B. Leggat and Bichard J. Leggat. The latter died in 1899, and this defendant is his executor. The plaintiff alleged that one-half of each note had theretofore been paid by Andrew B. Leggat. She also pleaded that in 1900 she had recovered judgment for the balance of the notes against Andrew B. Leggat, as sole surviving partner; that an execution issued upon said judgment had been returned wholly unsatisfied; that the judgment was wholly unpaid; that Andrew B. Leggat was insolvent; that she had exhausted her legal remedy against him as sole surviving partner, and that the defendant, as executor, had disputed’ and had rejected her claim upon the notes. ‘Additional to her denials of various allegations of the complaint, the defendant pleaded, inter alia, that the said execution was returned nulla Iona by the collusion of the plaintiff and Andrew B. Leggat, and pleaded as a defense that in 1899 Andrew B. Leggat conveyed certain realty, exceeding in value $15,000, to the plaintiff, who, in consideration, applied $6,000, one-half of the amount due on the notes, in part payment of the notes, and that the value of the property thus conveyed was sufficient to discharge the notes. As a further defense, the defendant pleaded that in June, 1900, the corporation of Leggat Brothers was organized under the statutes of Maine; that thereupon all of the assets of the copartnership of Leggat Brothers were transferred to the corporation, subject to the debts and liabilities of the copartnership; that the assets thus transferred were sufficient to meet the debts of the
It is insisted that the court erred in law because it agreed with the contention of the learned counsel for the plaintiff that as the Partnership Law (Laws of 1897, chap. 420, § 6) makes every general partner liable to third persons jointly and severally for all of the obligations of the partnership, the plaintiff was under no obligation to proceed against Andrew B. Leggat as the surviving member of the firm, but immediately after the death of Bichard J. Leggat and the issue of letters under his will, she could have presented her claim to his executor for the full amount of the notes, and upon rejection thereof could have forthwith proceeded to enforce the claim against this defendant. Even if we thought the court erred in its interpretation we should not disturb the judgment unless the judgment were in some way based upon this error. I think that the disposition of this ease does not require an interpretation of the statute. I may say, however, that although the phraseology of the statute may seem to sustain the contention of the learned counsel for the plaintiff, yet such interpretation is counter to the trend of the decisions of this State. (Lawrence v. Trustees, etc., 2 Den. 577; Voorhis v. Childs’ Executor, 17 N. Y. 354; Van Riper v. Poppenhausen, 43 id. 68; Pope v. Cole, 55 id. 124; Harbeck v. Pupin, 123 id. 115; Hotopp v. Huber, 160 id.
I think that the statute is not up for interpretation, for the following reasons: In the first place* the plaintiff did not rely upon her interpretation to the limitation of either her pleading or her proof. For she pleaded and proved a judgment entered by her against Andrew It. Leggat as the surviving partner, and the return
In the second place, in view of the pleading and proof which I have stated, even if the learned court did interpret the statute as permitting action in the first instance against this defendant, the correctness of that interpretation is not in question unless such interpretation moved the court to exclude testimony of the defendant which would have been competent, material or relevant if the law, despite the statute, required the plaintiff to first exhaust her legal remedy against the surviving partner. Therefore, it is necessary to examine the various rulings of the learned court. The defendant pleaded that the return of the execution “ was through collusion on the part of the plaintiff herein, and the said Andrew B. Leggat.” But even if proof of the plea had been admitted and made, that would not avail her. If she had pleaded that, at the time of the issue and life of the execution, the judgment debtor had assets of the partnership in his hands, and that by Collusion of the plaintiff and the sheriff, the execution had been returned nulla bona, then she would have pleaded a good affirmative defense (Forbes v. Waller, 25 N. Y. 430, 436), and exclusion of testimony to maintain such plea might have been error unless, of course, the construction of the statute of 1897 made by plaintiff should be upheld. But as there is neither pleading nor suggestion of any complicity of the sheriff, I think that proof of his return of the execution nulla bona was sufficient prima
I fail to see any prejudice to the defendant by the exclusion of a part of the testimony relative to the transfer of certain realty by Andrew B. Leggat to the plaintiff. The learned counsel stated-his proposed proof as follows : “ That in the year 1899, just before the sale of the stock on hand of Leggat Bros, to the corporation of Leggat Bros., Andrew Leggat conveyed in trust two pieces of property, the equity of which was reasonably and fairly worth $32,000, to the plaintiff in this action, and that that conveyance was to satisfy the debts of the old firm of Leggat Bros., and that from that time to
I think that the defendant did not offer sufficient evidence to justify a determination that the court erred in not finding that the plaintiff had agreed to proceed against the corporation upon these notes. There was no proof that her attorney had any authority to make the promise. Moreover, if he made it, there was no proof of consideration therefor. He could retract his promise, and the evidence shows that he did retract it.
The exceptions should be overruled, and motion for new trial denied, with costs. The right of the plaintiff -to costs and allowance at the trial cannot be passed upon on this appeal, for the
Bartlett, Woodward and Hirschberg, JJ., concurred; Goodrich, P. J., concurred in result.
Defendant’s exception overruled and motion for new trial denied, with costs.
Buys v. Donnithorne.