87 Iowa 93 | Iowa | 1893
I. We first consider the case as presented on the plaintiff’s appeal. The contentions thereby presented are between the plaintiff and the attaching creditors. It is not questioned but that the plaintiff’s mortgage is valid and binding upon Smith Bros., nor that it is prior in point of date to the mortgage to Sarah Archer and to all attachments. The contention is whether the plaintiff is entitled to priority, as to the firm’s property, over creditors of the firm. In 1884 the defendants Ernest and O. D. Smith were each indebted to their father, the plaintiff, then and
' assets: rights ?toreual cred" The plaintiff contends that the partnership of Smith Bros, had a right with the consent of both partners, to assume the individual debt of the members, and to mortgage the part-Property as security therefor, and that by executing the note and mortgage to him the indebtedness became a debt of the firm, and he a creditor thereof, and entitled to all the rights of such a creditor. These attaching creditors do not dispute the right of a solvent partnership to so dispose of its assets, nor do they claim to have had any lien upon the property at the time the mortgage was given. Their contention is that, the firm being insolvent, they had a right to preference in the firm’s assets, as against creditors of the individual partners, and that, as no consideration passed to the firm for assuming these debts of the partners, the giving of this mortgage was a fraud upon them, and that as to them the same is void. In the view that we take of the case, it is not required that we determine whether the plaintiff became a creditor of the firm or not.
The question is, whether these attaching creditors were, at the time the mortgage was given, entitled to such preference in the property of the partnership as that they are entitled to priority over the mortgage. There are but few contentions that have been more productive of decisions by the courts and comments by authors than these disputes between creditors of partnerships and creditors of the partners. It is not practicable or necessary that we note .all the cases cited, or attempt to reconcile apparent conflicts. An
The law is well settled that in the absence of contract, judgment, or levy, creditors of the firm have no lien upon its property; that while the firm is in existence, and no lien has attached, it may, in good faith and for value sell its property, and when so sold if will not be followed by any claim, in law or equity, of the creditors of the firm. City of Maquoketa v. Willey, 35 Iowa, 323. The contention under consideration is fully answered in Poole v. Seney, 66 Iowa, 502, wherein the question was, as" here, whether mortgages given upon the firm’s assets were fraudulent per se, as against the creditors of the partnership. The court says: Where the assets of a partnership have gone into equity for distribution, the rule, undoubtedly, .is that they will first be applied to the satisfaction of the debts of the partnership, and the separate creditors of the members of the firm can seek indemnity only from the surplus after the satisfaction of the partnership debts. McCulloh v. Dashiell's Adm’r, 1 Har. & G. 96; Murray v. Murray, 5 Johns. Ch. 60; Murrill v. Neill, 8 How. 414. This rule, however, is for the benefit of the partners. Each partner is individually liable for the debts of the partnership, but he has the right to have the property of the firm applied to their satisfaction. The creditors of the firm have no lien on, or equity in, the partnership property. Their right is simply to have the judgments which they may obtain on their claims satisfied out of the partnership property, or the individual property of the partners. As the rule exists for the protection of the partners, they may waive its benefits, and when they have done this the creditors have no grounds of complaint. This doctrine has been frequently recognized and affirmed by this court. See
If it may be said that, this ease being in equity, the assets of this partnership are in equity for distribution, they must surely be distributed with due regard to rights which had attached before they were brought into equity. We have seen that while the firm was in existence, and in full possession of the property, free from any lien, with the right to dispose of the same, with the consent of both partners, for value, and without any intentional fraud, they executed to the plaintiff; the note and mortgage in suit, thereby waiving their right to have the mortgaged property first applied to the satisfaction of the debts of the partnership. We • have also seen that the plaintiff received this note and mortgage in good faith and for value. The partners having thus waived their right, it can not be invoked on behalf of the creditors of the firm. Among the many cases cited are the following Iowa cases, referred to by the attaching creditors, which we should notice, namely: Switzer v. Smith, 35 Iowa, 269; Gordon v. Kennedy, 36 Iowa, 167; Cox v. Russell, 44 Iowa, 556; Fargo v. Ames, 45 Iowa, 491. It is sufficient to say of these cases, and those cited therein, that the question before us was either not involved, or not discussed and considered, and that in neither of them did the partners waive their right to have the partnership property first applied to the payment of partnership debts, as was done in this ease. We reach the conclusion that these attaching creditors did not have such right or interest in the property of the partnership, at the time it was mortgaged to the plaintiff, as to entitle, them to preference over that mortgage.
III. The record discloses that one Bradley intervened, claiming certain articles of merchandise, of which he was adjudged to be the owner, and entitled to possession. No question is made as to this part of the judgment.
It follows from the conclusions that we have reached that the plaintiff is entitled to decree declaring his mortgage a first lien upofi the property described
Reversed on plaintiff’s appeal, and affirmed on the appeal of Warfield & Howell, Spangler, Eroe & Co., and Doggett, Bassett & Hills Company.