43 Conn. 510 | Conn. | 1876
The demurrer was properly sustained. The petitioner’s intestate receipted property in the usual form which was attached as the property of one Huntoon. He thereby obligated himself to return the property to the officer, pay the value thereof, or pay the amount of the judgment that might he recovered by the attaching creditor. Judgment was recovered and demand was made for the property. He refused to deliver the property, pay the value, or pay the amount of the judgment. The officer brought an action upon the receipt and recovered judgment. The object of this petition is to enjoin the officer and all others interested from collecting the judgment, upon the ground that Huntoon was indebted to the
The fact that Huntoon had only a partnership interest in the property is not sufficient. If he had had none at all, that of'itself would not have excused Staples from performing his contract. The validity of officers’ receipts does not depend upon title in the attachment debtor. They are often given without reference to title, or even to the existence of the property therein named, being receipts for nominal property merely, the object being to secure the debt.
The fact that it will be a hardship for the petitioner, or those interested in the estate which he represents, is of no avail. It is always a hardship in one sense for a man who indorses a note for another, or signs a bond or other obligation as surety, to be obliged to pay the demand; but it is not a legal hardship, and no one ever supposed that a court of equity could relieve him of his legal liability.
The attempt in this way to settle the affairs of the partnership and compel the creditor to take only Huntoon’s interest in the property attached cannot succeed. Admitting that his interest was that of a partner only, that fact is no defense to an action on the receipt and cannot now operate to avoid the judgment. Moreover this is not an appropriate pi’oceeding for settling the affairs of a partnership.- When the property was attached Staples might have protected his. own interest, and limited the effect of the attachment to the interest of Huntoon. But failing to do that, and having taken upon himself the obligation of a l’eceiptor, he must accept the legal consequences. Equity can give him no relief.
There is no error in the judgment of the court below.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.