Beecher v. Stevens

43 Conn. 587
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 43 Conn. 587 (Beecher v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beecher v. Stevens, 43 Conn. 587 (Colo. 1876).

Opinion

Shipman, J.

On February 1st, 1873, John McLagon and Hiram Stevens were and for a long time had been partners in New Haven in their business of foundrymen and machinists. As'partners'they owned their foundry property and other real estate and machinery, which real and personal estate had been purchased with partnership funds, and was partnership property. At this time the partnership owed in. secured debts [589]*589$26,300; in notes' unsecured $34,286; by book accounts $9,686; making a total of $71,282; and their assets amounted upon book to $138,240, of which sum $21,909 was in accounts due the firm. About $11,000 only of this amount was subsequently paid.

At this time the firm was financially embarrassed, and was in need of more cash capital or of more cash funds. It was agreed between the partners and Henry Smith that Stevens should sell out his interest to said Smith, who was thereupon to form with McLagon a new firm under the name of McLagon & Smith. Stevens sold and conveyed to said Smith his interest in said firm of McLagon & Stevens, and by deed conveyed his interest in said real estate and machinery, said interest being described in the deed as one undivided half part thereof, subject to mortgages to the New Haven Savings Bank for $20,000, and a mortgage to Eli Whitney for $7,500.

Smith mortgaged back to Stevens the same undivided half part of said real estate and machinery to secure several notes for the purchase price which was to be paid to Stevens, all amounting to $17,050, which deed was duly executed and recorded. Smith agreed also to pay Stevens’s share of the debts of the old firm, except a certain specified portion, and said mortgage also secured the fulfilment of said agreement. The mortgage of Smith was also to be subject to an additional mortgage of $8,000 to be placed thereafter upon the property.

• McLagon & Smith thereupon on the same day went into partnership, and by their partnership agreement each partner contributed to the new firm his interest in the property and assets of McLagon & Stevens as his contributory share of the capital stock of McLagon & Smith, and said Smith agreed to pay said Stevens’s share of all the liabilities of McLagon & Stevens, except as expressly excepted, and that all the property so conveyed by said Stevens to said Smith should be held subject to the payment of said share as fully as if the same had remained in the name of said Stevens. The entire arrangement in regard to sale, dissolution and formation of a new firm was made in good faith, without fraud, and in the hope that additional pecuniary advantages would be furnished [590]*590thereby, so that a successful business might be done by the new firm. *

On June 10th, 1874, McLagon & Smith mortgaged said partnership real estate and machinery to Beecher & Todd to secure their endorsements for the benefit of the mortgagors to the amount of $30,000. In September, 1874, another mortgage on said partnership property was executed by McLagon & Smith to Beecher & Todd to secure endorsements in all amounting to $35,000.

In September, 1875, McLagon & Smith desired to obtain an additional savings bank loan. It was agreed that Beecher & Todd should release their mortgages on the foundry property, and that Stevens should release his mortgage, which had been reduced to $10,000, and allow a new savings bank mortgage to be placed on said property for $35,000, and that Stevens should then take a second mortgage from said Smith on the undivided half part of the said real estate for $10,000, and that Beecher & Todd should take a new partnership mortgage on the foundry property to secure endorsements and debts to the amount of $47,000; all which was done and the releases and mortgages were duly recorded. Beecher & Todd’s new mortgage specified that it was subject to the Stevens mortgage for $10,000, upon an undivided half part of said real estate.

The amount now due upon Beecher & Todd’s mortgage is $41,689.74, and interest to July 14th, 1876, of $1,303.04. In addition Mr. Beecher has paid interest on the savings bank mortgage and insurance premiums amounting to $2,926.96, which sum it is agreed shall take precedence of the Stevens mortgage.

McLagon & Stevens are now in bankruptcy. Their secured debts, not including the Stevens mortgage, are $80,919; their unsecured proved debts are about $19,000; making a total of $99,919. All the McLagon & Stevens debts have been paid, except about $300 or $400. Beecher is the real owner of the Beecher & Todd mortgage, as he has paid all the endorsements which it was given to secure. Smith has drawn out of the new firm at least $8,179 more than his partner. The new firm is largely insolvent. The debts of the old firm were [591]*591paid in great part from moneys for which the new firm is still indebted.

Beecher & Todd have brought their petition claiming that the mortgage to them should be preferred to the Stevens mortgage upon the following grounds. 1st. That their mortgage 'is for a firm debt secured by a firm mortgage for the benefit of the firm, while the Stevens mortgage is to secure an individual debt of Henry Smith to Stevens. 2d. Because in equity Smith & Stevens should be regarded as representing substantially the same interest, and that the indebtedness existing against the firm of McLagon & Stevens has been by their payments changed only in form, but has not béen diminished in amount. 3d. That the claim of Hiram Stevens should be deferred to the claims of general unsecured creditors of the firm of McLagon & Smith, of which the claim of Beecher is the largest, and that he has the right, if the previous propositions are not true, to abandon his mortgage, and prove as a general creditor.

The assignees have also brought their petition, praying that the Stevens mortgage shall not be paid, and shall not be a lien upbn the property until after the payment of the debts of the firm of McLagon & Smith to their firm creditors, and until after the adjustment of the accounts between the partners, and the payment to the fund belonging to the individual creditors of McLagon, of the amount that may be due to him as between the two partners.

Stevens claims that his mortgage is a valid mortgage, subject only to the savings bank mortgage. His $10,000 debt is represented by four notes of $2,500 each, all of which he owns, except one note which has been assigned to one Rosenblatt to secure a note of $650.

All the parties have appeared and submitted themselves to the jurisdiction of the court, and waived any question whether a summary petition or a bill in equity was the proper mode of procedure.

The real estate was partnership property, and was liable to all the incidents attending such property. It was expressly known by both Stevens and Smith to be partnership estate at [592]*592the time of the sale and mortgage in February, 1873. Partnership real estate is treated in equity as if it was personal property.

A sale of the interest of one partner in the partnership property conveys only his interest in the surplus, if any, which may remain after the payment of the partnership debts and the discharge of the liabilities of the partners, inter sese

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 Conn. 587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beecher-v-stevens-conn-1876.