55 N.Y. 124 | NY | 1873
The question arising upon the exceptions in this case is whether an action will lie against the representatives of a deceased partner for the recovery of a partnership debt, after the recovery of a judgment therefor against the survivor, and the return of an execution thereon unsatisfied, notwithstanding it may be shown that the survivor had property out of which the execution might have been satisfied, which was not discovered by the sheriff. The position of the counsel for the appellant, that this is not a suit by a judgment creditor to obtain payment of his judgment out of the property of his debtor, which cannot be seized upon execution, is correct. In this class of cases the counsel concedes that, in *127
the absence of collusion by the plaintiff, the return upon the execution issued to the proper county is conclusive evidence, and he might have added, the only competent evidence, that the legal remedy has been exhausted; at common law, when one joint debtor died, the remedy at law could only be had against the survivor. The estate of the deceased was only liable in equity for the payment of the debt. (The Trustees of the Leake and Watts OrphanHouse v. Lawrence, 11 Paige, 80; same case in error, 2 Denio, 577, and cases cited.) The same rule applied to the case of a deceased partner. (Cases supra.) This was formerly the rule in England. The rule there as to a deceased partner has been somewhat changed, upon the theory that partners were severally as well as jointly liable for the payment of the partnership debts. This change has not been adopted in this State. (See casessupra, and Grant v. Shurter, 1 Wend., 148.) To enable a partnership creditor to maintain an action against the representatives of a deceased partner, he must show an inability to collect his debt from the survivor. (Voorhis v. Childs,
It is now said, by the counsel for the appellant, that the plaintiffs ought to be precluded from this equitable remedy, for the reason that the survivor had property, from which, *129 had the sheriff discovered it, the execution might have been satisfied. But the plaintiffs were not in fault for the failure of the sheriff to discover this property. They had done all that was required of them when they had delivered the execution to the sheriff. It was not their, but the duty of the sheriff, to ascertain whether the debtor had property to satisfy it; and when the sheriff returned that he had not, the legal remedy was exhausted, and the plaintiffs were at liberty to pursue their equitable remedy against the estate of the deceased. It follows that, where the plaintiff can prove the insolvency of the survivor, and thus show that he has no legal remedy for the collection of his debt against him, he may proceed to enforce payment from the estate of a deceased partner, or other joint debtor, without bringing an action against the survivor, or he may exhaust his legal remedy against the survivor, and then proceed against the estate of the deceased debtor. The representatives of the estate of the deceased debtor have an adequate remedy against the sheriff, in case of a wrongful return of the execution.
The judgment appealed from must be affirmed, with costs.
All concur; ANDREWS, J., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed.