26 Fla. 442 | Fla. | 1890
This is a suit of Roach & Co. against E.
C. Post and J. R. Hunter, as partners under the style of
The bill then charges confederation between Post, Hunter and Green to cheat complainants out of their moneys. It further alleges that the defendants pretend that no such firm as Post & Hunter ever existed, but that it was understood between them that if the said Hunter could raise so much money he was to be a partner, but that he never raised the money, and was therefore never a partner, and that there was never any articles of copartnership entered into between them, that the said defendant Plunter never received any of the income of said firm, that Post kept the business himself and had all the stock in charge, and having assigned, conveyed the right and property to the assignee, Green; that the said assignee wished to hurry the sale of the assets for the benefit of Post’s creditors, and that the building in which the business was conducted belonged to the wife of Post, and the said Post had no real estate to pass to the assignee, all of which pretences are contrary to equity and good conscience. The bill concludes with prayer for an injunction restraining and enjoining defendants from selling or disposing of the goods, or in any wise meddling with the furniture, for the appointment of a master to take the property assigned in custody and for an account before the master, and that the master shall sell the property, pay complainants, and then pay all other claims that shall be proven against Post & Hunter.
We do not deem it necessary to set out the details of the answer, which for the most part admits the allegations of the bill, with explanations of default on the part of Post, not, in our view, material in a legal sense. But the answer denies fraud. Nor is it necessary to recite the evidence, further than by incidental references to the same in the succeeding epitome of facts, with a view to sustain our conclusion that the bill itself is fatally defective in making a case for the relief sought. We gather from the record that the case is this: Roach & Co. sold goods to Post, representing himself as buying for Post & Hunter. Post offered to give certain security, which he failed to do. Though there was no real partnership between Post & Hunter, as between themselves, the fact that Hunter knew of the order
Conceding that Roach & Co. were deceived in the promises made by Post as to the security he would give them, they only stood in the relation of ordinary creditors, whether of Post or of Post & Hunter. If fraud was practiced upon them in obtaining the credits, that might have been a ground for following up the goods they sold, and reclaiming them, but this is not what they undertake, and even if it were, the length of time they suffered to elapse before any complaint of fraud, knowing of Post’s default, and that he was claiming to do the business in his individual name, was an indication that the fraud charged was an afterthought. Then, if Roach & Co. were only general .creditors, awaiting the payment of their claim, like other
But even if there had been fraud in the assignment, Roach & Co. on the showing they make, could not invoke equity to enforce their claim. The law is .that a creditor must have prosecuted his claim at law to judgment to constitute a lien on real property, and to judgment and execution to constitute a lien on personal property before he can question the disposition of the debtor’s property. Wiggins vs. Armstrong, 2 Johns. Ch., 144; Rhodes vs. Cousins, 6 Randolph, 188; 2 High on Injunctions, Section 1403. And it does not avail to modify this doctrine, that an action at law is pending which may result in a judgment and execu
The decree will be reversed and the bill dismissed.