53 Miss. 689 | Miss. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the court.
However the doctrine may have vacillated elsewhere, it has been uniformly held in this State that real estate bought with partnership funds, or acquired in satisfaction of debts, constitutes assets of .the firm, so far as the partners and creditors are concerned, quite as effectually as dioses in action or merchandise. The mere fact of the acquisition in that mode works an equitable conversion of them into personal estate. A court of equity will not undertake to disregard the assurances of title under which they are held, but will treat the holder of the title as trustee for the purposes of the partnership : first, to pay the creditors; and, secondly, to adjust the account between the partners according to their several interests.
Where the conveyances are to both partners, they are in law tenants in common, presumptively equal owners ; but in equity, whether the title be in them jointly or in one of them, the property is assets, amenable to creditors, and the surplus is to be disposed of between them on settlement of the partnership account. Scruggs v. Blair, 44 Miss. 406, 411, 412. It is, therefore, a general principle, that each partner has a lien on the partnership property, not only for the amount of his interest, but for moneys advanced beyond his contribution to the capital, to the uses of the copartnership. And this lien attaches on real estate held for partnership purposes as well
The right of the partnership creditors to a preference over the creditors of the individual partners is said to be dependent on this right or lien, which each partner has, to have the joint property directed to pay partnership liabilities before individual debts. Rice v. Barnard, 20 Vt. 479; Howe v. Lawrence, 9 Cushing, 553, 558.
Another consequence of this principle is, that if a partner withdraws a part of the joint stock, if it can be identified, it should be applied to whatever balance on account taken shall be found due from him to the partnership, before it can go to pay his individual debts. West v. Skip, 1 Ves. Sen. 239, 244; Collyer on Partnership, § 126.
The complainant alleges that the individual estate of the deceased partner, Cotten, is insolvent. He points out several tracts of land in the counties of Amite and Pike that were acquired by the copartnership, and legitimately constitute assets, and that this real estate is needed to pay off the joint debts. A court of equity, as we have seen, would consider this real property as assets, as much liable to the claims of creditors as the personal effects ; would interfere to prevent the administrator of the deceased from selling it for the individual creditors, and would take control of it, so as to give a preference to the joint creditors. Winslow v. Chiffelle, Harper (S. C.), Eq. 25; Divine v. Mitchum, 4 B. Mon. 488.
The lands mentioned in the bill — or more properly the interest of the deceased partner in them — descended to his heirs, clothed with a trust to respond to all the purposes of the copartnership in them. If Cotten in his lifetime had alienated his interest, or if his heirs should convey it, such conveyance would not be valid against the complainant surviving partner, if the alienee had notice, actual or constructive, of the trust. A purchaser of such property, knowing that it is partnership property, would be chargeable as trustee for the other
It is manifest that a court of equity alone is competent to administer proper relief, either to the surviving partner, the complainant, or to the creditors of the copartnership.
The bill, however, is not framed so as to enable that court to take complete cognizance of the subject-matter. The bill sufficiently alleges that these lands are needed to pay the joint creditors. But the administrator of W. A. Cotten, deceased, is interested in the partnership account between the complainant and the intestate, and the heirs have also an interest in the question of the divestiture of their legal title for the joint creditors. The bill should have been framed on the theory of a settlement of the accounts between the complainant and the intestate, and between them and the creditors; so that the creditors might have an opportunity to present their claims and a proper distribution be made of any moneys arising from the sale of the real estate.
If the bill had been assailed by demurrer, the complainant would have been required to amend it as indicated. But, instead of being met in that form, it was dismissed on the motion of the guardian ad litem for the infant heirs, on the ground of want of jurisdiction. Such motions are not usual in our chancery practice, and should not be sustained, if the court has cognizance over the subject-matter and the parties. It is not the proper method of testing the sufficiency of the bill, either as to parties or form. If, however, the complainant makes such disclosures of merits as that upon a properly constructed bill, with necessary parties, relief may be granted, the bill should not on motion be dismissed, but opportunity should be offered the complainant to amend.
Decree reversed. Bill reinstated, with leave to the complainant to amend.