68 So. 369 | Ala. | 1915
This is an appeal from a decree of the chancery court overruling demurrers to the amended bill.
One of the appellants and the appellees, with other parties, as partners, on the 14th day of April, 1906, organized and became engaged in a banking business under the firm name of the Bank of Paint Rock, and
It is further alleged that, subsequent to the closing of the business, some of the surviving partners, by a written agreement, designated complainants, J. O. Butler and J. T. Wilburn, trustees, to collect the assets and close the partnership affairs. The agreement was confirmed by order of the chancery court, in the tase of Garber, Attorney General, v. Bank of Paint Rock, Under the agreement the trustees accepted the trust, and are seeking by this bill to wind up said trust and make a final settlement of the partnership affairs. The trust agreement contained the following clause: “It is expressly understood that the arrangement evidenced hereby is made for the purpose of effecting the payment and discharge of said debts and obligations of said Bank of Paint Rock as speedily and economically as .the same may be accomplished, and that no party to this agreement is to be in any manner prejudiced as to his rights to require any person who may be liable to make contribution for or on account of such liability, and that the equities or rights among the persons who may contribute towards the payment or satisfaction of such debts and obligations of said bank, or against any other party who may be liable to make contribution, shall not in any manner be prejudiced by what is hereby provided for, and nothing herein contained, .and nothing contained in any other papers, contracts, or
By amendment a party respondent was made a complainant, and it was further alleged that on the 20th of October, 1910, W. H. Bridges, one of the organizers- and the active manager and cashier of the bank,- died; that thereafter the complainants and respondents, as surviving partners of said' firm, settled with and discharged from further accounting the Bridges estate, and that the greater part of the contributions from the surviving partners had been made by the complainant J. C. Butler, and the other partners are indebted to him on final settlement of the partnership.
The bill further alleges that appellant H. A. Webb became a member of the partnership April 4, 1906, and continuel a member until the dissolution, owning one-tenth of the interest therein; that his share of the indebtedness would be about $2,000, for which he is liable to contribute; that on September 16, 1905, appellant and his wife undertook to convey to their daughter Mrs. Freeman, upon a voluntary consideration, their homestead of 120 acres of land in Jackson county, Ala., reserving to themselves the use and occupation thereof for life; that on December 29, 1910, they.reconveyed the same lands' to the same daughter Dovie M. Freeman ; that the first deed was defectively executed, and that the second deed was “voluntary and void as to
The prayer of the bill makes appellants H. A. Webb and Dovie M. Freeman parties respondent, together with five other member's of the partnership, and prays: (1) That “an accounting be had and a settlement be made of the trust hereinabove stated, and that an accounting be had between said trustees and said partnership.” (2) “That the total liabilities of said banking firm in excess of its assets be ascertained; that an accounting be stated between the several members of said partnership, and the amount due from each of them in payment of said liability to be ascertained and decrees be rendered in favor of those who have contributed more than their share toward the payment of said indebtedness and against those who have not contributed their full share.” (3) “That the deeds marked exhibits B and C be vacated and set aside as fraudulent and void, and said lands be subjected to the payment of the amount found to be due from said H. A. Webb on said accounting.”
(1) 1. The demurrer of respondent Webb that the statute provided an exclusive method of settling the affairs of an insolvent bank is answered by the allegation that the agreement appointing the trustees for the administration of the estate of the Bank of Paint Rock was signed by him, and was confirmed by the chancery court. He will not now be permitted to question by demurrer the ruling of the chancery court. — Stephens’ Dig. Law of Ev. art. 102, p. 161; 3 Eng. Rul. Cas. 310; Garrett v. Lyle, 27 Ala. 586; 6 Mayf. Dig. p. 330.
The second paragraph of the bill alleges that the interests of individual partners were thus conveyed.
In the agreement, Exhibit A, attached, is the following recital of the parties at interest: “Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises, we, J. C. Butler, J. G. Cunningham, W. H. Hill, C. C. Keel, H. A. Webb, J. T. Wilburn, S. H. Kennamer, Wallace W. Bridges, each of whom is now or has heretofore been interested in said bank as a partner therein, our several shares or interest varying in amount, and recognizing our liability to contribute ratably towards the satisfaction and discharge of the indebtedness of said bank, do hereby agree and bind ourselves,” etc.
The agreement was executed on the day after the bank’s failure, and was signed by W. H. Hill and the
It is then clear, from an inspection of the bill and exhibits, that all debtor or creditor partners of the insolvent banking partnership were not made parties. This would have been necessary in a bill filed by a partner against the copartners in the banking enterprise. It was the more necessary that all parties interested be brought before the court in a bill filed by J. C. Butler, individually, and by J. C. Butler and J. T. Wilburn, as the two trustees, for the threefold purpose of having a settlement of the trust, requiring the contribution by the debtor partners, and of obtaining a cancellation of the deeds made by one of the partners, conveying his homestead to a daughter.
Every change in the personnel of a partnership works a dissolution. — Warren v. Cash, 143 Ala. 158, 39 South. 124. In First National Bank v. Cheney, 114 Ala. 536, 21 South. 1002, it was declared that a retiring partner is not released from liability to the creditors, unless the creditors agree with the new firm, or its members, for such release. — Hall v. Jones, 56 Ala. 493. An agreement of a new firm, formed from an old one by the addition of a new member, to pay the debts of the old firm must be with the consent of all the members of the new firm. — Kling v. Tunstall, 109 Ala. 608, 19 South. 907; Humes v. Higman, 145 Ala. 215, 40 South. 128; Spaunhorst v. Link, 46 Mo. 197.
In a suit between the creditors and the partners of a firm, the creditors may discharge one partner and prosecute the suit against the other partner to a judgment, for the reason that his credit was extended to the firm on each individual liability. — Browning v. Grady, 10 Ala. 999; Roberts v. Strang, 38 Ala. 566, 82 Am. Dec. 729; First National Bank v. Cheney, supra.
In this case a number of partners (not all of them), by a written agreement ratified by the chancery court, appointed two trustees to close the affairs of the partnership. The trustees paid a portion of the debts of the firm with borrowed funds. They were authorized by the agreement to compel contribution from the debt- or partners. The chancery court could not ascertain and compel contribution from debtor partners unless all of that class were before the court as parties. No power of selection was given the trustees, by law or by the agreement, to compel contribution from a less number than all who were liable. Appellant IT. A. Webb could not be compelled to contribute, by the trustees’ bill, if it did not make a party one of the partners, W. W- Hill, or any other partner that incurred liability by the purchase of an interest in the partnership.
We have seen that the agreement appointing the trustees expressly reserves this right to compel contribution between all partners liable for the debts of the firm as follows: “Nothing herein contained * * * shall be held to waive or release any other person or any other estate from its just proportion of the losses and indebtedness of said bank, which might be ascertained to be due * * * on accounting.”
It is then clear that a bill filed by the trustees for an accounting should make parties all partners who
The overruling of the third and fourth grounds of demurrer to the bill, as amended, was error.
(9-11) 3. The several grounds of demurrer for multifariousness may be treated together. The bill was: (1) For settlement by the trustees of the trust; (2) that an account be stated betiveen the several members of the partnership, and that the amount due from each be ascertained and decreed in favor of those who have contributed more than their share; and (3) that the deeds of one of the partners to his daugter be set aside as fraudulent, and void.
In testing a bill for multifariousness, the whole bill must- be considered. Every case must be governed by ^xts own peculiar facts. In determining the question, multiplicity of suits should be avoided. It is left in a. measure to the sound discretion of the court. — 6 Mayf. Dig. 318, § 114½; Cicard v. Guyliou, 147 Ala. 239, 41 South. 474.
In Stone v. Knickerbocker, etc., Co., 52 Ala. 589, Chief Justice Brickell said that a “bill may be multifarious as to one or more defendants without being so as to others. * * *” The objection can only be taken by the defendants who are affected by it.
The appellant H. A. Webb cannot then complian of the joinder of his daughter as a party, for his right to litigate his indebtedness to copartners is not affected thereby.
Justice McClellan, in Ellis v. Vandegrift, 173 Ala. 155, 55 South. 781, reaffirmed the sound and pertinent observations by Chief Justice Brickell made in Truss v. Miller, 116 Ala. 195, 505, 22 South. 863, 866, where it is stated that: “When * * * the objection is that distinct and unconnected matters are joined together against several defendants, it is not necessary that all the parties should have an interest in all the matters of controversy; it is sufficient if each defendant has an interest in some of the matters involved and they are connected with the others.”
Can it be said that each of the defendant copartners has an interest in Mrs. Freeman’s lands, unless it is alleged that her parent is a debtor copartner and that he is insolvent or unable to respond to the satisfaction of any decree that may be rendered in this behalf against him?
In Exchange National Bank v. Stewart, 158 Ala. 218, 48 South. 187, it was declared that the fact that a creditor’s bill joined two or more defendants alleged to be fraudulent grantees in different transactions, in an effort to set aside fraudulent transfers of property, does not render it demurrable for multifariousness.
In Wilks v. Wilks, 176 Ala. 151, 57 South. 776, Justice Sayre held that a bill filed by the widoAV for the removal of the administration to' the chancery court and to annul a conveyance of an interest in the estate to her children, that she had by fraud and misrepre
In Bentley et al. v. Barnes, 155 Ala. 659, 47 South. 159, Justice Simpson hold that AAdien the object of tbe bill is to enforce specific performance of tbe contract of assignment of the interests of the partners in tbe partnership business, and an accounting from one Avho has transacted business Avith tbe assignor in violation of tbe provisions of tbe assignment, as Avell as an accounting from tbe other partners of tbe partnership business, tbe bill is multifarious, since tbe relief sought against tbe defendants respectively does not affect tbe interests of tbe codefendants.
The test applied by Chief Justice Brickell in Truss et al. v. Miller, supra, was whether “each defendant has an interest in some of tbe matters involved, and they are connected with tbe others.”
In Adams v. Wilson, 137 Ala. 532, 635, 34 South. 831, the test was Avhether each defendant Avas connected Avith all the other defendants, and their separate interests in distinct questions AVere all connected Avith tbe single object of tbe suit that did not divide tbe remedy into two suits.
In Tutwiler v. Tuscaloosa Goal, Iron & Land Co., 89 Ala. 392, 7 South. 398, tbe test Avas that “common relief Avas claimed” against tbe corporation, and against the former officer as to voting stock of tbe corporation, and it AA’as not “shown that relief against tbe one would affect the other;” and tbe bill Avas held multifarious.
In the case of Baker v. Mitchell, 19 Ala. 490, 20 South. 40, the object of the bill was to procure a settlement of the administration in chancery, to ascertain the interest of the estate in a mercantile copartnership composed of the decedent, in his lifetime, and the administrator, his former partner, and to require this former partner and administrator to disclose the true interest in certain lands which the administrator claimed to own in his individual right. The court properly proceeded to a final settlement of these accounts and of the administration. The same question was involved under the facts of Noble v. Tate, 119 Ala. 399, 24 South. 438.
If we may look for a simpler definition of multifariousness, Mr. Daniels gives it as: “Where he is able to say he is brought as a defendant upon a record, with a large portion of which, and of the case made by which
A limitation on the rule by Mr. Daniels is declared in Kennedy’s Heirs v. Kennedy’s Heirs, 2 Ala. 571, where it is stated that “defendants who have different interests in the subject-matter, if the relief granted Avill affect them all,” may be joined.
So, in Stone v. Knickerbocker Life Insurance Co., supra, the limitation was held to control in bills embracing “several matters distinct in themselves, but which together make up the complainant’s equity and are necessary to complete relief.”
In Dallas v. Timberlake, supra, the bill was not multifarious. The one purpose running through the whole suit was “to obtain payment of the amount due to the county complaining, from its late tax collector, out of him and the persons who agreed to be his sureties, and out of the properties on Avhich they gave a lien as security for such payment, * * * required as a condition upon Avhich only the tax collector was permitted to discharge the duties of his office.”
The case before us is that of a partner, as an individual, giving his daughter his property, as he had a right to do so long as it was not a fraud on his creditors. No lien Avas declared on the property so given, as Avas declared by the statute on the properties of the several sureties in Dallas County v. Timberlake, supra. It Avas not shown by the bill that Mrs. Freeman’s property Avas subject to the debts of her father, or that its subjection was “necessary to complete relief,” as declared in Stone v. Knickerbocker Insurance Co., supra, and Kennedy’s Heirs v. Kennedy’s Heirs, supra.
We believe that the trustees cannot, in the same bill, ask contribution and to settle the trust, and litigate the title of Mrs. Freeman to the lands in question. The trustees must first reduce the assets of the trust estate into moneys, to pay the debts. This may take separate suits in different courts, according to the facts of each case. They cannot consult their own convenience, and litigate such conflicting claims, in a bill filed to make their settlement as trustees, and for an accounting among the copartners and with the trustees.
The demurrers of Dovie M. Freeman should have been sustained. The decree of the chancery court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.