Fairchild v. . Fairchild

64 N.Y. 471, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 93
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 28, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 64 N.Y. 471 (Fairchild v. . Fairchild) 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
Fairchild v. . Fairchild, 64 N.Y. 471, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 93 (N.Y. 1876).

Opinion

Church, Ch. J.

This is an action for partition among the heirs of Egbert FT. Fairchild, of forty-eight vacant lots in the city of Flew York.

Egbert FT. Fairchild, Stephen C. Walker, Isaac D. Coleman and Henry J. Brown, were copartners, and constructed the new reservoir in Central park, and also other public works. The copartnership was formed in 1858, and the lots in question were purchased in 1860, and a conveyance taken in the name of Fairchild only. The other copartners, including the widow and heirs of one of them who has since died, claim an interest in the property equal to their respective interests in the copartnership. The rights of creditors are not involved.

The judge who tried the case at Special Term found that the property was purchased by and for the benefit of the copartnership, and paid for with its funds, that taxes and incumbrances were also paid from such funds, and that it was *475 intended and understood by all the members of the firm that said property belonged to the firm assets, and all payments, expenses, etc., were kept upon the firm books. He further found that the other members of the firm consented, that Fairchild should take title for the firm, but that they did not consent that he should take the title absolute in his own name, without recognition of their interests, and they did not know that the deed was so taken.

If these findings are sustained by sufficient legal evidence, the legal conclusion arrived at by the learned judge is inevitable, viz.: That the other members of the firm are entitled to an interest in said property, according to their interest in the partnership. I do not understand that this general proposition is seriously disputed by the counsel for the plaintiffs, but he predicates his answmr to the claim, first, upon the incompetency of the evidence admitted, and second, upon its insufficiency.

The fifty-first section of the statute of uses and trusts, provides that when a grant for a valuable consideration shall be made to one person, and the consideration paid by another, no use or trust shall result in favor of the person making the payment, but the title shall vest in the alienee, subject to the rights of creditors, as provided in section 52. The fifty-third section contains an exception in favor of the person paying the consideration, when an absolute conveyance is taken in the name of another without his consent or knowledge.

The Special Term decided in favor of the defendants upon two grounds: First, that a trust resulted to the defendants by the payment of the consideration, and that they could invoke the benefit of the exception contained in section 53; and, second, that the property was copartnership property, and should be treated as such, although the title was held by one member of the firm. It is insisted on behalf of the plaintiffs, that the admissions in the answer1 prevent the defendants from availing themselves of the exception contained in the fifty-third section. These admissions are: “ That the conveyance was taken to and in the name of *476 Egbert ET. Fairchild, for the purpose and convenience of the partnership, to the end that it might be more easily handled and pledged and disposed of for said copartnership purposes than if it stood in the individual names of all the members of said firm.”

It cannot be disputed that this allegation is a distinct admission that the defendants knew that Fairchild was to take the title not only, but so take it as to be able to pledge and dispose of it in his own name, but it is not absolutely inconsistent with his taking it in a way to recognize their rights. It would probably have been sufficient for this purpose to have inserted a declaration that he took the title for the benefit of the firm, and that the property was partnership property in pursuance of an agreement between the members of the firm. Assuming the necessity of some such recognition in order to secure the interest of the other members of the firm, it may be presumed that they contemplated it, and hence that the failure -to thus take it was a fraud upon them.

Upon the findings in. the case, the authorities go far towards sustaining the decision upon this ground. (Day v. Roth, 18 N. Y., 448; Lounsbury v. Purdy, 18 id., 515 ; Siemon v. Schurck, 29 id., 598; Foote v. Bryant, 47 id., 544.) Parties are bound by the allegations in their pleadings, and by every reasonable intendment to be inferred therefrom, and it is, to say the least, a liberal construction in favor of the defendants, to hold that the statement in the answer, that the lots were conveyed to Fairchild for the purpose of pledging and disposition, is not an admission that they were conveyed precisely as the parties intended, especially in the absence of any intimation they were not. The tendency of the decisions is to sustain the equitable interests of parties in such transactions, whenever it can be done without a palpable violation of the statute, and following this tendency it may perhaps be held that the defendants are not concluded by their answer But looking at the real nature of the transaction as found by the judge, it seems to me more reasonable to hold that this property should be regarded as assets of the copartnership. *477 The findings are explicit, that it was purchased and paid for by the firm as partnership property, and always treated as its property in the payment of taxes and incumbrances, making improvements, etc. Real estate purchased for partnership purposes and appropriated to those purposes, and paid for by partnership funds, becomes partnership property, and it is not material in what manner or by what agency the land is purchased, or in what name it stands. If it be established that it belongs to the partnership, equity will hold the one in whom is the legal title as trustee for the partnership. (Parsons on Partnership, 363.) When the land is conveyed to the several partners it is not indispensable that it should be actually used for partnership purposes, nor that a positive agreement should be proved making it partnership property. If it has been paid for with partnership effects it is then a question of intention, whether the conveyance is to have its legal effect, and the parties are to be treated as tenants in common, or whether the land is to be treated as partnership property. The manner in which the accounts are kept, whether the purchase-money was severally charged to the members of the firm, or whether the accounts treat it the same as other firm property, as to purchase-money, income, expenses, etc., are controlling circumstances in determining such intention, and from these circumstances an agreement may be inferred. (24 N. Y., 511.)

The rule, I apprehend, is the same in this respect when the deed is made in the'individual name of one of the partners, as where it is made in the names of all the members of the firm. But a distinction is claimed to exist between creditors and the members of the firm, and between the members themselves in respect to the proof necessary to establish the fact that the real estate is partnership property. I do not think such a distinction is recognized by the authorities.

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Bluebook (online)
64 N.Y. 471, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairchild-v-fairchild-ny-1876.