Suit by Mrs. J. H. Stahl and others against Dan Osmers and others to compel the vendees of partnership property acquired from the individual partners to account for and apply the proceeds thereof to the payment of partnership debts. The facts are practically undisputed, and the only controversy is about the application of the law thereto. On July 6, 1893, the defendants Dan Osmers and Mat Hughes were partners in the saloon business at Heppner, and were the owners of a stock of wines, liquors, and cigars of the alleged value of $800, and were insolvent. On that day the partnership property was attached for the individual debt of Osmers at the suit of Ruehl, and under *Page 200 an execution on a subsequently recovered judgment his interest therein was sold to the defendant William Hughes for the sum of $200. On the day following the attachment, the other partner, Mat Hughes, sold and transferred all his interest in the firm property to the defendant John Hughes for the sum of $600, who, together with the purchaser at the sheriff's sale, took possession of the entire partnership property, and disposed of it for their own use and benefit. The plaintiffs, — who are creditors of the firm of Osmers Hughes, — having reduced their claims to judgment, and an execution having been issued thereon, and returnednulla bona, began this suit on March 10, 1894, to compel the defendants and John Hughes to account for and apply in payment of their judgment the proceeds of the property formerly belonging to said partnership. The decree of the court below was in favor of defendants, and plaintiffs appeal.
AFFIRMED.
After making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
The complaint charges fraud in the sale and transfer by the defendant Mat Hughes of his interest in the partnership property to his co-defendant, John *Page 201
Hughes. But this allegation is wholly unsupported by evidence, and therefore the only question for determination on this appeal is whether simple contract creditors of a partnership have such a lien upon the assests of the firm as will enable them to follow and subject such assets, or the proceeds thereof, to the payment of the firm debts after all partners have parted with their interest therein. Upon this question there is some conflict in the adjudged cases, but the great weight of authority favors the doctrine that the firm creditors have no lien in their own right upon the partnership effects, and no direct right to compel their application to firm, in preference to individual, debts. The right to compel such an application of partnership assets is generally regarded as an equity the partners have as between themselves, but, so long as it exists in any of the partners, the creditors may, by a sort of subrogation to the right of the partner, compel its enforcement, and by this means obtain an application of partnership property to their demands. The right of the firm creditor in this respect is, however, a derivative one only, and not held or enforced in his own right; in other words "the equities of the creditors can only be worked out through the equities of the partners." From these premises it necessarily follows that, unless a partner is in condition to enforce such right, the creditors cannot do so. The quasi lien, as it is sometimes called, of the creditor, being at best only the resultant of his debtor's lien, it of course can not exist after the debtor has himself ceased to have any lien from which it can be derived. The leading case upon this subject is, perhaps, that of Case v.Beauregard, *Page 202
And in Schmidlapp v. Currie,
AFFIRMED.
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