Rosenheim & Sons v. Lacy

52 So. 833 | Ala. | 1910

MAYFIELD, J.

There was a partnership in Jefferson county, the firm name of which was Lacey & Massey, composed of Steve Lacey and George Massey. Lacey was adjudicated a bankrupt, and A. S. Cowan was appointed receiver of the bankrupt’s estate. He, as such receiver, filed a bill to set aside certain sales of the partnership property and to subject the property to the claims of the partnership creditors. . It was ruled by this court, on appeal in that case (162 Ala. 546, 50 South. 281), that he could not maintain such bill, and it was dismissed without prejudice. The creditors then filed this bill, seeking the same relief which was sought in the other suit. The chancellor, on motion of respondents, ordered the complainants to pay the costs of the first suit by the assignee before allowing them to proceed with this suit. The respondents failed or declined to pay such costs within the time specified in the order of the chancellor, and the chancellor subsequently, to wit, on the 20th day of November, 1909, rendered a decree dismissing complainant’s bill for the failure to comply with such previous order of the court; and it is from this decree that complainants appeal.

Though the assignee in the first suit sought to subject the identical property, the subject of this suit, to the claims of the creditors of the partnership, who are the complainants in this suit, yet these complainants were not liable for the costs of the original suit, and are not now liable therefor. It would, indeed, be strange if they could be made to pay costs for which they were never liable as a condition precedent of asserting their rights in a court of equity. While they might have been beneficiaries of the proceeds of the first suit, had it succeeded, yet they did not institute that suit. Indeed, they could not have prevented the suit, nor have controlled the assignee in the matter. He, as assignee, was prima*587rily liable for tbe costs of the first suit, and be, individually, was secondarily liable; but in no event could these complainants have been made liable for such costs. Consequently tbe chancellor erred in requiring them to pay such costs as a condition precedent to prosecuting this their own suit, and also in dismissing their bill upon their failure and refusal to comply with such order.

Sections 2490 and 8667 of the Code of 1907, a& to nominal and real parties, do not apply.

Reversed and remanded.

Dowdell, C. J., and Simpson and Sayre, JJ., concur.
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