Drucker & Brother v. Wellhouse & Sons

8 S.E. 40, 82 Ga. 129
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 9, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 8 S.E. 40 (Drucker & Brother v. Wellhouse & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drucker & Brother v. Wellhouse & Sons, 8 S.E. 40, 82 Ga. 129 (Ga. 1888).

Opinion

Bleckley, Chief Justice.

1. “Partners are called collectively a firm. Merchants and lawyers have different notions respecting the mature of a firm. Commercial men and accountants are apt to look upon a firm in the light in which lawyers .look upon a corporation, i. e. as a body distinct from 'the members composing it and having rights and obligations distinct from those of its members. Hence, in keeping partnership accounts, the firm is made debtor to each partner for what he brings into tlie common ¡stock, and each partner is made debtor to the firm for ¡all that he takes out of that stock. In the mercantile view, partners are never indebted to each other in respect of partnership transactions ; but are always either .debtors to or creditors of the firm.

“ Owing to this impersonification of the firm, there is a tendency to regard its rights and obligations as unaffected by the introduction of a new partner, or by the (death or retirement of an old one. Notwithstanding ■such changes among its members, the firm is considered ¡ás continuing the same ; and the rights and obligations .of the old firm are regarded as continuing in favor of or ¡against the new firm as if no changes had occurred. 'The partners are the agents and sureties of the firm; its agents for the transaction of its business ; its sureties for the liquidation of its liabilities so far as the assets of the firm are insufficient to meet them. The liabilities of the firm are regarded as the liabilities of the partners only in case they cannot be met by the firm and discharged out of its assets.

[131]*131“ But this is not the legal notion of a firm. The firm is not recognized by lawyers as in any way distinct from the members composing it. In taking partnership accounts and in administering partnership assets, courts have to some extent adopted the mercantile view,' and actions may now be brought by or against partners in the name of their firms ; but speaking generally, the firm has no such legal recognition. The law, ignoring the firm, looks to the partners composing it; any change amongst them destroys the identity of the firm ; what is called'the property of the firm is their property, and what are called the debts and liabilities of the firm are their debts and their liabilities. In point of law, a partner may be the debtor or the creditor of liis co-partners, but he cannot be either debtor or creditor of the firm of which he is himself a member.

“ A member of an ordinary partnership is at law, as in commerce, the agent of the firm for the purpose of transacting its business; but he is not the surety of the firm. Every member of an ordinary partnership, however numerous the partners may be, is liable to have his property seized for a partnership debt, whether the firm has assets to pay it or not; and not only so, but the property of the firm is liable to be seized for the private debts of any of the members composing it. This non-recognition of the firm, in the mercantile sense of the word, is one of the most marked differences between partnerships and incorporated companies.” 1 Bindley on Partnership, 4th ed. 207. Dicey on Parties, by Furman, 169, 183.

“ Upon, the same principle, namely, that the firm is not distinguishable from its members, and that the name of the firm is only a conventional name for those members, if a firm is appointed by its mercantile name to any office, e. g. the office of trustee, guardian or execu[132]*132tor, the partners in the house at the time of its appointment to the office are the persons who, in point of law, are considered as filling it. DeMazar vs. Pybus, and Knudson vs. Pybus, 4 Ves. 649. The firm, as such, cannot hold an office, nor can rights, personal to the members of a given firm, be exercised by new members who may be introduced into it. See Barron vs. Eitzgerald, 6 Bing. N. C. 201; E. C. L. R. 37; Stevens vs. Benning, 1 K. & J. 168.” 1 Collyer Partnership, 6th ed. "Wood’s notes, p. 288, note.

“ Partnership is but a relation; it is not a person — it. is not a legal being; the real owners of partnership property are the partners.” Harris vs Visscher, 57 Ga. 229. “ It is not a being distinct from the members which compose it.” Chambers vs. Sloan, 19 Ga. 84. “ As among partners, the extent of the partnership is determined by the contract and their several interests. As to third persons, all are liable not only to. the extent ■of their interest in the partnership property, but also to the whole extent of their separate property.” Code, §1888.

The foregoing quotations are more than ample to show that in contemplation of law there is no merger or fusion of the several persons. composing a partnership into a common and comprehensive person including them all. A firm adds nothing to population, and in this respect is unlike a corporation, which augments population in the legal, though not-in the natural world. Still, the law does (jiot) take note, on a wide scale, of partnership as a legal entity, and regards it as a unit both of rights and obligations. Judgment may be entered and execution issue for or against it. Code, §§1899, 3576. Attachment may issue against it as nonresident, Chambers vs. Sloan, 19 Ga. 84; DeLeon vs. Heller, 77 Ga. 740; oras absconding, Hines vs. Kimball [133]*133& Co., 47 Ga. 587. It may be served with process, Peel vs. Bryson, 72 Ga. 332. It may be taxed, The Mayor vs. Hines, 53 Ga. 616; and see many provisions in the session laws imposing taxes. It may be insolvent, Code, & 1918; Bennett vs. Woolfolk, 15 Ga. 213; Daniel vs. Townsend, 21 Ga. 155; Pullen vs. Whitfield, 55 Ga. 174; Anderson vs. Pollard, 62 Ga. 51. It may assign its property to pay its creditors, but whether by general law a single partner can make for it a general assignment seems open to question. Bur. on Ass. §67 et seq.; Story Par. §§101, 310 ; Parsons Par. 165, 166, 400. As to restrictions on limited partnerships in the matter of assignments, see Code, §§1939, 1940. According to Parsons, (Partnership, 449,) there is a “general tendency of the law at this day to complete its recognition of a partnership as a body of itself, with its own means appointed to its own debts.” In view of this tendency, which is everywhere traceable, and no less in our own local system than elsewhere, we may safely hold that though a firm or partnership is impersonal or non-personal, it is, for some purposes, in contemplation of law a quasi person, having powers and functions exercisible by one of the partners severally or all of them jointly. That it may be a debtor or a creditor within the meaning of modern statutory enactments, we have no question.

2. In September of the present year (1888), A. L. Drucker & Brother, the plaintiffs in error, executed' a deed of assignment to Malcolm Johnston, for the benefit of their creditors. The deed was executed in the firm name, and was also signed by the partners, each in his own name. A bill was filed by 'Weilhouse & Sons, creditors of the firm, attacking the instrument for not embracing the individual assets or property of each of the partners, as well as the assets of the partnership. [134]*134.The material question in the ease is, whether the assignment was valid, although it conveyed the partnership assets only.

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8 S.E. 40, 82 Ga. 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drucker-brother-v-wellhouse-sons-ga-1888.