30 Mich. 151 | Mich. | 1874
For some time preceding the 13th of June, 1873, the plaintiff and one William Penrose were co-partners in the commission business, and became indebted to the firm of Lichtenberg & Sons. At the date before mentioned, the plaintiff’s firm, being insolvent, was dissolved, and the effects were divided between the partners, the plaintiff taking as his share the articles in question in this cause.
Immediately on such dissolution the plaintiff became engaged in the same bind of business which had been carried on by his firm. On the 25th of the same month, and nearly two weeks after the dissolution and the division between the plaintiff and Penrose, the firm of Lichtenberg & Sons commenced a suit against the plaintiff and Penrose to recover the demand held against them, and on the 7th of July obtained judgment, and on the 14th caused an execution to be issued upon it. This execution was delivered for service to the defendant, who was a constable in Detroit, and he thereupon levied it on the property in suit, and which was the same property received by the plaintiff on the division between himself and Penrose.
The plaintiff brought replevin, and on the trial he gave evidence tending to show that the articles in question were worth fifty-five dollars, and were necessary to enable him to
This, however, was a mistake. No such question was involved. The circumstances excluded it. The mere fact that the plaintiff’s firm were debtors of Lichtenberg & Sons gave the latter no legal dominion over their debtors’ goods.
Until legal proceedings, adapted to bind the property, were had, the owners were not precluded from reducing their joint holding to separate ones; and the evidence for the plaintiff went to show that the joint interest was severed, and the whole right in these goods vested in the plaintiff, not only before the seizure on the execution, but previous to the commencement of the suit. The fact that the property had been some time before held by the plaintiff and Penrose as partnership property, was of no consequence in so far as the right of exemption was concerned.
That circumstance could not have the effect to impress upon the property a permanent quality or character by which it would continue forever subject to be treated as firm property.
By the division, the plaintiff became separate owner prior to the suit brought by Lichtenberg & Sons, and his right to hold under the exemption laws was not made abortive by reason that the property came to him from the firm, and was taken by defendant on a debt of the firm.
I think the court erred in directing the jury to find for the defendant, and that the judgment should be reversed, with costs, and a new trial ordered.