23 La. Ann. 417 | La. | 1871
This action is brought to effect a settlement of the business of a commercial partnership, dissolved by the bankruptcy of two of its members, and, as incident to the settlement, to subject as part of the assets of the partnership certain real estate, the title to which is in a third party, an absentee, never in any manner concerned in or connected with the partnership. Upon the petition of plaintiff a curator ad hoe was appointed to represent the absentee. The plaintiff took a rule upon the curator ad hoe and the defendant, Griffin, to show cause why a receiver should not be appointed and an injunction issue. An exception was filed hy each of the defendants. The ground taken hy the curator ad hoe is that in the liquidation of a commercial partnership an injunction can not he legally issued to restrain a third party from using or disposing of real estate, the title to which is admitted to he in his name, and who is not alleged to he a partner or member of the partnership; that the absentee, Edey, having a recorded title translative of property to the real estate sought to ho made subsidiary to the liquidation of a partnership, that title can not be divested or annulled hy a collateral proceeding of -the kind here resorted to, and can only he attacked by a direct action.
The defendant, Griffin, excepted that the plaintiff’s petition set» forth no sufficient allegation in law to warrant the issuing of the in
It appears that in 1865 the plaintiff, McKee, the defendant, Griffin, and two others, Bloomer and Graham, formed at Shreveport a commercial partnership, under the firm and style of S. P. Griffin & Co. The business of this partnership was declared to be the buying and selling of cotton, and the doing a commercial business generally. In the spring of 1866, McKee purchased the interest of Graham in the partnership. About two years afterwards, McKee and Bloomer both took the benefit of the bankrupt law, and subsequently purchased from the assignee in bankruptcy all the rights their estates had against S. P. Griffin and S. P. Griffin & Co. Bloomer sold the right he thus acquired to McKee, who, alter becoming owner of all the claims of Graham, Bloomer and himself against S. P. Griffin and S. P. Griffin &. Co., instituted this suit against S. P. Griffin, the other partner, and the absentee, Edey, as we have previously seen. The petition charges that a large amount of cotton was purchased in the States of Louisiana, Arkansas and Texas with the partnership funds; that Griffin sold this cotton and wrongfully converted the proceeds to his own use; that he purchased in his own name, with partnership funds, two fractional squares of ground in Shreveport at the price of $40,000,. and after-wards made improvements upon them with partnership funds to the amount of $35,000. The plaintiff charges that the said real estate, and the improvements made upon it, were fraudulently conveyed by Griffin to his brother-in-law, Charles C. Edey; that the conveyance of this property was made without consideration, and with the intent to defraud the other members of the firm; that Edey knew that the pur-, chase of the lots of ground in Shreveport by Griffin, and the improvements he made upon them, were all made with partnership funds, and that the conveyance to him operated a fraud upon the other partners. The petition expressly charges that Edey, the third party, is not a l>ona fide purchaser for a valuable consideration. It is contended that the other partners never consented to this transfer, and that Edey became a trustee for the partnership from the moment the property was transferred to him by Griffin. The plaintiff relies upon the case of Baca v. Ramos et al., 10 La. 420, and that of Hall v. Sprigg, 7 Martin 244 as establishing this proposition.
“The partners were joint owners, and either of them might have sold his undivided share or interest in the property which was liable to seizure for liis private debts. But in case of" such seizure and sale ho must have accounted to ids x’artners for the price. * * * In-fact, the title to one undivided third was in him, but the value thereof belonged to the partnership. The distinction we have taken between the title by which the property is held, and the value thereof, is well known in the other States of tilo Union whore the common law prevails. These rights are there distinguished by the expressions 'legal title’ and ‘equitable title.’ There courts of equity enforce the rights-of the equitable owner by compelling the legal one to make a conveyance io the other, precisely as this court in the case of Hall v. Sprigg, 7 M. 243.”
In various cases cited by counsel, the status or condition of immovable property, purchased in the name of a commercial partnership, is-recognized as that of prox>erty owned jointly by the purchasers, and the principle enunciated in these decisions establish that if immovable property" is purchased with partnership funds by one of the partners-in his own name, and without the consent of his copartners, the property itself belongs to the partner x>urchasing, but its value at the time of the purchase belongs to the partnership. No decree of a court could be rendered to vest the title of property so purchased in the partnership, for the partnership is incayiable of acquiring title.
In the aspect under which the case before us is x>resented, the title-to the property purchased by defendant having been transferred to a-third person, it is not necessary to determine whether the copartners, under the authority of the two cases relied upon, could compel,the defendant, if he still held the legal title, to make a conveyance of it in joint ownership to the members of the firm. The case of Hall v. Sprigg was different from that of Baca v. Ramos et al. In the former,, the defendant, as the agent of the plaintiff, with the plaintiff’s money entrusted to him to purchase land, bought it in his own name with the. plaintiff’s money. The court decided that the unfaithful agent should convey the land to the plaintiff, who held the equitable title. In this case the plaintiff had the capacity to hold.
None of the cases, it seems to us, authorize the conclusion that the condition of the property would be the same in the hands of a third party in possession, under a title translative of property, even if held
In an ordinary suit for the settlement of a commercial partnership brought by one of the partners against his copartners, the Code of Practice furnishes conservatory remedies that may be resorted to, as contingencies arise, to secure the partnership property and assets' pending the settlement. But that real estate in possession of a third party, in no manner connected with the partnership, and under a recorded title translative of property, can be taken out of the possession of the presumptive owner, and held subject to a decision'of the
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment of the district court be annulled, avoided and reversed; that the injunction be dissolved; that the appointment of a receiver be set aside and rendered of no effect, so far as he was authorized to take into his possession or under his control the property of the absentee, Edey; that the casé be remanded to the court of the first instance to be proceeded with according to law, the plaintiff and appellee paying costs of this appeal.