109 N.Y.S. 1027 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
The complaint alleges that on October 24, 1907, Frank R. Cross died intestate and plaintiff was on February 6, 1908, appointed administratrix; that the defendant bank has in its possession certain moneys and stocks or bonds which belonged to said Cross; that the plaintiff is entitled to the possession thereof as admin
John T. Wilson in a supporting affidavit avers that he is the husband of the plaintiff and is her attorney in fact, and that he had inquired at the bank for information as to the moneys and securities deposited by Cross that it held and demanded the same and that both demands were refused. “ Said officer said that said moneys and securities were placed in the possession of the said bank in the intestate’s name jointly with another, the defendant Arthur S. Cooper. * * have known the defendant Cooper for some
years and know from correspondence in my possession received by members of the family of the intestate from the intestate that all the moneys in which the defendant Cooper and said intestate had any interest during his lifetime were invested in stocks and bonds or on deposit in Hew York City for that purpose.”
The defendant Cooper avers that he is a citizen of the United States and a resident of the borough of Manhattan, city, county and State of Hew York; that he knew Cross intimately for about fourteen years; that in the year 1894 deponent and said Cross entered into a copartnership as dental surgeons and practiced their profession as copartners in various places, including Costa Bico, the Bepublic of Panama, and the city of Hew York until the 24tli day of October, 1907, when the said Cross died in the city of Panama; that during all these times deponent and said Cross were copartners ia the practice of their profession and said business was always conducted under the firm name of Cooper & Cross; that frequently one partner would be in one of the places above mentioned and the other partner would be in another place, both practicing their profession, and each would account to the other for profits and expenses in the various places where they were practicing their profession under said firm name ; that during all the times above mentioned and down to and including the 24th day of October, 1907, the principal place for the transaction of the copartnership business was the city of Panama; that he has deposited to the credit of the said firm of Cooper & Cross various sums of money in the International Bank, and that the balance now there amounts to $1,977.68, and has also deposited with said bank for safekeeping, to the credit of said firm, three bonds of the United
It thus appears conclusively that plaintiff’s intestate never deposited any money or securities with the defendant bank, but that all the deposits. were made by the defendant Cooper to the firm account. The order appealed from restrains the bank from delivering and the defendant Cooper, the surviving partner, from receiving any part of the said moneys and securities. It was held in Williams v. Whedon (109 N. Y. 333) that upon the death of one partner the surviving member of the firm becomes the legal owner of its assets by virtue of survivorship, and has exclusive right to sell, mortgage and dispose of them in closing up the copartnership and can do so in the manner he deems best for the interest of those concerned. The representatives of the deceased partner have no legal interest in such assets and no legal right to interfere in their administration so long as the survivor is closing up the estate and applying its proceeds in the payment of firm debts. The survivors do not take such assets as trustees, but as survivprs hold the legal title subject to such equitable rights as the representatives have in the due application of the proceeds. They may, therefore, require the application of the assets to the payment of the partnership debts, but the time, manner and mode of doing so are a part of the administration of the estate which is under the exclusive control of the' survivors.
In Secor v. Tradesmen’s Nat. Bank (92 App. Div. 294) this court said: “ It is evident that the legal title to all of the personal property of the firm vested in the surviving partner. He had and has the sole and exclusive right to liquidate and deal with such property for purposes of liquidation as fully and completely as could the partners themselves. * * * He alone could enforce the collection of dioses in action, pay debts and liquidate the affairs of the firm. Such relation is not that of trustee of the personal representatives
The surviving partner has a reasonable time in which to liquidate the affairs of the firm. “ Undoubtedly an action upon a proper state of facts will lie against the surviving partner at the instance of the representatives of a deceased partner for an accounting, not as to any specific or particulao- thing, but as to all of his transactions as surviving partner and liquidator. * * * Plaintiff asks that an accounting be had of the specific fund ; that it be decreed upon such accounting the sum to which the surviving partner would be entitled and that it be paid over to the plaintiff. If this should be granted it would not settle the copartnership affairs; there would be no liquidation of the firm’s accounts and the liquidator would not be authorized to receive the fund. * * * Evidently the plaintiff is vested with no such right and consequently the complaint fails to state a cause of action.”
The action at bar is directed against a specific sum. It is not brought against Cooper to procure a general accounting of the partnership affairs. It is not brought against Cooper for an accounting even of this specific fund. It is the bank which is asked to account for the fund which it has in its hands, under the theory that the fund was plaintiff’s intestate’s and deposited by him. U o accounting whatever is asked of Cooper, and no judgment obtained in this action would settle the affairs of the partnership. It appearing that the fund was deposited as partnership property, that the account is so held, the surviving partner has the legal title thereto and has a reasonable time in which to liquidate the firm affairs and to account. I find no warrant for this injunction order. The facts do not support the allegations of the complaint. Plaintiff’s right in his representative capacity to call Cooper to account is not being exercised. The survivor’s right to the firm assets has not been lost so as to justify the order appealed from, which should, therefore, be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs to the appellant.
Ingraham, Laughlin, Houghton and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.