Remington v. Pilcher

112 So. 338 | Ala. | 1927

The ultimate aim of the bill is to recover purchase money paid by complainant under an executory contract for the purchase of lands; the vendor having disabled himself to execute the contract by a subsequent sale and conveyance to a third person.

The appeal is from a decree overruling demurrer to the bill, interposed by respondent Mrs. L. C. Remington.

So far as now pertinent, the averments of the bill may be summarized thus: Mrs. Remington and Wm. L. Harriman, both nonresidents of Alabama, entered into a partnership for the purpose of buying, platting, and selling suburban property in the Muscle Shoals district. To this end Mrs. Remington furnished $10,000 to purchase acreage property; the title being taken in the name of Harriman, with mortgage back to Mrs. Remington, subject to a purchase-money mortgage to the vendor for an unpaid balance. The property was duly surveyed and platted, and business conducted in the name of De Luxe Land Company. Harriman was managing member, under the title of president.

Certain lots were sold to Mrs. W. R. Pilcher, also a nonresident, an executory contract given, part of the purchase money paid in cash, and deferred installments paid from time to time. Later these same lots were sold and conveyed by deed to J. F. Wallace. Thereafter, by agreement between Harriman and Mrs. Remington, members of the partnership, Harriman sold and conveyed certain other and distinct lots to Mrs. Remington in payment of her $10,000 mortgage, and it was canceled of record.

The bill, among other things, seeks to declare and enforce an equitable lien upon these lots so conveyed to Mrs. Remington in favor of Mrs. Pilcher, and enforce same for the collection of the money due to be refunded. The demurrer challenges the equity of the bill, and especially the alleged lien. The bill proceeds on the theory that, when the partnership disabled itself to comply with its contract of sale to Mrs. Pilcher, this worked a rescission of the contract, and Mrs. Pilcher elects to claim a refund of the purchase money.

Under the facts alleged, the firm and the members thereof are liable in assumpsit as for money had and received. Chandler v. Wilder, 215 Ala. 209, 110 So. 306.

A simple contract creditor of a partnership has no lien against partnership assets merely because of the relation of debtor and creditor. The parties stand in like positions as individual debtor and creditor.

The right of a partner to have partnership assets first applied to partnership debts, an equitable right treated as a partner's lien, may in cases of insolvency be worked out in the interest of creditors of the partnership. Their right is derivative.

In the absence of fraud, one partner may surrender this lien by passing partnership property to another, giving no right of complaint to partnership creditors. Knox v. Parker, 167 Ala. 647,52 So. 438; 1 Rawley on Partnership, §§ 526, 527; 2 Lindsey on Partnership, §§ 654, 655; Fitzpatrick v. Flannagan,106 U.S. 648, 1 S. Ct. 369, 27 L. Ed. 211.

The bill makes no case of fraud in the conveyance of lots to Mrs. Remington in satisfaction of her mortgage. The partnership interest in these lots was merely the *60 equity subject to her mortgage. It is not averred they were not conveyed for a fair price. This released the other property of the firm from her mortgage, and in her hands these lots remained subject to her individual liability for firm debts by appropriate action at law.

For all that appears, complainant was placed in no worse position by the sale of these lots. The right to charge assets fraudulently conveyed as held in trust for existing creditors of the grantor cannot be made the basis of the lien asserted on the lots of Mrs. Remington.

That Mrs. Remington had not placed her mortgage on record when complainant purchased her lots does not affect the situation. Complainant does not bring herself within the class of purchasers or judgment creditors protected by the recording statutes. As to lots sold to Mrs. Pilcher in the course of partnership business, the business for which it was organized, no doubt Mrs. Pilcher would be protected against Mrs. Remington's mortgage, recorded or unrecorded. Being a party to the sale as a member of the partnership, she released her mortgage on lots sold, and was remitted to her claim on the purchase money under the articles of copartnership. But the lots here involved were other and different lots, to which Mrs. Pilcher had no contractual relation. There is no averment that the mortgage was collusively withheld from the record while the property was fraudulently held out as a basis of credit.

No theory of the bill supports the claim of an equitable lien upon the lots conveyed to Mrs. Remington. The court erred in overruling the demurrer addressed to this feature of the bill. It does not follow that the bill is subject to the general demurrer for want of equity; that Mrs. Remington is entitled to have the bill dismissed as to her. This brings to view other features of the bill and Mrs. Remington's relation thereto.

It is averred that Harriman sold and conveyed one-half interest in a portion of the partnership property to respondent J. F. Compton, in consideration that Compton assume the payment of one-half the mortgage of Mrs. Remington and the superior mortgage held by respondent W. S. Spencer; that thereupon Compton joined Harriman in conveying the lots to Mrs. Remington in satisfaction of her mortgage; but that Compton defaulted upon his agreement to pay the Spencer mortgage, and that Spencer and Compton have entered into a collusive agreement to foreclose Spencer's mortgage on Harriman's interest in the property, and thus dispose of the Harriman interest in the property in fraud of Mrs. Pilcher, an existing creditor. The bill seeks to restrain the foreclosure sale.

The bill does not show any dissolution of the partnership between Mrs. Remington and Harriman, or parting with Mrs. Remington's equity in the partnership assets held in the name of Harriman. If, as alleged, there is a collusive and fraudulent movement to put the partnership assets beyond the reach of partnership creditors, applying them to the payment of the debt for which a solvent party has become primarily liable, Mrs. Pilcher has standing in equity to restrain such devise and subject the partnership assets to her debt, or be subrogated to the security held against the primary debtor. Mrs. Remington, as a member of the partnership, is a proper party to such bill. Having jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the parties, a court of equity may do complete justice, rendering a personal decree against respondent partners for a balance over, if need be.

The latter feature of the bill may be subject to special demurrer, but not the general demurrer for want of equity. Dixie Grain Co. v. Quinn, 181 Ala. 208, 61 So. 886; McDuffie v. Lynchburg Shoe Co., 178 Ala. 268, 59 So. 567.

A decree will be here rendered sustaining grounds of demurrer Nos. 2, 4, and 5.

Ground No. 3 misconstrues the bill in respect to the time Mrs. Remington's mortgage was recorded.

As to grounds of demurrer Nos. 1 and 3, the decree is affirmed.

Affirmed in part, and in part reversed and rendered.

ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and GARDNER, JJ., concur.