Hillman v. Moore

3 Tenn. Ch. R. 454
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 15, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 454 (Hillman v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hillman v. Moore, 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 454 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

In the year 1868, the defendants W. F. Moore and J. H. Collins were partners in the tinware business, at Nashville, under the firm-name of Moore, Collins- & Co., and so continued until October, 1871, when Moore-bought out Collins, and continued the business, under the-name of W. F. Moore & Co., until closed out by the sheriff, in February, 1876. In October, 1873, the defendant M. O-[455]*455Lightfoot was employed by Moore as clerk, having previously loaned Moore about $1,400. Afterwards, it was agreed between them that Lightfoot might become a partner by raising money sufficient to purchase one-half the stock; which was never done, and he continued to act as clerk until sale by the sheriff, in February, 1876. In the meantime, however, there can be no doubt that both Moore and Light-foot so acted as to hold the latter out as a partner, and make him liable as such, one of the complainants having actually recovered a judgment against both as partners, and all of them being clearly entitled to a similar recovery. On February 4, 1875, the defendant Collins recovered judgment against W. F. Moore for $2,900 and costs, on one of the notes given for the purchase of Collins’s interest in the business in 1871. Execution issued on this judgment, and was, on February 3, 1876, levied on the “ entire interest of W. F. Moore in and to all the stock of merchandise, and fixtures of every kind, and also the books, notes, accounts, and judgments in the house No. 37 North Market Street, belonging to W. F. Moore, or W. F. Moore & Co.,” referring for particulars to an attached memorandum. Moore having waived any advertisement, “ the interest of W. F. Moore as above described” was, on February 8, 1876, sold by the sheriff, in block, to the defendant Collins for $2,300, who afterwards sold it to the defendant Pleasant Smith. On March 25, 1876, the original bill was filed by the complainants, as judgment-creditors of W. F. Moore & Co., on return of execution nulla bona, as well for' themselves as for all other creditors of W. F. Moore & Co., against Moore, Lightfoot, Collins, and Smith, to reach the property thus sold and bought, as partnership property, upon the ground that the purchasers at thé execution-sale acquired only the interest of Moore as an individual; which, they insist, would be the surplus, if any, after paying the partnership debts. The judgments of these complainants were recovered on March 7, 1876, upon obligations of W, [456]*456F. Moore & Co., but by service of process on Moore alone. ■The complainant Haggerty, who came in afterwards by petition, recovered his judgment on June 15, 1876, by service of process on both Moore and Lightfoot, execution thereon having issued and been returned nulla bona.

If, in point of fact, Moore and Lightfoot had been partners, there can be no doubt that the sale of Moore’s interest alone in the partnership property, under a judgment against him for an individual debt, would have clothed the purchaser with that interest as of the date of the levy. But the interest of the individual partner, and, consequently, of the purchaser, is only what remains after the settlement of the partnership accounts, and, of course, after the payment ■of the partnership debts. Taylor v. Fields, 4 Ves. 396 ; Matter of Smith, 16 Johns. 102; Haskins v. Everett, 4 Sneed, 531; Knight v. Ogden, 2 Tenn. Ch. 477. In that view, the rights of the parties would have been clear. For, although Lord Eldon said, in 1801, in Ex parte Ruffin, 6 Ves. 127, that creditors of a partnership had “ no lien ¡upon or interest in” the effects of the partnership, “in point of law or equity,” the reason being, as put by this eminent judge, with unanswerable force, that, if the law were otherwise, ‘ ‘ the consequence would be that no partnership could ever arrange its affaii’S ; ’ ’ and, although the Master of the Bolls, in 1819, in Campbell v. Mullett, 2 Swans. 575, echoed the expression, with the variation that “they have no lien, but something approaching to a lien,” yet both of these distinguished judges announced the principle in connection with the assertion of the right of the creditors to acquire a lien by suit. “They” (the creditors), says Lord Eldon, “ had power of suing, and by process creating a demand that would directly attach upon the partnership effects.” “They have,” says Sir Thomas Plumer, “something approaching to a lien,— that is, a right to sue, and, by judgment and execution, to obtain possession of the property.” The general doctrine thus enunciated by him was [457]*457•rigidly adhered to by Lord Eldon in Ex parte Williams, 11 Ves. 4, Ex parte Rowlandson, 2 Ves. & Bea. 173, and other cases. It has, with the peculiar phraseology of the Master of the Rolls, touching the creditor’s right being “ something approaching to a lien,” been adopted by the text-writers and repeated by the courts. It has been accepted by our Supreme Court in Fain v. Jones, 3 Head, 308, House v. Thompson, 3 Head, 512, and Furman v. Fisher, 4 Coldw. 631. As a consequence of the power ■of disposition of the partners to “arrange their affairs,” the partner himself will lose his lien, and, 4 fortiori, the «creditor his “ something approaching to a lien,” by a sale ■of his interest even to a copartner. Ex parte Ruffin, 6 Ves. 119; Smith v. Edwards, 7 Humph. 106; Croone v. Bivens, 2 Head, 339. The creditor’s right is derivative, and if the partner deprive himself of the right, the ■creditors can have none through him. But as long as the right or equity of the partner to have the partnership •effects appropriated to the partnership debt continues, the creditors may, by suit, judgment, and execution, “obtain possession of the property.” If, therefore, Moore and Lightfoot had really been partners, and the sale under Collins’s execution had been only of Moore’s interest, the right of the complainants, as creditors of the firm, would have been clear to levy their executions on the property in the hands of the purchaser, and sell it. Menagh v. Whitwell, 52 N. Y. 47; Campbell v. Mullett, 2 Swans. 575. Their right to come into equity seems to be equally clear. 2 Story’s Eq. Jur., sec. 1253; Fain v. Jones, 3 Head, 308; Collins v. Hood, 4 McLean, 186.

The difficulty in this case is, that both Moore and Light-foot deny that there was any partnership; and the other testimony, while it tends to show that Lightfoot so held himself out to the world, and was so held by Moore, as to make him liable to the complainants as a partner, does not ■disprove the denial of the parties. If I were satisfied, from [458]*458tbe record, that Lightfoot had been a partner, in point of < fact, I would treat his subsequent denial as fraudulent, and ' would not permit it to affect the rights of the creditors. But I am of opinion that he never was a partner, although he has made himself liable as such. In this view, as be‘tween him and Moore, he never had any interest in the * property of W. F. Moore & Co.; and, having no interest* ‘and consequently no lien, it seems to follow logically that 1 the creditors could derive no rights through him. The cor- / rectness of such a conclusion was conceded in the analogous' 1 case of Kelly v. Scott, 49 N. Y. 599.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Tenn. Ch. R. 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hillman-v-moore-tennctapp-1877.