Whitmore v. Shiverick

3 Nev. 288 | Nev. | 1867

Lead Opinion

Opinion by

Beatty, C. J., Lewis, J., and Johnson, J.,

concurring.

This was a bill filed to foreclose a mortgage upon what counsel *297in the cause term a tract of land. The plaintiff alleges that in February and March, 1862, the defendant, N. Shiverick, was the owner of an undivided half interest in the property described in the mortgages set out in the complaint-; that being such owner or having such interest in the property, he executed two mortgages, one to the plaintiff, another to a third party who has since assigned to plaintiff.

He makes N. Shiverick, Antoine. Laroche, and Peter Frothing-ham parties defendant, and prays a foreclosure and sale of the interest mortgaged to him.

Frothingham answers, and states in his answer substantially that at the time the mortgages were executed, the property belonged to Sperry & Co., a firm composed of A. J. Sperry, N. Shiverick, E. P. Whitmore, (the assignor of one of the mortgages to plaintiff) and Thomas McFarland. That at the time of the execution of said mortgages the firm was insolvent, and they were executed for fraudulent purposes. That shortly after the execution of these two mortgages, judgments were had against the firm of Sperry & Co. for about $1,000. That the entire property of the firm (including this property, the undivided half of which Shiverick purports to have mortgaged) was sold under execution, a regular conveyance made thereof by the Sheriff, and that he (Frothingham) became the owner by purchase from the party who bought at Sheriff’s sale. He relies on his title thus derived from a Sheriff’s sale, as a defense to this action. Laroche disclaims all interest except as mortgagee of Frothingham.

The cause went to trial in the Court below, and the Judge there found the following facts and conclusions of law:

The property described in the mortgages sued on was, at the time they were executed, the copartnership property and assets of the firm of Sperry & Co., and of this fact the plaintiff, at the time the mortgage to him was executed, and E. P. Whitmore, at the time the mortgage was executed, had notice.
Also, at those times, the firm of Sperry & Co. was embarrassed, pressed by their creditors, unable to pay their debts, and insolvent, and the said mortgagees respectively at the times they *298took their mortgages, had notice of such embarrassment and inability to pay.
“Also, in an action commenced and pending in the District Court of Ormsby County, Territory of Nevada, by E. Ruhling k Co. against Sperry k Co., to recover a copartnership indebtedness of the latter firm to the former, the summons was served upon J. A. Sperry, a member of the firm of Sperry k Co.; and on the twenty-first. day of April, a.d. 1862, E. Ruhling & Co. recovered judgment for the sum of $2,058.75 debt, besides $40.75 costs, which -debt was the amount then due and owing by said Sperry & Co. to E. Ruhling & Co., and accrued subsequent to August 18th,. A.D. 1861.
“ Also, in an action commenced and pending in said District Court of Ormsby County by Hickok k Co. against said Sperry & Co.,to recover a copartnership indebtedness of the latter firm to the former, the summons was served upon J. A. Sperry, a member of the firm of Sperry k Co., and on the eighteenth day of April, a.d. 1862, Hickok k Co. recovered a judgment for the sum of $2,229.25 debt besides $57.15 costs, which debt was the amount then due and owing by said Sperry & Co. to said Hickok k Co., and accrued subsequent to August 13th, a.d. 1861.
“ The said judgments were severally docketed and executions issued thereon to the Sheriff of Ormsby County, under which said Sheriff sold said property, on the thirtieth day of May, a.d. 1862, to McCullough & Ruhling, composing the firm of E. Ruhling & Co., for the sum of $4,698.29, which was paid by them and was the full value thereof, as well as the amount of said executions and costs; and after and upon the expiration of six months from the time of sale, said Sheriff executed a deed of said property to McCullough k Ruhling, composing the firm of E. Ruhling & Co., who thereafter sold the same to the defendant, Erothingham, and gave him possession, and the same has remained in his possession ever since, as owner thereof.
“ The claims of other creditors of the firm of Sperry & Co. remain still unpaid. The property sold under said execution was the entire assets of the firm of Sperry k Co. During the time said liabilities of the firm of Sperry & Co. were incurred and the *299said judgments recovered and sale made, the firm was composed of J. A. Sperry, N.- Shiverick (who is one of the defendants in the action) and Thomas McFarland, and they represented to the creditors of said firm that E. P. Whitmore was also a member of said firm, which representation the said creditors believed to be true.
“ The notes and mortgages mentioned in the complaint were all executed out of the State and Territory of Nevada, and in the State of California, and the note and mortgage executed to E. P. Whitmore became due and payable on the twenty-eighth day of June, A.D. 1862, and the other note and mortgage became due and payable on the tenth of September, a.d. 1862, and no action was commenced on either until the commencement of this action.
“ The conclusions of law upon the foregoing facts are that this action is not barred by the Statute of Limitations; that the said property and its full value was necessarily and properly applied to the payment of copartnership liabilities of Sperry & Co. to Hickok & Co. and E. Ruhling & Co.; that the purchasers of said property, under the execution in favor of Hickok & Co. and E. Ruhling & Co., and those holding under them, are entitled to hold said property free and clear of any and all incumbrances by virtue of said mortgages, or either of them, and that said mortgages, or either of them, cannot be enforced against said property.
“ Let judgment be entered accordingly.
“ R. S. Mesick, District Judge.”

The findings of the Court were filed December 6th, a judgment entered up December 7th, and on December 8th a paper was served by the appellant (plaintiff in the Court below) on respondent’s counsel which may, we suppose, be properly termed a notice of motion for a new trial, although not in the usual form of such notice. This notice does not seem, however, to have been followed up by any statement whatever on motion for a new trial. On the twenty-seventh of the month a statement on appeal was filed. This, it will be seen, was many days after the time for statement on motion for new trial had expired. On the fifth of January, 1867, the motion for a new trial was called up and overruled.

On the nineteenth of January, 1867, a statement on appeal from the order overriding the motion for a neto trial was filed by appellant.

*300The first question to be determined is, what figure do these statements cut in the case ? The first statement as a statement on appeal, which is clearly contemplated by the statute, was made in time, and if it shows any such error as can be reviewed where there is no motion for a new trial, it is sufficient to reverse the case. This statement we will hereafter notice. The second statement can serve but one purpose; that is, to show that the Court committed some error in overruling the motion for new trial. We cannot mix up the two statements, taking portions of one to help out the other.

There are here two separate and distinct appeals — one from the judgment, the other from the order overruling the motion for a new trial. Let us first examine the latter. Before a District Court can regularly grant a new trial two preliminary steps are necessary. First, there must be a notice served on the adverse party that a motion for that purpose will be made. Second, that notice must be followed either by affidavit or else by a statement showing the grounds upon which such motion will be based. The statute declares that if such affidavit or statement is not filed within the prescribed time, “ the right to move shall be deemed waived.” In this case, “ the statement on appeal from the order of the Court overruling the motion for a new trial ” totally fails to show that there was either an affidavit or a statement filed in support of the motion. Consequently the Court did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial. The Court could not grant the appellant’s motion when by his own conduct he had waived the right to move for a new trial. This latter statement then, not being available to show that the Court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial, ceases to be a paper of any importance in the case. As we have already substantially said, it cannot be appended to and made a part of the original statement on appeal. That statement had to be made within twenty days after judgment. If no amendments were offered it could not be patched up by another statement made more than forty days after judgment. The latter statement would properly include only such things as accrued subsequent to the trial and pending the motion for new trial. If it contains other matter, it is surplus-age and must be disregarded. Having disposed of the appeal from *301the order overruling the motion for a new trial, let us now examine the appeal from the judgment.

The statement on appeal commences in this way :

The plaintiff’s statements on appeal from the judgment in this eause: The ground upon which the plaintiff will rely on appeal is the evidence, findings, and decision of the Court that the mortgaged premises set out in the complaint herein at the time the mortgages were executed were the partnership property, and the assets of the firm of Sperry & Co.”

If we give to this language its literal meaning, it shows that the evidence established just what the appellant complains was not established, to wit: that the mortgaged property was partnership property at the time of the Sheriff’s sale.

We presume (though the language used does not convey the idea) the appellant meant to complain that the finding of the Court to the effect stated was not supported by the evidence in the case. Overlooking the error in this part of the statement, let us see how the remainder of the statement is made up.

Immediately following whatwe have before quoted and commented on, is the following language: and that the mortgages [mortgagees] severally had notice thereof; that the said company was insolvent, of which said mortgagees had notice, all the evidence in the case tending to prove the tenure by which said company held said property, and plaintiff’s notice thereof and of the company’s indebtedness, is the deed from J. S. Henning to J. A. Sperry and N. Shiveriek, conveying said property to them, which deed was introduced in evidence at the trial, a copy of which is herein contained and made part hereof; the depositions of said Sperry and Shiveriek in evidence, copies of which are herein set out and made part hereof. In addition to this evidence, the plaintiff testified that the consideration of the notes and mortgages was money advanced for and used in improving the mortgaged property and in paying the debts of Sperry & Co., which advances were made prior to the indebtedness to Hickok & Co. and E. Ruhling & Co., and that he, the plaintiff, did not know of the embarrassment of Sperry & Co. until after the expiration of these mortgages; and that E. P. Whit-more had no knowlege of the condition of the affairs of Sperry & Co.

*302“ And in the further error of the Court, in its findings and decisions, that in the said proceedings of E. Ruhling & Co. and Hickok & Co. against Sperry & Co., the title to or interest in said mortgaged premises of N. Shiverick and his mortgagees passed to the-purchaser under such proceedings at Sheriff’s sale, etc., without any process or summons having been served on said Shiverick and his mortgagees, and it being in evidence that no process was ever served in either of said proceedings on any of the persons made defendants therein, except on said Sperry. (Deed from Henning to Sperry & Shiverick, to wit.)”

After this follow the deed, an agreement, several depositions, etc.? all seeming to have been documentary evidence in the cause. The statement then winds up as follows:

“And the plaintiff says the foregoing statement contains all the evidence in said case tending to prove the tenure by which said Sperry and said Shiverick held the mortgaged property described in the complaint, or of the notice of the plaintiff, or said E. P. Whitmore of the pecuniary position of the firm of Sperry & Co. at time of accruing of the indebtedness mentioned in the complaint, or at the time of the execution of said mortgage.”

The first question is, does this statement negative the idea that there may have been before the Court below sufficient evidence to show that Sperry & Co. were the owners of the property in dispute at the time they were so found to have been by the Judge who tried the case ? If we give a very liberal interpretation to the language used, perhaps it does. But the language is extremely confused, and not clearly intelligible. The statement is ex parte, never served on the opposite party, no amendments • offered thereto, and not settled by the Court. Such a statement is allowed by the statute. Statements on appeal are (probably by an oversight of the Legislative branch of the Government) not required to be served. But whilst such a statement must be tolerated, it should not be allowed to establish more than is clearly stated.

We should hesitate then to hold that this statement was sufficient to authorize this Court in saying the first finding of fact by the Court below is not supported by the evidence. But if this part of the statement had been ever so clear and explicit, there is another *303objection to reversing the judgment on the ground that the findings are not sustained by the evidence.

Our Practice Act was copied almost verbatim, from the California Practice Act as it stood at the time ours was enacted. Under the California code of practice, the Supreme Court of that State had almost uniformly refused to review the facts of a case unless there had been a regular statement and motion for new trial. (See Brown v. Graves, 5 Cal. 119-20; Brown v. Tolles, 7 Cal. 399; 8 Cal. 108; 15 Cal. 380; Gagliardo v. Hoberlin et al., 18 Cal. 394.)

The only conflict that we can discover in the California cases on this point, was in holding, in some instances, that the rule did not apply to actions of equitable cognizance, but was confined to those of a strictly legal nature. Rut finally this distinction ceased to be recognized, and in the last case cited was distinctly overruled, and since then the rule made applicable to chancery cases and actions at law. We deem it best to follow the practice thus established in California, and think it especially appropriate that the practice should be established in a case of this kind, when it is so extremely doubtful if the statement would aid the appellant, even if we were to decide that we could review the facts of the case on tile statement on appeal, without any previous motion for new trial. Whilst the party that complains that the verdict of a jury or the finding of the Court is against the evidence in the case must present that particular point by motion for new trial, or it cannot be looked into in this Court, we do not mean to say other errors committed in the progress of a trial may not be brought up either upon a bill of exceptions or upon statement on appeal. Doubtless most errors committed during the progress of a trial may, at the option of the appellant, be first brought under review in the Court below upon motion for new trial, and upon that Court refusing relief, be reviewed here on appeal from the order refusing a new trial; or they may be ■brought directly before this Court on an appeal from the judgment. This Court can look into bills of exception, statement on appeal, the findings of the Court and the judgment roll, for the purpose of correcting errors shown by any of these records. . But for the purpose of setting aside a verdict or finding on the ground of its not being sustained by the evidence, it can only look to a statement on motion for new trial.

*304Having disposed of the statements in this case, it only now remains to determine whether the judgment of the Court below is justified by the pleadings and by the findings of fact by the Court.

The findings of fact by the Court say the property in dispute was, at the time the mortgages were executed, “ the copartnership property and assets of the firm of Sperry & Co.”

Section 32 of the Practice Act is as follows: “Where the action is against two or more defendants, and the summons is served on one or more, but not on all of them, the plaintiff may proceed as follows: First, if the action be against the defendants jointly indebted upon a contract, he may. proceed against the defendant served, unless the Court otherwise direct, and if he recover judgment it may be entered against all the defendants thus jointly indebted, so far only as that it may be enforced against the joint property of all, and the separate property of the defendant served: or second, if the action be against defendants severally liable, he may proceed against the defendants served, in the same manner as if they were the only defendants.”

In this case the suits of Ruhling & Co. and W. B. Hickok & Co., on whose judgment the property was sold, were commenced against N. Shiverick, A. J. Sperry, Thomas McFarland, and E. P. Whitmore, composing the firm of Sperry & Co. The summons was served on A. J. Sperry only, and judgments taken against him personally and against the joint property of Sperry & Co. The first question is: does the finding of facts show that this property, at the date of their judgments, was the joint property of Sperry & Co. ? It appears to us it does. The language of the finding does not use the word joint, but it says copartnership property and assets. Collyer on Partnership, Sec. 123, p. 108, quotes approvingly this language from Lord Hardwicke: “ The partners themselves are clearly joint tenants in the stock and effects. They are seized per my etper tout.” Finding that this property was copartnership property was in effect finding it was the joint property of the partners composing the firm of Sperry & Co. But even if there was a question about copartnership property and assets being technically joint property, still it was clearly joint property as *305contemplated by the thirty-second section of the Practice Act. The very object of that Act was to authorize a judgment, after service of summons on one member of a trading or manufacturing firm, which would reach the entire partnership property. We think the finding of the Court here sufficiently shows this property was subject to an execution against the property of Sperry & Co.

Holding, then, that Sperry & Co. were the joint owners of the property up to the time of the execution of the mortgages, the question naturally arises: what effect did the execution of these mortgages have upon the property ? When two or more parties hold property by joint title, and one of the joint owners conveys his interest, the joint tenancy is immediately destroyed. So too, it is said that if one of the joint tenants mortgages his interest in fee, this will destroy the joint tenancy. (See Hilliard on Mortgages, vol. 1, p. 12.)

This latter proposition, however, we are inclined to doubt, or rather to think too broadly expressed. Where the title to mortgaged premises rests before foreclosure, seems to be one of those points on which neither Courts nor commentators agree. The decided preponderance of opinion, however, seems at this day to be in favor of the proposition that the title does not pass from the mortgagor before breach of condition. By many it is held that even after breach of condition the title still remains in the mortgagor until foreclosure. We are satisfied the best authorities hold that the title remains in the mortgagor until breach. If the fee remains in the mortgagor until breach, we do not see on what principle it can be held that a mere mortgage, not changing the fee of the property, should destroy a joint tenancy. We are not disposed to hold a proposition so apparently against principle, upon the mere opinion of Mr. Hilliard, however respectable that may be, without some judicial decision to sustain him. Hilliard cites Powell on Mortgages (a work we have not at hand) to support his opinion. Whether Powell is supported by any judicial decision we are unable to determine.

The reasons for holding, in this case, that a mortgage by one of the joint tenants should not have the effect of destroying the tenure by which the partners hold the property, are much stronger than in *306an ordinary ease of joint tenancy. Partners are only quasi joint tenants; or to speak more accurately, it may be said that partners are joint tenants whose rights and duties are qualified in many respects by the law merchant. The right of survivorship exists only in a limited and qualified manner. A surviving partner takes the property, and may sell and dispose of it for the purpose of settling the partnership affairs. But unlike other survivors, (who take the joint property for their own use) after the partnership affairs are settled he must account to the representative of the deceased partner for his net interest in the partnership effects.

On the other hand, ordinary joint owners may at their pleasure sell their joint interest and thus destroy the joint tenancy. A partner cannot sell his interest in the partnership property, so as to deprive his cotenants of their lien on the property for partnership debts or liabilities due from the party selling. As the mortgages in this case were given on partnership property, and with a full knowledge on the part of the mortgagees that it was partnership property, Ave think they did not change the tenure by Avhich the property was held, and that it was liable to be sold under any execution which was legally issued against the property of Sperry & Company.

But it is contended by appellant that there was no legal execution against Sperry & Co., because Ruhling & Co. and W. B. Hickok & Co. sued Sperry & Co., consisting of four members,-and the findings in this case show that the Sperry & Co. who were interested in the property in dispute only consisted of three members.

We think this is hardly a correct view of the case. Ruhling & Co. and Hickok & Co. sued the Sperry & Co. who were erecting a mill and transacting business with them. Of this company, beyond all question, A. J. Sperry was one member. In their complaints they allege that Shiveriek, McFarland and Whitmore were also members of that firm. The Court in this case find they were mistaken as to Whitmore being a member; that only the three first named were partners in the firm.

Now.it appears to us that was an immaterial fact, and ought not to have been investigated in this case. Sperry was served with summons and was bound to make his defense or ever after hold his *307peace. He might have shown that he never made a contract or contracted a debt to the plaintiffs jointly with Whitmore, and this would have been a good defense to the action unless the plaintiffs had by leave of the Court amended their complaint (as they could have done under our statute) and stricken out the name of Whit-more. But Sperry made no such defense to the action, and consequently the judgment was good against him. It would be strange indeed if a stranger to the proceedings could be allowed to come in at this late date and make a defense for Mr. Sperry, which he declined to do for himself when he had an opportunity, four or five years since. The judgment, so far as it is a complete judgment, is only against Sperry. So far as it affects the joint property it only reaches it through Sperry as one of the members of the firm of Sperry & Co. The execution could only be levied on the individual property of Sperry and the joint property of the company which he represented. If Whitmore was a member of that company it was right that his interest in the joint property should be sold; if he was not, certainly a judgment against the property of the firm did not hurt him.

Here the executions were levied on property which the Court finds belonged to Sperry & Co. That is, to that firm of which A. J. Sperry (who was served with summons) was a member, and with which Ruhling & Co. and W. B. Hickok & Co. had dealings. If it belonged jointly to that firm, it was wholly immaterial whether' the firm consisted of three or three hundred persons.

The judgment of the Court below must be affirmed.






Rehearing

RESPONSE TO PETITION EOR REHEARING}.

Opinion by

Beatty, C. J., Lewis, J.,

concurring.

We granted a rehearing in this case mainly because the principal points in the case, on which our first decision rested, had been scarcely noticed by counsel in their arguments or briefs.

The proper construction to be put on See. 32 was one important question which we were anxious to have fully discussed. That dis*308cussion has, however, only confirmed us in our views, heretofore expressed, in regard to that section of the Practice Act.

The object seems to have been to make all partnerships or joint associations, so far as their joint property was concerned, answerable on judgments obtained by the service of summons on a single member, the service on one member having the same effect on the company as service on a proper officer of a corporation has on such a body. Keeping this object of the law in view, many of the objections raised by appellant to this judgment seem to be very readily disposed of.

The first objection raised by appellant is that defendant Frothingham pleads that the title to the property in controversy, when Shiverick executed his mortgage, was held jointly by A. J. Sperry, N. Shiverick, E. P. Whitmore, and Thomas McFarland, composing the firm of Sperry & Co., while the findings show that only three of those parties compose that firm. Therefore the answer and findings, being at variance, do not support the judgment for defendant. That if the proof does not support the allegation of the answer, the defense must fail.

A trifling variance between the probata and allegata is not material. Here the variance was of no manner of importance. In the suits of Ruhling & Co. and Hickok & Co. four parties were sued, the complaint alleging they all four composed the firm of Sperry & Co. One of the four parties (confessedly a member of that firm) is served, and being so served, the law makes him answer for all his partners. They are (to the extent of the partnership funds) just as much bound by his action as they would be by the action of an attorney employed by them jointly. Now Sperry confesses (and in confessing for himself he confesses for all his partners) that the firm was composed of the four members charged in the complaint of Ruhling & Co., as forming that association. So far, then, as that company is concerned, it is admitted Whitmore is a partner; and no member of that company, nor any person claiming under them, can be permitted to say he was not a partner. With regard to E. P. Whitmore himself, of course the thing would be different. He, not being a member, would not be affected by the admissions of parties with whom he was not connected.

*309The real defense here set up by Frothingham was, that the property, when Shiverick executed his mortgage, belonged jointly to Sperry & Co., and was bound for their joint debts, etc. The fact that he was mistaken as to the number of persons composing that firm was of no importance whatever.

Appellant contends that if this was partnership property, held jointly by the partnership firm of Sperry & Co., still each partner might mortgage his individual share, and the mortgage would be good against all persons, except partners and creditors of the firm. That is true. But in this case it is claimed that a creditor sold this property under regular proceedings against the firm. If so, the entire title passed, and Frothingham holds under the claim of a creditor.

The clerical error of the Judge in writing J. A. Sperry for A. J. Sperry is certainly a matter of no importance. Nor is it of any importance that the Judge, in speaking of the judgments against Sperry & Co., spoke of the plaintiffs as Ruhling & Co. and Hickok & Co., instead of mentioning the names of the persons composing such firms. These objections are rather too technical to be seriously considered.

Nor is the objection that no judgment eo nomine could be entered against Sperry & Co. any more tenable than the other. The judgment in this case, so far as it was a personal judgment, was only against Sperry, the defendant served ; but it was also a sort of judgment in rem. against the partnership effects of Sperry & Co. The debt was contracted by the firm of Sperry & Co., and all the joint property owned by the members of that firm was bound for it. The counsel for appellant seems wholly to lose sight of the distinction between “ defendants jointly indebted” and defendants jointly sued. In this action, four defendants were jointly sued, but it turns out that only three of them were jointly indebted. Now this judgment, which is in the nature of a judgment in rem., is only effective against the joint property of three of the defendants sued, for it seems Whitmore was not bound by the joint contract. If in fact there had been joint property held by'Sperry, Shiverick, Whit-more, and McFarland, and it ha'd been sold under this execution, Whitmore could certainly, by a proper proceeding, have set aside *310the sale, or at least recovered his fourth of the property, by showing he was not a member of the firm of Sperry & Co.; for he not being a partner of Sperry, nor a joint contractor with him, was not bound by his silencé or his confession. But the other three being actual partners in the firm of Sperry & Co., they were, in the language of the statute, defendants * * jointly” indebted, and as such their joint property was bound.

It is contended that this property could not pass under the section of the Practice Act heretofore referred to, because that only refers to joint property, and partners cannot hold real estate as joint owners; and in support of this proposition we are referred to the case of Howard v. Priest, and Dyer v. Clark, 5 Met. Mass., and Sec. 135 of Collyer on Partnership. These cases do not, in our opinion, sustain any such proposition. At law, partners, like any other persons, may take a conveyance of real estate to themselves, either as joint tenants or tenants in common.

To show that such was the opinion of the Court in the case of Dyer v. Clark, just referred to, we need only quote the following language of Chief Justice Shaw in delivering the opinion in that case: “ Should the partners take their conveyance in such mode as to create a joint tenancy, as they still may, though contrary to the policy of our law, still it would not accomplish the purpose of the parties.” In the foregoing quotations the italics are our own.

Then in truth, partners may hold real estate, so far as the legal title is concerned, like any other persons, either as joint tenants or tenants in common. But when property has been acquired with partnership funds and for partnership purposes, whatever the legal tenure may be, Courts of equity will treat it as partnership property. Or, as Courts sometimes say, they will treat it as personal property. Of personal property, partners are admitted to .be joint tenants. Yet Courts of equity, in speaking of real estate held by partners, always say that in equity it will not be treated as joint property, but as held in common, each tenant in common holding his interest in trust for the partnership. They say they cannot hold it to be joint property, otherwise, the jus aecrescendi would intervene in case of the death of one of the parties, to the great detriment of trade. But the jus aecrescendi applies as well to personal property as to real *311estate, yet the Courts have no hesitation in calling the personal property of partners joint property.

Now the truth is, that phrase, jus aecresoendi, when applied to real estate, seems to have frightened Courts into all sorts of absurd and contradictory expressions. It does not seem to have done any harm so far as results were concerned, but merely led to confusion of expression. As regards personal estate, the phrase seems to have been very harmless. Judges could deal with it without being frightened out of their propriety.

Chief Justice Shaw, in delivering the opinion of the Court in the case of Dyer v. Clark, (5 Met., p. 576) uses this language: “ Such, indeed, is the result of the application of the well known rules of law, when the partnership stock and property consist of personal estate only. And as partnerships were formed mainly for mercantile transactions, the stock commonly consisted of cash, merchandise, securities and other personal property; and therefore the rules of law governing that relation would naturally be framed with more especial reference to that species of property. It is therefore held that on the decease of one of the partners, as the surviving partner stands chargeable with the whole of the partnership debts, the interest of the partners in the chattels and choses in action shall be deemed so far a joint tenancy as to enable the surviving partner to take the property by survivorship, for all purposes of holding and administering the estate, until .the effects are reduced to money and the debts are paid ; though, for the purpose of encouraging trade, it is held that the harsh doctrine of the jus aecresoendi, which is an incident of joint tenancy at the common law, as well in real as in personal estate, shall not apply to such partnership property ; but, on the contrary, when the debts are all paid, the effects of the partnership reduced to money, and the purposes of the partnership accomplished, the surviving partner shall be held to account with the representatives of the deceased for his just share of the partnership funds.” In plain' English, personal property of partners is joint property with only a qualified right of survivorship. Real estate is in law common property or joint property, just as the deeds of the conveyance make it. In equity, all real estate acquired with partnership funds and used for partner*312ship purposes, is, like personalty, joint property, with only a qualified right of survivorship.

The- answer of Prothingham in this case alleges that the property which was sold under the judgments of Ruhling & Co. and Hickok & Co., was the joint property of Sperry & Co. The finding of the Court in reference to this matter is that the property was the copartnership property and assets of the firm. It would have been more satisfactory if the finding had been more explicit as to the tenure by which this property was held. An Act, however, passed by the Legislature of this State, approved March 11th, 1865, in relation to appeals, contains the following section:

“ In cases tried by the Court without a jury, no judgment shall be reversed for want of a finding, or for a defective finding of the facts, unless exceptions be made in the Court below to the finding or to the want of finding; and in case of a defective finding, the particular defects shall be specifically and particularly designated ; and upon failure of the Court below to remedy the alleged error, the party moving shall be entitled to his exceptions, and the same shall be settled by the Judge, as in other cases; provided, that such exceptions to the finding shall be filed in the Court within five days after the making of the finding or decision to which exception is made.”

In this case it seems to us, if the plaintiff thought this finding not sufficiently specific as to the tenure by which Sperry & Co. held this property, he should have excepted to this finding, pointing out its particular defects. In the absence of such exceptions, we think it sufficient to support the judgment. The judgment of this Court will be in accordance with the opinion heretofore filed.

Johnson, J., not having joined in the order granting a rehearing, does not participate in this decision.