52 Miss. 713 | Miss. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellee, John Hanway, was a creditor, by open account,, of the mercantile firm of B. Hanway & Co. Said firm having-been dissolved by the death of B. Hanway, appellee had a. settlement with Greary, the surviving partner, and received in satisfaction of his debt the notes of Greary and Mary Hanway (now Mary Robertshaw), the widow and administratrix of the-deceased partner, and for the protection of said notes received, also from said parties a mortgage executed by them on certain, real estate belonging to the firm.
The notes falling due he filed his bill to foreclose the mortgage, making the surviving partner and the widow, who was,
It was declared further that a court of equity was the proper tribunal in which to subject the realty of the firm to the payment of the partnership debts.
Acting upon these suggestions the complainant dismissed his bill in the lower court against Mrs. Robertshaw in her individual capacity, retaining it, however, against her in her character of guardian of the minor heirs of her former husband. Having established his case by proof, he had decree condemning the land to be sold, from which decree this appeal is prosecuted.
It is objected that the proceedings are erroneous because Mrs. Robertshaw is not made a party in her character as admin-istratrix of her deceased husband. It is stated in Story’s Eq. Pl., § 167, that in suits against a surviving partner to subject firm effects the administrator of the deceased partner should be joined. No authority is quoted in support of this doctrine, and the annotator of the volume remarks in a note
If it was proposed to reach the individual property of the-several partners then of course the administrator of the dead one must be joined. But no such attempt is made here.
There was no plea or demurrer for non-joinder, and it is too late, upon the hearing, to raise the objection, if substantial justice-can be done in the absence of the party who was not joined. Story’s Eq. Pl., § 237; 1 Daniell’s Ch. Pr., 285; Story v. Livingston, 13 Pet., 375. We may remark, also, that Mrs. Bobertshaw, the administratrix, was a party in her capacity of' guardian.
It is further objected that the minor heirs of the deceased partner occupied the land as a residence, and are entitled to a. homestead exemption in so much of it as descended to them. Neither the partners nor the heirs could acquire any interest. in the partnership property, real or personal, adverse to the-trust imposed upon it by law for the payment of the partnership debts. It was said in Sykes v. Sykes, 49 Miss., 190, that, the widow was only entitled to dower in partnership realty after the payment of the firm debts. .Certainly the right to a. homestead exemption stands upon no higher ground.
- The statute of limitations of three years is pleaded as being-a bar to complainant’s demand. The three years statute does not apply. There had been a full accounting, and an amount, agreed upon between the surviving partner and complainant, and though the notes taken were void as against the widow and administratrix, yet the amount agreed upon as being due-became by the settlement an account stated, and would only-
It is urged that complainant’s remedy was at law, and that a court of equity has no jurisdiction.
It was decided otherwise, and Ave think correctly, in the previous opinion in this case. 49 Miss., supra.
Let the decree be affirmed.