22 Or. 212 | Or. | 1892
This is a suit in equity, brought by the plaintiff against the defendant to compel contribution on account of the payment by him of a certain judgment obtained against the plaintiff and defendant as partners. It appears from the complaint that the plaintiff and defendant were equal partners during the year 1881, and for some time prior thereto, doing business under the firm name of R. G. McDonald, and that they failed in business, owing considerable sums of money to various individuals and firms; that among those having claims against the firm of R. G. McDonald were Oberfelder Bros. & Go., who, on the seventh day of March, 1882, obtained judgment against the plaintiff and defendant as partners for the sum of one thousand two hundred and sixteen dollars and eighty-eight cents, and twenty-one dollars and seventy-five cents costs and disbursements; that the said judgment was duly entered in the proper records and kept in full force and effect; that on the fifth day of September, 1890, an execution was issued in favor of the said Oberfelder Bros. & Co., and that the same was duly paid thereunder by the plaintiff, amounting to the sum of one thousand eight hundred and seventy dollars and twenty-nine cents. It is to recover one-half of this sum, so paid by the plaintiff, with interest at six per cent from the last date aforesaid, that this suit is brought.
The defendant answered, and set up as a separate defense in substance that the plaintiff and defendant were equal partners engaged in business in the city of Las Vegas in the territory of New Mexico, and that sometime in July, 1881, as such partners, they failed in business and became insolvent, owing to divers persons divers and sundry sums
1881, December. J. C. Brunner & Co____________$122 61
1882, January. Gunther & Co________________ 755 43
1881, February, 'j 1881, November. I Craft, Holmes & Co____________ [ XXX XX XXXX ], February. J
1882, June. C. F. Herman________________ 78 88
1882, July. Udell, Schemening & Co_______ 45 00
1883, April. J. P. Campbell--------------- 32 00
1882, October. 1882, December. > A. Mau & Co_________________ [ XXX XX XXXX ], April. J
1882, January, 1882, December. I Cook & Bernheim____________ [ XXX XX XXXX ], June. J
1882, July. -| 1883, June. > Charles Bebstock & Co_________ [ XXX XX XXXX ], July. J
1883, July. F. M. James & Son------------ 5 00
1882, March. "| 1883, March. V Philip Best Brewing Co________ [ XXX XX XXXX ], March. J
That all said payments were made for and on account of the indebtedness of said firm, composed of the plaintiff and defendant, and are a part of the same transaction set forth by the plaintiff in his complaint, and that plaintiff is liable to the defendant for one-half the sum or sums paid, etc., but that plaintiff has not paid defendant any part or portion of said sum or sums of money, etc.
There is another separate defense set up, but the view we take of the case renders its statement unnecessary.
The plaintiff demurred to all the new matter set up in
In the absence of any arrangement as to existing liabilities after dissolution, the partnership relation between the partners remains, until the partnership affairs are adjusted. A debt due by the firm is a partnership debt as much after the dissolution as before it, as in like manner property owned by the partnership remains partnership property until disposed of or segregated. The interest of a partner in the partnership property is not in any particular part or portion of it, but his share is in the balance remaining after the payment of the partnership debts, and after the settlement of the accounts between the several partners. “For,” as Houck, J., said, “his co-partners have a specific lien on his share of the assets of the partnership to secure his indebtedness to the firm; and in the ascertainment of his interest in the property of the firm, his indebtedness thereto must be taken into account and settled out of his share.” (Over v. Hetherington, 66 Ind. 869.) Nor is there any implied promise, when a partner pays a debt of the
Mr. Justice Story says: “ The cases in which a recovery can be had at law by way of contribution between partners are very few, and stand upon special circumstances. The usual, and indeed almost the only, effectual remedy is in equity, where an account of all the partnership transactions can be taken.” (1 Story Eq. Jur. § 504.)
As this suit is by one partner against the other to compel contribution for the payment of a partnership debt, when the facts show that there has been no accounting or settlement of the partnership affairs, it results that it cannot be maintained, unless the suit is allowed to embrace an accounting and full settlement of the partnership affairs, and then only to recover such excess as appears after such accounting and settlement that the plaintiff has paid beyond his share. Until this balance is ascertained in favor of one or the other partner, there exists no cause of action for contribution; and until a cause of action exists, the statute of limitation does not begin to run.
There was no error in overruling the demurrer.