Bush Co. v. Gibbons

87 A.D. 576

This text of 87 A.D. 576 (Bush Co. v. Gibbons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bush Co. v. Gibbons, 87 A.D. 576 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

In 1895 the plaintiff in this action entered into two contracts with M. Gibbons & Son, by which the latter undertook to construct two warehouses for the former, at an aggregate cost of $151,000. The firm of M. Gibbons & Son originally consisted of Michael Gibbons and Bichard Gibbons, his son, one of the defendants in this action. The buildings were completed about July 2, 1896, and shortly thereafter Michael Gibbons and Bichard Gibbons began an action against the plaintiff in this action to recover the sum of $56,000, the unpaid balance of the contract price for the erection of said buildings. The original complaint claimed a considerable sum for extra work, but this was dropped upon- the trial, and the litigation, after passing successively through the Appellate Division and the Court of Appeals, resulted in a judgment or judgments against the plaintiff aggregating at the time of the commencement of this action, with interest, $79,640.78. Several claimants appearing and demanding this money under assignments or otherwise, the plaintiff brought this action, in the nature of a-bill of interpleader, and has been permitted by the court to deposit the amount to the credit of the action, and has been dismissed from further liability. All of the parties acquiesce in this, and the only questions raiséd by the [579]*579appeal are in relation to the rights and priorities of the various claimants, the fund not being sufficient to meet all demands.

On the 25th of August, 1896, shortly after the commencement of the action by Michael Gibbons and Bichard Gibbons against the plaintiff in this action, Michael Gibbons died. The complaint in that action alleged that they were copartners, doing business under the firm name of M. Gibbons & Son, and after the death of the father the action was continued in the name of Bichárd Gibbons as surviving member of the firm of M. Gibbons & Son, the judgment being entered in that name and under that designation, and it continued in that form during all of the subsequent history of the case, Michael Gibbons left a last will and testament under date of August 14, 1896, which was duly admitted to probate in October of that year.. The will appointed Bichard Gibbons as executor, who qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties. The will, among other things, contained the following clause,'upon which several of the claimants rest their demand for a reversal of the judgment. It reads as follows: Having heretofore conveyed to my son Bichard .Gibbons all of my interest in the business of M. Gibbons <fe Son, I hereby ratify & confirm such conveyance & bequeath to my said son Bichard Gibbons any interest which it may appear that I may have at the time of my decease in the said business of the firm of M. Gibbons & Son.” ■

It appears from the evidence that the firm of M. Gibbons & Son had, at the time of the death, of Michael Gibbons, a large number of contracts for buildings, which were being performed, and that the firm had already borrowed of various concerns considerable sums of money. Bichard Gibbons, acting in the capacity of surviving member of the firm, and as it was his duty, ho doubt, as executor of the estate in protecting its assets, borrowed other sums of money for the purposes of paying the debts of the firm and completing the contracts which had been entered into in the lifetime of Michael Gibbons, and the principal question to be determined upon this appeal is whether the creditors of the firm and of Bichard Gibbons as surviving member of the firm have a right to be reimbursed out of the fund which has been paid into court under the judgments, in the action of Bichard Gibbons as surviving member of the firm of M. Gibbons & Son, or whether the judgment creditors of Bichard [580]*580Gibbons, individually, or his subsequent bankruptcy creditors, are entitled to this fund or to priority over such firm creditors. The learned court at Special Term has held, upon what we conceive to be the preponderating evidence of the case, that the fund in court belonged to Bichard Gibbons as surviving member of the firm of M. Gibbons & Son, and that it was subject to the liens created by the several assignments made by the said Bichard Gibbons of portions of the judgment recovered in the action against the plaintiff. The mere recital in the will of the late Michael Gibbons that he had heretofore conveyed his interest in the firm to his son, could not be controlling as against the testimony of the son in harmony with his action that he had made use of the credit and assets of the firm in completing the work which had been contracted for during the lifetime of his father and in discharging the indebtedness of the firm. The verified complaint in the original action, commenced within a few weeks of Michael Gibbons’ death, says that they were copartners; the action was continued in the name of Bichard as surviving member of the firm, and if there was a transfer after the verification of the complaint and before the death of Michael Gibbons, it must have been subject to the equities of the creditors, whose rights could only be protected by the completion of the contracts then under way and for which moneys had been advanced. In other words, any transfer of the partnership property to Bichard Gibbons was subject to the debts of the partnership, and until the contracts then in'existence had been completed and the indebtedness of the firm settled, the rights and equities of the firm creditors were superior to those of the individual creditors of Bichard Gibbons. While it is probably true that if Bichard Gibbons had continued the action in the manner that he did and had recovered this judgment, a court of equity would not permit him to keep it as against his individual creditors, but where there are equities superior to those of the individual creditors it is proper that the fund should be first used to pay the debts which were of the- firm’s creation and which extended, equitably at least, to the debts which were necessarily created in making available the funds which had already, been tied up in the works being carried forward under the original contracts of the firm. In Durant v. Pierson (124 N. Y. 444, 454) the court' reviews the authorities upon the point here involved and say : [581]*581It appears to us that the conclusion is warranted from the authorities referred to that where a person in good faith loans money to a surviving partner, and where the money is faithfully applied by such partner in satisfaction of the liabilities of the firm, the claim becomes .one which in equity should be paid out of the assets of the firm; and in an accounting between the survivor with the personal representative of the deceased partner, equity will recognize the right of the surviving partner to have the money so borrowed and applied by him repaid out of the assets of the firm, and an assignment so directing is not fraudulent.” This is the principle which underlies the action of the learned court at Special Term, and in the Durant Case (supra) it was held that the fact that the deceased partner left a will making the survivor his sole devisee and legatee did not affect the question of the equities of the bank which had loaned the money. (See Bell v. Hepworth, 134 N. Y. 442, 449.)

It does not appear necessary to review each of the several assignments involved in this appeal, for while there are variations in the facts, and some intervening transactions, they will all be found to respond to the principle laid down in the Durant Case (supra)

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Related

Russell v. . McCall
36 N.E. 498 (New York Court of Appeals, 1894)
Durant v. . Pierson
26 N.E. 1095 (New York Court of Appeals, 1891)
Bell v. . Hepworth
31 N.E. 918 (New York Court of Appeals, 1892)
Williams v. . Whedon
16 N.E. 365 (New York Court of Appeals, 1888)

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Bluebook (online)
87 A.D. 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bush-co-v-gibbons-nyappdiv-1903.