83 Va. 46 | Va. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court
Whitehurst & Owen, the plaintiffs in this suit, suing, as they say in their bill, for themselves and all other creditors of Sadler & Wright, and for the creditors of the estate ■of R. S. Sadler, the deceased partner, and the creditors of F. E. Wright, the surviving partner of Sadler & Wright, filed their bill in this suit against F. E. Wright in his own right; against F. E. Wright, as surviving partner of Sadler & Wright; against Sue E. Sadler in her own right, as devisee of.R S. Sadler, deceased; against Sue E. Sadler, as executrix of R S. Sadler, deceased; and against Virgie W. Sadler and Mattie S. Sadler, as children, devisees, and legatees of Richard S. Sadler, deceased, the two last mentioned being infants. The object of the bill is to ascertain the partnership assets of Sadler & Wright, and to administer them; to ascertain the individual property of F. E. Wright, the surviving partner, and the individual estate of R. S. Sadler, the deceased partner, and to subject them both to the alleged claim of the complainants against the dissolved firm of Sadler & Wright; and to administer the estate of the decedent, R. S. Sadler, including both his personal and real estate; and .with these ends in view, all in the same suit, the bill seeks to convene and’ combine in one suit the social creditors of Sadler & Wright, the individual creditors of F. E. "Wright, the surviving partner, and the individual creditors of R. S. Sadler, the deceased partner, and to call into the same suit the personal representative of R.
The bill is plainly and grossly multifarious, as embodying various separable, distinct, and numerous objects, interests, and parties, and the court erred in overruling the demurrers. 2 Rob. Pr. (old,) 278, 279; Dunn v. Dunn, 26 Gratt. 291; Brinkenhorf v. Brown, 6 Johns. Ch. 157; Sand. Eq. 186; Stuart v. Coalter, 4 Rand. 74.
The complainants’ alleged claim rests on an open account against the firm of Sadler & Wright, a large part of which is-dated, and admitted in the bill as contracted, months after-the death of Sadler, the deceased partner. The bill itself alleges that Sadler died January 5, 1884, and yet the account filed as exhibit with the bill shows that much of the-account was contracted in February, May, and June, 1884,, and is charged against him and the surviving partner as if they were both then living. In addition to this itemized-account, there is exhibited with the bill a note signed “ Sadler & Wright,” dated January 26,1884, twenty-one days afterSadler’s death, which the bill says was executed by the surviving partner, F. E. Wright, and Sue E. Sadler before her qualification as executrix of R. S. Sadler, they two, the bill says, “ so operating for the benefit of the old firm and' the estate of the said Sadler.” The bill - does not allege-
By the error of the court in referring the cause to a commissioner, without giving Mrs. Sadler an opportunity to answer, not alone she, but the infant defendants, whose ancestor is charged by the note, are deprived of the benefit of her denial of the charge made in the bill that she executed this note or contracted the account. The court assumed that these charges made in the bill against their ancestor’s estate, and against them as his devisees and legatees, are just and true; and without any evidence to support them against the answer of the infant defendants calling for proof thereof, and of every allegation in the bill, ordered a reference to a master commissioner. The prayer of the bill and the inquiry ordered are directed against the estate of their ancestor, R. S. Sadler, the deceased partner, to satisfy an open account indebtedness which the bill says was contracted months after the death of the said R. S. Sadler, the deceased partner. “ The estate of a partner who dies is not liable for partnership debts contracted after the date of the death.” Pol. Partn. 88, citing Lindl. Partn. 418. The bill alleges the insolvency of the surviving partner, F. E. Wright, but the court ordered the account and reference to a master without any evidence whatever to prove his insolvency, although the answer of the infant defendants called for the proof.
This order of reference was premature under the ruling of the court in Lee Co. Justices v. Fulkerson, 21 Gratt. 182. In that case Staples, J., speaking for the court, says: “ The answer denying all the material allegations of the bill, and the latter being wholly unsustained, the court ought to have dismissed it at the hearing. This cannot be questioned,
The remedy in this case is against the surviving partner-at law, and without his proved insolvency the court of equity has no jurisdiction of the bill against him. Yet the complainants come into equity upon a common-law claim,, by a bill to convene creditors, without liens, of both a dead man and of living defendants, to administer the dead man’s-estate, real and personal, to manage a partnership, to settle-up all its concerns, and to decree generally pro and con among all the numerous parties, plaintiffs and defendants, living and dead, social and individual, congruous and incongruous, in their personal or representative capacities. The bill alleges that Wright, the surviving partner, had executed a deed of trust upon his individual property, and yet-it does not make the trustee a party to the suit, or the deed of trust an exhibit in the cause. The bill asks for a discovery, and forthwith, before any opportunity is given to-answer and disclose, an order of reference to a master commissioner is made. Phillips, an alleged creditor of Sadler- & Wright, filed a petition in the cause on the day of the decree for a reference, which was made for him inclusive, without making him a party, and without giving the infant-defendants or Mrs. Sadler any opportunity to reply to its-statements.
The decrees of the chancery court of Richmond city complained of are wholly erroneous, and must be reversed and; annulled, and this court, as the said chancery court ought, to have done, will sustain the demurrers to the bill, anck order it to be dismissed.
Deceees eeveesed.