173 Mass. 170 | Mass. | 1899
This case was heard upon the pleadings and the master’s report. There was a final decree and an appeal, and a request to the justice who heard the case to report the same under St. 1883, c. 223, § 7. The case may be treated as here on appeal, and the report may be regarded as a finding under that statute of all the facts on which the decree was founded, namely, those stated in the master’s report and those admitted by the pleadings. It is not necessary to determine the power of a single justice, independently of the statute of 1883, to report a case to the full court after the entry of a final decree.
The bill as brought alleges that the plaintiff is a half owner as tenant in common of certain personal property, and asks that the property be sold and the proceeds divided, that a mortgage put upon the property by one of the defendants be de
None of the plaintiff’s exceptions to the master’s report in regard to his findings of fact can be considered, because the evidence is not reported. It appears that at most the plaintiff has only an equitable interest in such assets of the partnership as may remain, if any, after settlement of the affairs of the partnership. He has nothing but that which he acquired from one of the partners, and if the legal title to the chattels had been in the firm, he would not have acquired an ownership in the articles themselves. The title to personal property of a partnership is not in the individual members of the firm, so that they can convey an undivided share in any specific articles to another; but it is in the firm as an entirety, subject to the equities of the different members and their right to have it applied to the payment of the debts of the partnership. Sanborn v. Royce, 132 Mass. 594. Pelletier v. Couture, 148 Mass. 269. Lovejoy v. Bowers, 11 N. H. 404. Fourth National Bank v. Carrollton Railroad, 11 Wall. 624. Menagh v. Whitwell, 52 N. Y. 146. Tarbell v. West, 86 N. Y. 280. Beecher v. Stevens, 43 Conn. 587. Sirrine v. Briggs, 31 Mich. 443.
It is questionable on the authorities whether, upon a conveyance of an interest in only a part of the partnership property, a plaintiff could maintain a bill in equity for a settlement of the partnership affairs and an accounting. Assuming that he could, this bill was not brought for that purpose. In the original bill there is no hint of the existence of a partnership, and in the amendment there is no express averment to that effect, but only a statement which might lead to such an inference. If this were a bill to settle the affairs of the partnership, Sumner Fairbanks would be a necessary party. Moreover, in the plaintiff’s requests for findings filed on November 29, 1897, he waives the amendment “ wherein it is alleged that the defendant held the title to the machinery as trustee for the said Fairbanks,” which we understand to be the amendment above referred to, although
It is plain that this bill cannot be maintained.
Decree affirmed.