The plaintiff has obtained an interlocutory judgment directing a partition of the real property described in the complaint and the defendant has appealed from that judgment.
The complaint alleges that the plaintiff and the defendant Gustavus A. Goldsmith are tenants in common of the six parcels of real property described in the complaint, the plaintiff being seized and possessed of one undivided half and the defendant Gustavus A. Goldsmith of the other undivided half thereof. The defendant admits that he and the plaintiff are possessed in fee of the lands, but denies that they are possessed of an undivided interest in common, and alleges that the plaintiff and the defendant purchased the real estate described in the complaint as copartners, and that the same is the property of an existing copartnership between the plaintiff and the defendant. The question involved is whether this property was purchased by a copartnership of which the parties to the action were partners, and thus the real estate purchased was copartship property, or whether the property was conveyed to and is held by the parties to this action as tenants in common. The deeds conveyed the property to “ Gustavus A. Goldsmith and Julius Levine,” the contention of the defendant, however, being that the plaintiff and the defendant organized a firm for the purpose of purchasing real estate and renting the same as a business enterprise, and that before this property could be divided there must be a dissolution of the copartnership and the liquidation of affairs of the firm. The property being conveyed to the two parties interested in it by virtue of the statute, the grantees became tenants in common. (1 R. S. 727, § 44.) It is there provided that “ every estate granted or devised to two or more persons in their own right shall be a tenancy in common, unless expressly declared to be in joint tenancy ; ” and this provision is continued in the Real Property Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 541, § 56). There is no question as to creditors. The claim of the defendant is based entirely upon an understanding that is alleged to have existed between the parties at the time when the purchase of the property was determined on. It appeared that the plaintiff
Objections are made to the form of the interlocutory judgment, but we think them frivolous.
It follows that the judgment appealed from must be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
