In re Hamilton

1 F. 800, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 39
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedApril 14, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1 F. 800 (In re Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Hamilton, 1 F. 800, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 39 (E.D. Ky. 1880).

Opinion

Brown, J.

This case arises upon petitions of the assignee to expunge certain proofs of debt made by Swearingen & Biggs, the Bank of Kentucky, and William Hughes, trustee. The material facts of the case are as follows: On the fifteenth of September, 1875, Swearingen & Biggs,, a firm of distillers» composed of George W. Swearingen and Andrew Biggs, entered into a temporary partnership with Anderson, Hamilton & Co., a firm engaged in a general provision business, composed of William B. Hamilton, the bankrupt, W. T. Hamilton and D. M. Anderson, to pack pork together on general account for the season of 1875-6. The profits and losses of this business were to be divided in the proportion of three-fourths to Anderson, Hamilton & Co., and one-fourth to Swearingen & Biggs. No firm name was agreed upon, but for convenience it will be designated in this opinion as the conjoint firm.

The money to carry on its operations was to be raised by paper bearing the name of Swearingen & Biggs as drawers, and Anderson, Hamilton & Co. as acceptors. William B. Hamilton also became an indorser of such paper in his individual character.

[802]*802The hogs were bought in the name of Anderson, Hamilton & Co., and the product was also sold in their name. A new set of books was opened, and the transactions relating to said business were entered under the name of Anderson, Hamilton & Co. After making this contract, and while the pork packing season was going on, Swearingen & Biggs continued their business as before, at the same store, and Anderson, Hamilton & Co. continued their office at the same place as before, kept up their separate books in the name of Anderson, Hamilton & Co., and borrowed money and did business in that name as before. Neither of these firms had any interest in the business of the other, except the joint interest in the hog product of that season. In the course of their business a large amount of paper was drawn by Swearingen & Biggs upon Anderson, Hamilton & Co., and accepted by them, generally, in favor of Hamilton Bros., who indorsed the paper, which was also indorsed and negotiated by William B. Hamilton. Amongst the paper so negotiated were the bills proven in this case by the bank of Kentucky, amounting to $80,000.

In June, 1876, the conjoint firm was dissolved by reason of great financial embarrassment, and the control of the hog product and the other assets of the joint account was transferred to Swearingen & Biggs. On the twenty-sixth of June an agreement or settlement was made between the-conjoint firm and its creditors holding paper drawn, accepted and indorsed as above stated, by which it was agreed that upon the turning over by Swearingen & Biggs to a trustee (William Hughes being afterwards named by the creditors as such trustee) of all the hog product and other assets of Anderson, Hamilton & Co., and paying the creditor $66,000 in 6, 12 and 18 months, with interest, securing the same upon real estate, and by warehouse receipts upon whisky of Swearingen & Biggs, the creditors would obligate themselves not to sue Swearingen & Biggs, and to accept such hog products and the sum of $66,000 in full satisfaction of the liabilities of said Anderson, Hamilton. & Co. and Swearingen & Biggs, [803]*803and of tlioir accommodation indorsers or acceptors, Hamilton Bros.

Before this agreement was executed William B. Hamilton, the bankrupt, in order to facilitate it, agreed in writing that the proposed settlement with the conjoint firm might be made, without in any manner releasing or affecting his individual liability as indorser on any of the paper held by the creditors, assenting to remain hound as if the settlement had not been made.

Swearingen & Biggs thereupon transferred to Hughes, as trustee for the creditors, all the assets of the conjoint firm, and paid them the $66,000.

Subsequent to the making of this agreement William B. Hamilton filed his petition in bankruptcy, and was duly adjudicated a bankrupt.

1. As to the claim of Swearingen & Biggs. This firm has proven against the individual estate of William B. Hamilton for three-fourths of $100,000 and interest, this being the amount which they were compelled to pay out of their private means in order to pay off the debts of the conjoint firm. By the terms of the conjoint partnership agreement, as before stated, the profits and losses between the two firms of Anderson, Hamilton & Co., and Swearingen & Biggs, were to be divided in the proportion of three-fourths to the former and one-fourth to the latter. Swearingen & Biggs contend that, by the rules of law governing partnerships, as by the rules governing joint debtors, each partner is bound to contribute to the other his proportion of the loss which may he paid by that other partner in excess of that partner’s own proportion; and that, in event of any partner being insolvent, the others and solvent ones must be assessed the portion of the insolvent ones also.

Anderson, Hamilton & Co. being insolvent and worthless, Swearingen & Biggs now claim the right to prove against William B. Hamilton, the only partner in said firm having assets, upon the ground that they have paid all the debts of the partnership, and that William B. Hamilton is responsible individually to them for throe-fourths of the losses incurred in their conjoint business.

[804]*804■ This claim is resisted by the creditors of the conjoint firm, who, under the arrangement of June 26th, were still entitled to prove against the estate of William B. Hamilton, as indorser, any balance that may remain due them after realizing from the assets turned over to the trustee.

The theory of Swearingen & Biggs, in this connection, is that the conjoint firm was composed, not of the two firms as partners, but of the five individuals composing these two firms, it being apparent that, if their claim is a partnership claim against Anderson, Hamilton & Co., the individual creditors of William B. Hamilton must be paid in full before the partnership creditors are entitled to any dividend from his estate. While it is ordinarly true that a partner cannot act as such except within the scope of the partnership business, and that one member of a firm cannot, take in another partner without the assent of the co-partners, still I see no legal difficulty in the way of treating two firms as individual partners in a conjoint firm, if such be obviously the intention of the parties. Such seems to have been the case in Cheap v. Cranmont, 4 Barn. & Ald. 663, and there are a number of cases cited in Bindley on Partnership, 995, 998, where the members of firms were treated as partners, and allowed to prove against each other, when it could be done without prejudice to -the creditors of both. It seems to be in each case a question of intent; and, in the case under consideration, I think the court ought to treat the conjoint firm, for the purposes of this case, as composed of two partners, viz.: Anderson, Hamilton & Co. and Swearingen & Biggs, for the ‘following reasons:

First. No firm name was ever adopted. Each firm continued to carry on its own business and to make the paper of the conjoint firm in the name of the separate partners.

Second. The original agreement under which they became partners was signed by the two firms, and not by the individuals composing each firm.

Third,.

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Bluebook (online)
1 F. 800, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hamilton-kyed-1880.