Collumb v. . Read

24 N.Y. 505
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 24 N.Y. 505 (Collumb v. . Read) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collumb v. . Read, 24 N.Y. 505 (N.Y. 1862).

Opinion

Dentó, J.

The most material question raised by this appeal is, whether the assignment made by the firm of Gr. & J. W. Caldwell was fraudulent and void on account of its embracing real estate the title to which was in the separate partners as tenants-in-common. If this real estate is to be considered as the individual property of the partners, and not as copartnership property, the assignment of it, to pay the partnership debts, with a reservation of the surplus to the assignors, who were, at the same time, insolvent as to their separate concerns, was fraudulent as against their creditors. This was the judgment of this court when the case came here after the first trial. (16 ÍT. Y., 484.) But, upon the second trial, which eventuated in the judgment under review, evidence was given touching the manner in which this real estate was acquired, and was held; and the question is, whether, upon the finding of the referee upon these subjects, the case was such as to warrant the application of the equitable principle which permits the separate partners, or the creditors of the copartnership, to require the sale and appropriation of its real estate for the liquidation of its affairs. Where land is conveyed to two or more persons by a common deed of conveyance, they become tenants-in-common, and each is at law considered separately seised of his individual share, as fully as though they derived title under separate conveyances from different sources. But if the tenants-in-common are at the same time copartners, and the land was purchased with partnership funds, and for partnership purposes, it is deemed in equity converted into personal property, and is liable to be administered as such in winding up the affairs of the firm; and it goes, moreover, to *510 the personal representative, and not to the heirs, of a deceased partner. (Phillips v. Phillips, 1 Mylne & Keene, 649, 663; Broom v. Broom, 3 id., 443; Bisset on Partnership, 56.) And I understand that the rule is the same as to the claims of creditors, if it be brought into the partnership by one of the partners for partnership use during the continuance of the concern, under an agreement that it should be considered partnership property; though, in this last case, the equitable conversion is not so absolute as that the personal representative- would be entitled to the succession against the rights of the heir. (Cookson v. Cookson, 8 Sim., 529.) But suppose it be purchased with partnership funds or taken in payment of a partnership debt, but not to be adapted for employment nor actually used in the business of the partnership, but is yet to be kept on hand until the failure of the firm: is it applicable to the payment of partnership debts, or must it be applied to the payment of the debts of the individual partners, supposing them also to be insolvent? In Randall v. Randall (7 Sim., 271), it is held that the conversion of real estate into personal property in such a case must not take place- so as to give the succession t to the personal representatives of one of the partners who had died. Whether, if the firm and the partners had become insolvent, the creditors of the copartnership could have invoked that fiction of a court of equity against the creditors of an individual partner, does not appear to be distinctly settled in England. There is a class of cases in which it had been agreed, upon the formation of the copartnership or subsequently, to the effect that the real estate brought into the concern should be considered as partnership property. There, though the conversion is not absolute so as to change the succession from the real to the personal representatives, yet there is a qualified, conversion so far as may be necessary for partnership objects; and the payment of partnership debts being one of the purposes of the partnership, the joint creditors have a right to call for its appropriation for the satisfaction of their demands. Cookson v. Cookson, just referred to, contained that feature; and it was conceded that, if there had *511 been, partnership debts, the creditors could have subjectedthe land to their payment. Where the land was not purchased for partnership uses, and there was no agreement making it partnership property, and yet it was paid for out of the funds of the partnership or taken in the payment of debts due to it, the question between the two classes of creditors would be one of construction as to the intent of the partners in making the purchase. It might be that such a purchase would be made as an investment of realized profits. If, for instance, the purchase-price should be charged to the separate accounts of the partners, that would be an indication that it was considered by them an application of divided profits. If, on the other hand, the income should be carried into the books of the copartnership, or if the land itself should be included in the periodical inventories of stock in trade, there would be an inference, more or less strong, that it had been agreed to hold the estate as partnership property. Where neither of these features exist, I am of opinion that, according to the doctrine of the English courts, the land, though paid for out of partnership funds, would retain its original character of real estate, and would be considered as belonging to the several partners according to the legal title as determined by the conveyance. But, in a leading case in the late Court of Chancery, decided in 1847, the land was considered as .converted for the purpose of subjecting it to the debts of the copartnership, upon the single fact that it had been conveyed to the copartners in payment of a firm debt. Lands were conveyed to the partners, Naylor & Sumner, by a debtor of the firm, in satisfaction of the debt. On winding up the affairs of the concern, Naylor was obliged to pay out of his own means to the creditors about five thousand dollars beyond his ratable proportion of the debts, and for this balance he recovered a judgment against Sumner in the Superior Court; but, by mistake, the judgment was never regularly docketed, as the Chancellor held. Subsequently, a judgment was recovered against Sumner by another party for an individual debt, and then the premises'were sold upon a decree of foreclosure of a mortgage' *512 older than either of the judgments, and the money was brought into court for distribution. Upon a reference, it was adjudged to belong to Naylor—one half of it as the owner of an undivided moiety of the premises, and the other half as the judgment-creditor of Sumner, the other tenant-in-common. On the hearing of exceptions to the report, a Vice-Chancellor confirmed it; and on an appeal to the Chancellor, he held that the distribution could not be sustained on the ground upon which it was placed by the Master, for he considered the imperfect docket wholly void. But he decided that, for the purpose of a liquidation of the copartnership affairs, the payment of its debts, and the division of the assets between the partners, the land was to be regarded as personal property; and he sustained the report on that single ground. The opinion is quite thorough, and it reviews all the cases on the subject, English and American; and the judgment appears to have been acquiesced in, as I do not find that it was brought before this court on appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.Y. 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collumb-v-read-ny-1862.