37 N.J. Eq. 333 | New York Court of Chancery | 1883
The complainant, by his bill, which is exhibited against his copartner, states that prior to June 1st, 1876, he was the sole owner of a certain planing-mill and sash and blind and moulding-factory at Bound Brook, with the necessary stock, machinery and fixtures for carrying on the business; that about that time he entered into copartnership with the defendant in the business, the latter buying one-third of the stock, machinery and fixtures, and to have one-third of the profits, the complainant to have two-thirds; that the terms of the agreement were not reduced to writing and there was no limit fixed to the. duration of the partnership; that the defendant was to pay $2,715.59 for his interest, but never paid more than $2,000 of that sum; that the business was continued until April 1st, 1882, when the defendant abandoned it without making any settlement of the partnership affairs, and that they have never since been settled, either wholly or in part; that the business, while it was carried on by the firm, produced but a small profit, and on the whole was conducted at a great loss to both partners, but particularly to the complainant; that he lent large sums to the firm, some of which were never repaid, while the defendant never contributed anything, except in paying the $2,000 on account of the price of his interest in the property, and that on the 1st of April, 1882, there was due from the firm to the defendant about $173, and to the complainant about $900. The bill further states that on the last-mentioned day the value of the assets of the firm was $5,010.27, and the amount of the liabilities $7,073.93; that since that time the complainant has continued to carry on the
The bill was filed January 9th, 1883, and on the 23d of that month a receiver was appoined with “ full power to demand, sue for, collect and receive and take into his possession all the goods and chattels, rights and credits, moneys and effects, lands and tenements, books, papers, choses in action, bills, notes and property of every description belonging to the copartnership, and to take charge of and settle all of the copartnership matters, under the direction of this court, according to law and. the practice of this court.” Isaac D. Titsworth, the creditor above named, re
Those creditors ask that their judgments may be paid out of the property in the receiver’s hands. The application is resisted on the ground that in view of the appointment of the receiver they are not entitled to any priority over the other creditors of the firm. They were diligent creditors, pursuing their lawful remedy for the recovery of their debts when the bill was filed. If they are to lose the benefit of their diligence it must be because the other creditors who have not sued have obtained an interest in the assets which forbids, and that can only be true on the ground that this court has assumed an administration of the affairs of this concern, which ensures a just and equitable application of its assets to the payment of its debts; If the proceedings under consideration—this suit—were, from the moment the receiver was appointed, beyond the control of the parties to them, at least so far as that the parties could not discontinue them without the consent of all the creditors, such a distribution would be insured. But the suit is at this moment, and has been ever since it was begun, under the control of the parties—the two copartners. If they agree to discontinue the suit and discharge the receiver, whether in order to go op with the business, or for any other reason, or merely at will, can this court refuse to grant the order of discontinuance or dismissal ? It surely cannot. How, then, can any distribution of the assets be ensured at this stage of the proceedings? Has this court obtained such a hold of the assets as places them beyond the reach of the parties? Have the parties lost all control of the property, so that henceforth it must be administered here, and the partnership affairs settled here, without regard to the wishes of the partners ?
The bill prays no dissolution. It does not expressly allege insolvency, though it shows it. When the proceedings in such a suit have gone to the extent of an order of this court that the
It is suggested that this court favors proceedings here for the distribution of the assets of partnerships, because it can secure equality in the administration of the property. But the maxim “equality is equity,” is not applied in the administration of the assets of partnerships to deprive a diligent creditor of the lien he has lawfully acquired before the court has undertaken the distribution. A creditor-at-large of a partnership cannot maintain a suit even to restrain an execution creditor of a member of the firm from enforcing his legal remedy against the partnership property. Young v. Frier, 1 Stock 465; Mittnight v. Smith, 2 C. E. Gr. 259. The parties to such a suit as this may, up to a certain period in its progress, dismiss it and give preferences, and the court cannot prevent it.
In the case in hand the order appointing the receiver was made by consent. It empowered him, indeed, to take into his possession the assets, and to take charge of and settle all of the copartnership matters under the direction of the court, according to law and the practice of the court; but there was no decree of dissolution nor of insolvency, nor any direction, to call in the creditors, and when the judgments in question were recovered there had been no further proceedings in the cause, nor had any creditor come in. Did this court, by that order, obtain such control of the assets that it could have denied the application of the
The answers to the petitions state that after the making of the order appointing the receiver, the partners, by bill of sale, transferred the partnership property to him, “ in consideration of his appointment and in furtherance of the trust.” That fact does not affect the decision of the question. The receiver’s title under the voluntary bill of sale is not valid as against these judgment creditors, unless it be because it was created in aid of the receivership, and that transfer would not prevent the parties from putting an end to this suit by dismissing the bill.
I have thus considered the merits of these applications, without regard to the irregularity of the proceedings, because no objection was made on that ground, and it was deemed desirable that the question should be decided, with as little delay as practicable on its merits, as presented on the petitions and answers and the bill. The petitioners are not parties to this suit, and it is settled practice that no motion can be made in a cause by one who is not a party to it, except that he be made a party. Linn v. Wheeler, 6 C. E. Gr. 231. These creditors may be made parties, and thereupon the relief prayed, or other appropriate relief to the same end, will be accorded to them.