41 Me. 373 | Me. | 1856
Notwithstanding a co-partnership after its dissolution may be regarded as subsisting in a qualified sense, for the settlement of its affairs, still, it seems to be well settled, that one partner, after its dissolution, has no power to make new contracts or to create new liabilities to bind the firm, without some special authority so to do. Such authority may be inferred from all the circumstances in the case, but without it he cannot give a co-partnership note in payment of a co-partnership debt. Milliken v. Loring, 37 Maine, 408; Sanford v. Michels, 4 Johns. 224; Perrin & al. v. Keen & al. 19 Maine, 355.
It appears that the defendants, as co-partners, on the second day of Feb., 1855, made an assignment “of all their property, estate, rights and credits belonging to said partnership, of every description, consisting of goods in the store and shop, stock, notes, accounts,” &c., to one Everett W. Stetson, for the benefit of their creditors. Said assignment was duly executed by said Curtis & Wright and said Stetson, and also by the firm of L. B. Usher & Co., as creditors. Said assignee on the day of the assignment took possession of the stock in trade and books of the defendants, but did not give any bond or file any copy of the assignment in the probate office as is required by the statute of 1849, c. 113, § § 1 & 4. It further appears from the certificate of the magistrate upon said assignment, that said assignors, on the day of its date, made affidavit that they had “ placed and assigned all their property, rights, estate and credits belonging to the co-partnership of Curtis & Wright of every description” in the hands of said Stetson for the benefit of their creditors.
It is contended in defence, that these proceedings operated
It therefore becomes important to determine whether the assignment proved in this case, is valid or not. That it is void as against attaching creditors, is not denied. The neglect of the assignee to give the bond required by the statute, is decisive upon this point. Stat. 1849, c. 113, § 1. But our inquiry now is whether it is not absolutely void.
Prior to the statute of 1836, c. 240, voluntary assignments made bona fide by debtors directly to, or in trust for all or any of the creditors of the assignor, if accepted by them, were held valid; but that statute expressly provided that “ no assignment hereafter made by any debtor in this State, for the benefit of his creditors, shall be valid, except the provisions of this Act be complied with;” and under this statute, this Court decided, that an assignment which provided only for such creditors as should consent to discharge the assignor from any balance which might not be received under the assignment, was void. Pearson & al. v. Crosby & al., 29 Maine, 261. This statute was expressly repealed by the statute of 1844, § 5. By this last statute, which is still in force, it is provided in § 1, that “ all assignments made by debtors in this State, for the benefit of their creditors, shall provide for an equal distribution of all their estate, real and personal, among such of their creditors, as, after notice as herein provided, become parties to said assignments, in proportion to the amount of their respective claims, excepting such property of said debtors as may by law be exempt from attachment;” and the same section further provides, that “ in all such assignments, the assignor or assignors shall make affidavit to the truth thereof, a certificate of which affidavit shall be made upon said as
By a fair construction of these provisions of the statute, the defendants were bound to provide in their assignment for an equal distribution of all their estate, real and personal, not exempt from attachment, among such of their creditors as should become parties to it; and to make affidavit that said assignment embraced the whole of such estate. The design of these provisions undoubtedly is, to give assurance to the creditors, that they will receive their just proportion of the avails of the whole estate which is by law liable for the payment of their debts, if they shall become parties to the assignment. It is not sufficient for a co-partnership to assign only the co-partnership property. It must appear also that the private property of the individual partners, not exempt from attachment, which is liable for the partnership debts, is in some way embraced in the assignment; and the oath of the assignors must verify such fact. By the second section of the same statute, it is provided, that “ no assignment shall be valid, unless sworn to, nor unless the assignee or assignees shall give the notice required in this Act.” We think the assignment made by the defendants, being limited, as it is in its terms, to the property, estate, rights and credits belonging to the co-partnership of Curtis & Wright, and, the certificate thereon, showing only that they made oath or affidavit that they had placed and assigned all such property in the hands of the assignee, is not a compliance with the foregoing requirements of the statute. The assignment should contain some language, to show that the private property of each of the partners, not exempt from attachment, was intended to be assigned; yet there is not one word in it from which such intention can be inferred; but on the contrary, the language used clearly excludes it, and implies the possession of such property. In the case of Merrill v. Winslow, 29 Maine, 58, the Court held that an assignment made by a general partner, in his own name, without reference to the co-partnership, which was special, and conducted in his name alone, did not embrace
But it is contended on the part of the defence, that the assignment in this case operates upon the whole property of the assignors, co-partnership and private, by virtue of the provisions of the statute of 18M, § 2, which are, that “all assignments made by any debtor or debtors, for the benefit of any one or more of his creditors, shall be construed to pass all the property, real and personal, of such debtor or debtors, not exempted by law from attachment, whether specified in such assignments or not.” The object of this provision is to provide, that a general description of the property shall be sufficient; but we think there must be some language used, from which an intention to assign the property can be inferred. It would be unreasonable to hold, or suppose, that an assignment of a stock of goods in a certain store should pass ships and farms, or that an assignment of a horse for the benefit “ of one or more creditors,” should pass a stock of goods. If it be said, that the case- does not show that the defendants had, at the time of the assignment, any separate property belonging to them or either of them, we think the want of such property is not to be assumed, when the oath of the parties making the assignment does not negative the fact. The assignment should purport to be of the whole property liable for the payment of debts, or at least it should use language broad enough to embrace it, if any exist. We think therefore, that as the assignment in this case is limited to the partnership property of the defendants, and as the affidavit upon it does not import that such property was the only property of the defendants liable for the payment of their debts, it is not such an assignment, and so sworn to, as to make it valid within the true intent and meaning of the statute. It is therefore void, and being ineffectual to pass the property of the co-partnership of Curtis & Wright to the assignee, it is not sufficient, in connection with the other evidence in the case, to authorize us or a jury to say that said
Rut it is further contended in defence, that the giving of the note in suit was a fraud upon the other creditors of the firm. It appears to have been given for a debt honestly due, and whether such debt was payable at the time does not distinctly appear. The right of a debtor to prefer one creditor to another, cannot be questioned; nor does the fact, that in the present case such preference was given to the plaintiffs by only one of the partnership defendants, change the rule. The defendants must be defaulted, and the plaintiffs have judgment for the amount of the note and interest.