Wilson & Co. v. Lizardi

15 La. 255 | La. | 1840

Bullard, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiffs, bankers of London, represent in their petition that C. D. Tolmé & Co., of the Havana, being largely indebted to them, remitted at different times, between the 1st of November, 4836, and the 1st of April 1837, to John A. Merle & Co., who were the plaintiffs’ agents, a number of drafts amounting to,"[upwards of sixty thousand dollars, for collection, and directed the proceeds to be remitted to them, That Merle & Co. received these drafts, as the agents of the plaintiffs, and undertook to hold them, on their account, until they should mature, and to collect and remit their proceeds to them in London, and that by means of the premises the plaintiffs became the owners of said drafts and the proceeds *258thereof. They allege that there is now in the hands of Merle & Co. sixteen thousand and thirty dollars and sixty-five cents belonging to them, but' which they l-efuse to pay over5 alleging that the same had been attached in their hands by Lizardi & Co., the Citizens’ Bank, and others, as the property of C. D. Tolmé & Co., and for debts due by them to the attaching creditors. They pray for an injunction, restraining Merle & Co. from disposing of the funds, and that the same may be declared to belong to them in preference to the attaching creditors, and that they may be condemned to pay damages, &c.

J. A. Merle & Co. answer, that they have in their hands a certain sum of money, and a note for seven thousand five hundred dollars, which they believe belong of right to the plaintiffs, but that the same having been attached as the property of Tolmé & Co., they hold it subject to the final order of the court. The attaching creditors answer by a general denial. '

The plaintiffs have certainly failed to prove, that J. A, Merle & Co. were their agents, or that there was any privity between them, or that they had come under any positive engagement to pay over the funds to the plaintiffs. They were, on the contrary, the agents of Tolmé & Co., and received large amounts of bills of exchange, with instructions to cash them and remit the proceeds in sterling bills to the plaintiffs in London. The question, therefore, which the case presents is, whether the bills of exchange remitted by the house in the Havana, or the proceeds of them before they were remitted, became the property of Wilson & Co., and were placed beyond the reach of the creditors of Tolmé & Co.

The course of dealing between the plaintiffs and Tolmé & Co., appears to have been in exchange on joint account. The latter were authorized to draw on the plaintiffs for twenty thousand pounds sterling on joint account, and to be covered by remittances either direct or through certain houses in the United States, designated by Wilson & Co., in their correspondence. The firm of J. A. Merle & Co., is not among those indicated by the plaintiffs. The account kept *259by Tolmé & Co. was styled, “joint exchange account with T. Wilson & Co., of London,” in which “ joint exchange” wTas debited with the amount of remittances made through different houses in the United States and directly to Wilson & Co., and credited by the amount of bills drawn by Tolmé & Co. on the plaintiffs. The remittances of bills of exchange to J. A. Merle & Co., were made with orders to collect and remit in sterling bills to Wilson & Co. It appears to us clear, that if the parties to any bills thus remitted for collection had failed after they came into the hands of Merle & Co., the loss would not have fallen upon the house in London. They were still at the risk of Tolmé & Co.,, or perhaps-of the joint exchange account, but certainly not of Wilson & Co. It does not appear that J. A. Merle & Co., were acquainted with the partnership existing between those two houses. Their correspondence was with the Havana house : the bills . . , . . s o of exchange were received as the property of iolme & Co., with orders to collect and remit the proceeds to Wilson & Co. The name of the latter house was not known in the transactions, so far as it appears, except as entitled, finally, to receive the proceeds, which were to be remitted with guaranty, Under these circumstances, we are of opinion that those effects in the hands of J. A. Merle & Co., were liable to be attached by the creditors.of Tolmé & Co.

Where the plaintiffs’ debtor placed drafts in the hands of an agent for collection, with orders to collect and remit the proceeds to the plaintiff, and in the mean time another creditor attached these funds in the hands of the agent: Held, that the attachment is good, and that the funds are liable to be attached by other creditors, until placed beyond their reach by remittance.

But it is contended by the counsel for the appellees, Wilson & Co. and Tolmé & Co. were partners, and that the funds and bills attached belonged to the partnership, and that they were .not liable to attachment, except subject to the liquidation of the partnership concerns.

These pretensions are totally different from those advanced in the petition. Tolme & Co. are therein treated as the debtors of the plaintiffs, not as their partners, and the fund itself as having become the separate property of the plaintiffs. Admitting that such an inquiry could be gone into in this case, it is by no means clear, that even as between the parties themselves, the bills of exchange remitted to Merle & Co. belonged to the partnership. As it relates to third persons, they were upon their face the property of Tolmé & Co., as *260much as if it had been a shipment of coffee to the same agent, with directions to sell and remit the proceeds to Wilson & Co. Wilson & Co. cannot show themselves to be creditors of Tolmé & Co., on account of partnership operations, until the concern has been liquidated, and the case presents no conflict between the separate creditors of one partner and the creditors of the firm.

Upon the whole, we conclude that the court below erred in considering the funds in the hands of J. A. Merle & Co., as belonging exclusively to the plaintiffs, and in decreeing accordingly.

The judgment of the District Court is, therefore, reversed, and ours is for the defendants, with costs in both courts.