17 Abb. N. Cas. 136 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1886
—My conclusions upon the questions of fact litigated upon the trial .will appear fully from the findings. It will be unnecessary to refer to them here, farther than they may bear upon the questions discussed in this opinion.
The defendant was a special partner in the limited copartnership known as “Humphrey & Co.” The plaintiffs seek to bold him liable as a general partner for the debts of said partnership, and claim to recover upon several distinct and separate grounds. The question of the good faith of the contribution of the special partner’s capital, was substantially disposed of on the trial. It was paid in in cash, as required by the statute, and there is absolutely no evidence of any agreement connected with such contribution, that it should be used to pay the debts which the firm of Humphrey & Colgate owed to Mr. Colgate or to the
The various questions in the case are now to be considered.
The certificate of the formation of the partnership, required by the 4th section of the statute, bears date March 9, 1874. It was signed and acknowledged by Theodore F. Humphrey, one of the general partners, on that day, and by the other general partners and by the special partner on March 11. It states “ that the amount of capital which the said James B. Colgate,
The plaintiff’s claim is that the statement was false on the day of the date of the certificate, and on the day it was executed by Theodore F. Humphrey, and, therefore, all parties became liable as general partners. It would be a sufficient answer to this proposition to say, that on March 9, there was no certificate within the meaning of the statute. There was a paper signed by a single individual. One person cannot form a limited partnership, and until it received the signatures of other parties, it was impossible to make use of it for any purpose. The statute defines what a certificate is. “Those desirous of forming a partnership shall make and severally sign a certificate,” is the language of the fourth section of the act; until all who intend to become members of the partnership have signed, there is no certificate. The false statement which the statute denounces, must, therefore, be one contained in a completed instrument—one signed and acknowledged by all parties interested; one that upon its face is apparently true, and which is capable of being used to form a limited partnership,
The statute permits the special partner to invest his capital in business without incurring the liability imposed upon a general partner. To that end it requires that accurate information be given in the certificate of the formation of the partnership, the names of the partners, the general nature of the business, the amount of capital contributed by the special partner, and the term for which the special partnership is to continue. The limited partnership so authorized is formed by the filing of a certificate and affidavit. Until that act is accomplished, there is no partnership, and until there is a partnership there is no need of information for any one. What precedes the act of filing the certificate is of no importance. Until that is done, no rights are conferred upon the special partner, and no wrong can be done to creditors. It is the act of filing the certificate and affidavit which gives life to the partnership, and confers immunity for the debts of the firm upon the special partner, and from that moment those who deal with the partnership become entitled to know the truth as to its formation, and from and after that time a wrong is done to those who deal with it, if a false statement is published through the filing of the certificate. The truth of the statements contained in the certificate is to be determined, therefore, at the time of its being filed with the county clerk. If true at the instant of filing, there is no liability, because, being true at the instant of the creation of the limited partnership, they fulfill the purpose for which the law was enacted. Such appears to me to b"e the spirit of the statute, and such also is its literal reading.
Section 4 provides that persons desirous of forming a limited partnership shall “severally sign a certificate;” section 5, that “the certificate required by
What is. required of parties desirous of availing themselves of the privileges conferred by the statute in question, is a substantial compliance with its terms. Of what importance is it whether the capital contributed by the special partner is paid in a few minutes before or a few minutes after the certificate is signed, so long as it is paid in good faith before the partnership comes into existence'í In my judgment, if, at the moment the partnership is formed by the act of filing the certificate, all its statements are true, there is both a substantial and literal compliance with the statute, and the special partner is not liable to the creditors of the firm.
The case of Durant v. Abendroth, 69 N. Y. 148, is not in conflict with this view of the law. It is true that it is said in the opinion that the certificate and affidavit speak of the day of their date, but later on
The final proposition made by the plaintiff is that the renewal of the partnership in February, 1882, was not in accordance with the statute.
The provision relating to renewals is contained in section 11 of the act in question, and is as follows: “Every renewal or continuance of such partnership, beyond the time originally fixed for its duration, shall be certified, acknowledged and recorded, and an affidavit of a general partner be made and filed, and notice be given, in the manner herein required for its original formation; and every such partnership which shall be otherwise renewed or continued, shall be deemed a general partnership.”
The partnership of Humphrey & Co. was renewed in February, 1882, by the making and filing of a certificate and affidavit which are fully set forth in the findings.
At the date of the renewal the firm was insolvent, and the capital contributed by the special partner had been lost. The claim made by the learned counsel for the plaintiff in the language of their brief is as follows :
“ We contend it was the purpose of the Legislature to require a contribution of actual capital to the renewed or continued partnership, and the same sort of information as to its amount and character as is concededly required to form the original partnership.”
Section 11 clearly contemplates a renewal and
The wTords used in the statute must be assumed to have been used in their ordinary meaning. The ordinary meaning of the word “manner” is “form”— the mode or way of performing or effecting anything. In the sense that the word is used in the statute, it refers to the mode or way of effecting a renewal. The word “ otherwise ” also refers to the manner of renewal; obviously it can have no other meaning. It cannot mean that the special partner shall not contribute his capital to the renewed partnership “ otherwise” or in other manner than he contributes to the original partnership, because by the fourth section it is provided that he must at the formation contribute a specific sum in actual cash payments, and, as I have already shown, such a contribution would be impossible. In construing this section, therefore, the word “manner” must be given its ordinary and usual meaning, that is, the renewal must be effected in the same “mode” or “way” that the original partnership is created. There must be a certificate and affidavit, and there must be filing, recording and publication, and if this certificate and affidavit are in proper form, and are filed and recorded, and there is a publication
The fact that the penalty imposed by section 11 is against the manner of renewal solely, and not against false statements in the renewal certificate and affidavit, is strong evidence that new facts are not required to be inserted in such certificate or affidavit. In this view of the law, statements of fact in the renewal papers, if false, would have been false in the original formation, and for such false statements the parties would be liable to the penalty created by section eight.
It is claimed, however, that to permit an insolvent partnership to renew itself would be against the policy of the law, and a fraud on creditors. We cannot look - beyond the statute to ascertain its purpose or its policy. We can enforce the penalties, but can give none where none are provided in the law. The requirement as to the filing of the certificate and affidavit and publication of the notice of the formation of the partnership was doubtless intended for the benefit of those who deal with the firm; but I fail to find in the statute any provision for giving to creditors any information as to its financial condition after it is once formed and has entered upon its business; after that, it is entitled to pursue its business in the same manner and way as a general partnership, and may contract debts and engage in all the ramifications and chances of business, with nothing to interfere with .it, except the power which our law gives to creditors to enforce payment of their dues.
The time during which the partnership may continue is not limited by the statute, but is left to be determined at the will of the parties interested, and
But if it is claimed that unless there is an actual contribution of capital by the special partner, there is no limited partnership, such claim is opposed to the whole theory of the law. It is not the contribution of the capital by the special partner which creates the partnership, but the making, acknowledging, filing and recording of the certificate and affidavit. .If these papers on their face comply with the law the partnership is created. The statute does not punish a special partner for a failure to contribute his capital, but for the making of a false statement as to such contribution
But assume that I am in error in holding that the partnership may be renewed by filing and recording papers containing the same statements that are contained in the original papers. The renewal certificate and afiidavit in this case stated all the facts required to be stated in the original papers, and the additional facts that the capital which the special partner had contributed to the original partnership “remains in the said limited partnership wholly unimpaired; and the said amount, namely, one hundred thousand dollars, has been contributed by the said special partner to the common stock of the renewed and continued partnership.” If, therefore, the statute intends that the original partnership may be continued (and of this there seems to be no question), and as the capital contributed by the special partner must at the date of the renewal necessarily be invested in the common stock of said partnership, it seems to me that the utmost that can be claimed for the requirements of the statute is that the certificate and afiidavit must state that the special partner’s capital is unimpaired in the common stock of the partnership, and has been contributed by the special partner to the renewed partnership. There is certainly no requirement that a balance sheet of the business of the firm shall be filed or any general statement made as to its assets or debts. If this view is correct, then the renewal certificate and afiidavit are correct in form and contain all the requirements of the statute.
We have then this case: a limited partnership renewed in the manner required by the statute, but
In the case of Haddock v. Grinnell, 2 Eastern Rep. 604, the supreme court of Pennsylvania held, that the capital of the special partner must be unimpaired at the date of the renewal, and in such a condition
affidavit stated that the capital specified in the original certificate to have been contributed by the special partner, had been so contributed, “and remained in the common stock of the said firm.” This latter statement is very different from stating that the said capital remains in said limited partnership “wholly unimpaired,” and “has been contributed by the said partner to the common stock of the renewed or continued partnership.”
The certificate and affidavit in the Pennsylvania case were clearly not in the form required by the statute, and the decision was therefore correct. It was correct in the view of the law that I have taken; but that case does not hold that for a false statement in a renewal certificate or affidavit proper in form the special partner is liable. That case is therefore not an authority for the plaintiff beyond holding that the special capital must be unimpaired at the date of the renewal. But, as I have already shown, there is no general penalty in the act for a violation of any of its provisions, but the penalties, so far as they are applicable to this case, are those given by sections 8 and 11.
The case made for the plaintiff does not fall within any of the provisions of the statute, and the defendant must have judgment with costs.