Dupuy v. Leavenworth

17 Cal. 262
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 17 Cal. 262 (Dupuy v. Leavenworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dupuy v. Leavenworth, 17 Cal. 262 (Cal. 1861).

Opinion

Field, C. J. delivered the opinion of the Court

Baldwin, J. and Cope, J. concurring.

This is a suit on the equity side of the Court to quiet, or rather to perfect, the title of the plaintiffs to certain premises situated within the city of San Francisco. The facts of the case, as established by the evidence embodied in the record, are briefly as follows. In 1847, the defendants, Percy B. Shelly and Samuel Norris, were copartners in mercantile business in San Francisco. In July of that year the authorities of that town sold at public auction certain beach and water lots; and at the sale the defendant Norris bid off the premises described in the complaint—designated as lot number one hundred and eighteen—in the firm name of Shelly & Norris, fof six hundred and twenty dollars. Of this sum he paid at the time, to the first Alcalde for the town, one hundred and fifty-five dollars, and the defendant Shelly executed, in the name of the firm, an undertaking—in the form of a bond, but without any seal [266]*266affixed—for the payment of the balance, with interest, in three installments, at six, twelve and eighteen months. The Alcalde thereupon gave to Shelly & Norris a certificate to the effect that they had purchased the lot, and executed the bond referred to; that the bond and the deed for the lot were filed and recorded, and that the latter would be delivered on the payment of the last installment of the purchase money. The premises in question were intended for the purposes of the copartnership, and the cash payment at the sale and the first installment on the bond were paid out of copartnership funds. In March, 1848, Shelly, under pretense of making a visit of a few days to San José, absconded with all the available effects of the firm, leaving Norris without the requisite means to settle with their creditors. Attachments followed, which closed up the business of the concern. The effects and property remaining were turned over to the creditors and applied, so far as they would go, to the satisfaction of their claims. After the personal property was in this way exhausted, the lot in question was disposed of to William H. Davis, one of the creditors, in part payment of the debt due to him. The lot was not at the time worth the sum for which it was bid in at the sale, but Davis agreed to take it and credit the firm the amount advanced of the purchase money, and to pay the balance. Norris thereupon executed in the firm name of Shelly & Norris a conveyance to Davis, who paid the remaining installments and received the bond from the Alcalde, together with the deed prepared for delivery and placed on record. Davis subsequently went into possession of the premises, and improved them at an expense of several thousand dollars. The plaintiffs derive their title by sundry mesne conveyances from him.

Shelly never returned to San Francisco until some time in the year 1854, and he then learned all the particulars of the affairs of the old firm, and of the sale of the premises in question, and made no objection to the course pursued by his partner. In 1856, Norris related to him in detail the manner in which the copartnership effects and lot were disposed of and the accounts settled, and he then expressed his entire satisfaction with what had been done.

In May, 1859, Shelly executed a conveyance of all his right, title and interest in the premises in question, to the defendant [267]*267Baker, for the consideration, as expressed therein, of five thousand dollars, claiming at the time that the conveyance of Norris to Davis, in 1848, only operated to pass an undivided half interest. The plaintiffs thereupon instituted the present suit, and in their complaint charge that the conveyance to Baker was the result of collusion and conspiracy between Leavenworth, Shelly and Baker, to defraud the plaintiffs and to extort money from them; that the consideration expressed therein is fictitious, and was never paid'or agreed to be paid; that Leavenworth and Baker were both cognizant of the facts relating to the conveyance by Norris to Davis, and that Baker is not a Iona fide purchaser for a valuable consideration, and holds the premises as a trustee, in part or in whole, for Leavenworth and Shelly, upon some agreement for mutual profit and benefit. The complaint concludes with a prayer, among other things, that Leavenworth, Shelly and Baker be enjoined from making a transfer of the premises, and be decreed to convey to the plaintiffs all their interest in the same, or, on failure to do so, that a Commissioner be appointed to execute such conveyance in their names. The Court found that the material facts stated in the complaint were true, and rendered judgment substantially in conformity with its prayer.

The principal ground upon which the defendants rely for a reversal of the judgment is, the alleged want of authority in Norris to execute a conveyance so as to pass the entire interest of the co-partnership in the premises. The proposition asserted is, that the copartners were tenants in common of this real property, and that neither could transfer the interest of the other; in other words, that the rule of copartnership, by which each individual member possesses full authority to dispose of the entirety of particular personal effects of the firm, and not merely of his own share, does not prevail with respect to real property; but as to this kind of property, all the members must unite in the conveyance to transfer the entire interest. Such is, undoubtedly, the rule at law, but in equity a different doctrine prevails. In equity, real property acquired with partnership funds for partnership purposes is regarded as personal estate, so far as the payment of partnership debts and the adjustment of partnership rights are concerned. The real and. [268]*268beneficial interest which each partner possesses in the partnership property is the balance coming to him after the payment of the partnership debts, and the settlement of accounts with his copartners. And, in the view of equity, it is immaterial in whose name the legal title of the property stands—whether in the individual name of one copartner, or in the joint names of all; it is first subject to the payment of the partnership debts, and is then to be distributed among the copartners according to their respective rights. The possessor of the legal title in such case holds the estate in trust, for the purposes of the copartnership. Each partner has an equitable interest in the property until such purposes are accomplished. Upon the dissolution of the copartnership by the death of one of its members, the surviving partner, who is charged with the duty of paying the debts, can dispose of this equitable interest, and the purchaser can compel the heirs-at-law of the deceased partner to perfect the purchase by conveyance of the legal title. (See Andrew's Heirs v. Brown's Heirs, 21 Ala. 443; Delmonico v. Guillaume, 2 Sand. Ch. 367.)

Under the special circumstances of this case—Shelly having absconded with all the available funds of the firm, leaving Norris without sufficient means to pay the debts of the copartnership, and the personal property having been, in good faith, first exhausted and found to be insufficient—it is not perceived why the same rule which governs as to the authority of the surviving partner should not apply.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Cal. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupuy-v-leavenworth-cal-1861.