Campbell v. Floyd

25 A. 1033, 153 Pa. 84, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 1054
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 3, 1893
DocketAppeals, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66 and 67
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 25 A. 1033 (Campbell v. Floyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. Floyd, 25 A. 1033, 153 Pa. 84, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 1054 (Pa. 1893).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Heydbick,

The appellants, together with several other persons, are sued as copartners, doing business under the name American Bank, to recover moneys which the plaintiff deposited with them as bankers at various times from the fifteenth day of September, 1870, until the ninth day of October, 1882. They do not deny that the partnership existed as alleged at the time the deposits, except the last two, aggregating $330, were made; nor do they deny that the deposits were made and received in the course of the business of the copartnership, but they contend that, for reasons that will be noticed, they have been discharged from liability to the plaintiff.

*90 Two of the appellants say that one John Floyd was a member of the copartnership from the time of its organization until October 2, 1881, when he died; that by his death the partnership was dissolved, and thereupon an action accrued to the plaintiff to recover his deposits; that although some of the members of the firm continued to manage the bank until it suspended November 25,1887, they never consented thereto, or, after the death of John Floyd, expressly or impliedly promised to pay the plaintiff; by reason whereof they insist this action is barred as to them by the statute of limitations. The articles of association of this firm contain some provisions looking to the continuance of the partnership by the survivors in case of the death of a member, as well as by the remaining members in case of a sale and transfer of the interest of any of their fellows. It is, however, unnecessary to decide whether, in view of these provisions, the death of John Floyd had or had not the ordinary effect in this respect of the death of a partner. It may be conceded for the present that it had.

If the partnership was dissolved, each of the surviving members owed some duties to the others as well as to the common creditors. In soeietatis contractibus fides exuberet is the language of the civil law, and applies as well to the winding up of the business of the firm after its dissolution as to its ponduct before. It is the right of each partner to have the assets of the firm applied to the discharge of its debts, and the residue, if any, divided among those entitled thereto; and it is the duty of those having custody of the assets to so apply them; they cannot in good faith to their fellows run away and leave them. And when one, in whose keeping the assets are, assumes the duty of liquidating partner, good faith equally requires that the others shall hold themselves bound by what is done, or object promptly and show why it ought not to be done. “ The authority to act as a liquidating partner does not require an express and specific appointment. When one so acts with the knowledge of his late copartners their permission may be presumed, and as to third persons they may be bound by his acts: ” Fulton v. Central Bank of Pittsburgh, 92 Pa. 112.

According to the affidavits of defence William Floyd and other survivors continued the business after the death of John Floyd, and it is not alleged that any objection was made thereto. *91 In the ordinary course of such business, if prudently conducted, all the old liabilities would eventually be discharged, and the new liabilities incurred would not bind the late partners who did not agree to be bound. Thus a liquidation to that extent would be accomplished, and it has not been pointed out that it was not in this case and would not ordinarily be the most advantageous mode of liquidation — especially advantageous to the non-liquidating partners. Indeed, if these appellants believed the partnership dissolved by the death of John Floyd and knew the bank to be insolvent, as they now allege it was, it would not be a strained presumption that they looked with quiet satisfaction upon what their late partners were doing. Enough appears in their conduct as it is represented in their affidavits to hold them to have given authority to the others to act as liquidating partners, and they are consequently bound by all the acts of the latter within the scope of the business committed to them.

It was held in Estate of Davis & Desauque, 5 Wh. 530, that a liquidating partner may borrow money on the credit of the firm for the purpose of paying the debts of the firm ; and if the credit is given in good faith, though with a knowledge of the dissolution, and the money is applied to the liquidation of the joint debts, the creditor has a claim against the firm. The substantial effect, in one respect, of such borrowing is to renew a debt which may be about to be barred by the statute of limitations, and thus toll the statute. This case was followed by Houser v. Irvine, 3 W. & S. 345, in which it was held that a liquidating partner may give a note in the partnership name in settlement of partnership debts, and that a payment made by him upon the note so given within six years after its maturity must be attended with the consequences of a payment by all the partners, and is therefore evidence of a promise by all. These cases have been approved in Dundass v. Gallagher, 4 Pa. 205; Brown v. Clark, 14 Pa. 474, and Kauffman v. Fisher, 3 Grant, 302, in the latter of which it was held, as a logical sequence from the preceding cases,that the payment of interest upon a note by a liquidating partner “ kept the note alive as to the firm, and the firm as to the note.” In the present case a copy of plaintiff’s bank book was filed with his statement, showing that interest was paid on the deposits every year after the *92 death of John Floyd until 1887; and the entries in that book were averred to have been made by the defendants sued. The appellants do not deny the payment of interest or the making of the entries thereof in the book by some of the defendants; their denial in this respect being simply that the affiants made the entries. Taking the affidavits in connection with the statement and its accompanying account, they must be regarded as admitting payment of interest by the liquidating partners. The statute of limitations cannot, therefore, be successfully pleaded.

Another of the appellants sets up, in addition to the general statute of limitations, the act of March 28,1867, which provides that “no suit at law or in equity shall be brought or maintained against any stockholder or director in any corporation or association to charge him with any claim for materials or moneys for which said corporation or association could be sued, or with any neglect of duty as such stockholder or director, except within six years after the delivery of the materials or merchandise or the lending to, or deposit of money with said corporation or association, or the'commission of such act of negligence by such stockholder or director; ” and says that the American Bank, having provided in its articles of association for the election of a board of directors by which its business was to be conducted, and called its members stockholders, is an association within the intendment of this act.

The plain import of the language of this statute is that the associations whose stockholders are protected are such as can be sued without the joinder of their members, and tbat the subjects of the suits barred are claims for which the associations are primarily, and the stockholders secondarily, liable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 A. 1033, 153 Pa. 84, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 1054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-floyd-pa-1893.