180 Iowa 325 | Iowa | 1917
Under the bankruptcy laws, a firm may be bankrupt and the individuals composing such firm solvent. In re Sanderlin, 109 Fed. 857; 5 Cyc. 413. Doubtless the members of the firm might be included with it in the petition, asking that all be found insolvent; but, before the individual members could be so found, in involuntary bankruptcy, one or more of the enumerated acts of insolvency must have been alleged and proven to have been committed by such members. In re Meyer, supra. And where no act of bankruptcy is charged against the members of a firm, and the proceedings are 'solely against the partnership as a legal entity, the individual members are not entitled to a discharge in bankruptcy. In re Hale, 107 Fed. 432.
Under the allegations of the petition' in bankruptcy, then, plaintiff might not have been adjudged a bankrupt and about the only purpose that could have been- served by reciting in the petition who were members of the partner ship was to identify it, and point out to whom the subpoena
As contended, there is a tendency to liberally construe actions as interfering with property in order to avoid a denial of this remedy (see Luby v. Bennett, 111 Wis. 613 [56 L. R. A. 261, 87 Am. St. 897]); but there is nothing in the case at bar justifying a departure from the doctrine of Wetmore v. Mellinger, supra. The authorities pro and con are reviewed in the case last cited, and in Kolka v. Jones, 6 N. D. 461 (66 Am. St. 615).
The ruling of the court in sustaining the demurrer has ■ our approval, and the judgment is — Affirmed.