delivered the opinion of the court.
Harney and Washington were partners in a liquor saloon, the former having contributed the- capital, and the latter his-services. Harney, having become indebted to Odeneal, transferred to him in part payment of the indebtedness, and with the knowledge and consent of Washington, the entire business- and stock of the partnership. Odeneal subsequently took in Currie as a partner, and the business was continued under the style-of S. D. Currie & Co. The debt of Harney to Odeneal, jvhich formed the consideration of the transfer, was the individual debt of Harney, for which neither Washington ñor the firm of Harney & Washington, as a firm, were in any way responsible ; but Washington assented to and acquiesced in the sale. After the sale, Schmidlapp & Bros., creditors of the firm of Harney & Washington, sued out a writ of attachment against them, and caused the same to be levied on their former goods, in the possession of S. D. Currie & Co., upon the ground that the transfer of the firm goods in satisfaction of the individual debt of one of the partners was fraudulent and void as against firm creditors.
Is the principle assumed a sound one? Is it true that partnership assets cannot, by the act or assent of a,11 the partners, be-
■ The firm creditors at large of a partnership have no lien on its assets, any more than ordinary creditors have upon the property of an individual debtor. The power of disposition ■over their property, inherent in every partnership, is as unlimited as that of an individual, and the jus disponendi in the firm, all the members cooperating, can only be controlled by the same considerations that impose a limit upon the acts of an individual owner, namely, that it shall not be used for fraudulent purposes. So long as the firm exists, therefore, its members must be at liberty to do as they choose with their own, and even in the act of dissolution they may impress upon its •assets such character as they please. The doctrine that firm assets must first be applied to the payment of firm debts, and individual property to individual debts, is only a principle of administration adopted by the courts where from any cause-they are called upon to wind up the firm business, and find that the members have .made no valid disposition of, or ■charges upon, its assets. Thus, where upon a dissolution •of the firm by death or limitation or bankruptcy, or from any other cause, the courts are called upon to wind up the ■concern, they adopt and enforce the principle stated; but the
Conceding, as all the authorities do, that the firm creditors had no independent right to demand to be first paid, but derive that right solely through and under the right which the partners have to insist that this shall be done, it is impossible to see how the rule can be enforced where all the members of the firm have, before the dissolution, and without any ground to suspect fraud, given to the assets a different direction.
While some courts of high repute have taken a different view, we confess our inability to escape the logic of this proposition.
The courts of New York, New Hampshire, Illinois, and per
In consonance with our view are the following, among other, authorities: Whitton v. Smith, Freem. Ch. 231; Freeman v. Stewart, 41 Miss. 139; Carter v. Beaman, 6 Jones L. 44; Rice v. Barnard, 20 Vt. 479; National Bank v. Sprauge, 20 N. J. Eq. 14; Allen v. Centre Valley Co., 21 Conn. 130; Sigle v. Knox County Bank, 8 Ohio St. 511; Ex parte Ruffin, 6 Ves. 119; Campbell v. Mullett, 2 Swans. Ch. 550.
Judgment affirmed.