In re Sauls

5 F. 715, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 254
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Tennessee
DecidedJuly 21, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 5 F. 715 (In re Sauls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Sauls, 5 F. 715, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 254 (W.D. Tenn. 1880).

Opinion

Bahhosi), D. J.

Ono of the creditors assenting to the bankrupt’s discharge is J. IT. McClellan, as surviving partner of the firm of Guy McClellan & Co., the other partner being dead. If this debt be counted the bankrupt is entitled to his discharge because of having secured the assent of a sufficient number and amount of his creditors who have proved their debts. But if this debt, which was also proved by the surviving partner, be rejected in the count, there is a deficiency of assenting creditors, and the discharge must be refused. The objection is made by a non-assenting creditor that a surviving partner cannot assent so as to bind either the administrator of the deceased creditor or the creditors of the firm, for whom it is argued he is a trustee; and therefore the assent of these cestuis que trust must likewise have been procured to entitle the bankrupt to his certificate.

The question has been argued on both sides with exceptional thoroughness, and it is said by counsel that no ease [716]*716ruling the point has been found. The bankrupt’s counsel submits that the non-assenting creditor cannot question the action of the surviving partner, who is responsible alone to the administrator of the copartner, or to the firm’s creditors, if he violates his trust. But I am of opinion that non-assenting creditors have a clear right to insist that the certificate of discharge shall not be signed, unless it is shown by the record that the bankrupt is entitled to it. They may object to invalid or insufficient asseiits, for the reason that their own debts are affected and may be discharged if they be permitted to operate contrary to law.

The learned counsel for the objectors insists that by the death of a partner the scope of the partnership is restricted to winding up the concern, and the powers of the survivor are correspondingly so restricted that he can appropriate nothing to himself, nor do anything which will operate to the injury either of the creditors of the firm or the administrator of the deceased partner’s estate; that he cannot, without consideration, release a debt due the firm, or give away any portion of the partnership effects, and that his duties are confined to realizing all that is possible out of the assets for the payment of the creditors of the firm and distribution to the deceased partner’s representatives.

The application of this argument to the case in hand is that it is the survivor’s duty to keep the debt against this bankrupt alive to be collected out of future acquisitions, and that, by assenting to his discharge, he thereby extinguishes the debt in violation of this duty, and entails a loss upon those interested, which he has no power to do without their consent. No case is cited which discusses the power of a surviving partner in this matter of consenting to a bankrupt’s discharge, and the argument is deduced from principles applied in common-law or equity cases in restraint of a surviving partner’s power over the partnership property and in aid of those interested in its most beneficial appropriation to the purposes for which he holds it. Daniel v. Daniel, 9 B. Mon. 195; Bookout v. Anderson, 2 La. An. 246; Rogers v. Batchelor, 12 Pet. 221; Vance v. Campbell, 8 Humph. 524; Martin v. Kirk, [717]*7172 Humph. 529; Belote v. Wynne, 7 Yerg. 541; Bancroft v. Snodgrass, 1 Cold. 441.

These and other eases cited, some of them treating of the powers of a, partner in existing firms, and some of his powers after dissolution, all show that a partner cannot waste the assets or act beyond the scope of the partnership business, nor, after dissolution, create new debts, or misapply the firm property. But they seem to me not to settle any principle which militates against the idea, that, after all, it may be within the legitimate scope of a surviving partner’s power to assent to a bankrupt’s discharge. The nearest analogy to it in the ordinary conduct of his affairs is the release of a debt. The case of Bookout v. Anderson, supra, does decide that in Louisiana a surviving partner cannot release a debtor of the firm so as to qualify him to be a witness, but then the law of Louisiana seems to be peculiar as to the powers of a surviving partner, who has no right at all to administer the firm assets until authorized by a court of probate. Coll. Partnership, (4th Ed.) § 129, note 3; Id. § 666. And in Buckley v. Dayton, 14 John. 387, it was held that the release of a witness by one partner alone was sufficient to qualify him. On general principles, a surviving partner is the owner of the partnership assets; he has the legal title, and it is only in a court of equity that he is treated as a trustee. Case v. Abeel, 1 Paige, Ch. 393. He may collect, compromise, or otherwise arrange all the debts of the firm, and his receipts, payments, and doings generally in that behalf are valid, if honest and within the fair scope and purposes of the trust. And if there be negligence, delay, misconduct, or gross mistake, equity will interfere and give proper relief. Pars. Part. (3d Ed.) 440; Id. 442 and notes. So completely is this so that the firm assets pass to his administrator and to his individual assignee in bankruptcy. Brooks v. Brooks, 12 Heisk. 12; Re Stevens, 5 N. B. R. 112.

The powder of a partner in an existing firm to release a debt cannot be doubted, even after dissolution. Coll. Part. §§ 468, 636, 637; Story, Part. §§ 115, 252; Pars. Part. 172, note w; Salmon v. Davis, 4 Binney, 375; Nepier v. McLeod, 9 Wend. [718]*718120; Robbins v. Fuller, 24 N. Y. 570, 573. And this is particularly so after institution of legal proceedings, when the power arises rather from general practice in actions at law than from privileges of partnership; for it is génerally true that one plaintiff may release an action brought by two. Coll. Part. §§ 441, 636. No case that I have seen suggests that a surviving partner is deprived of this power to release a debt either before or after action brought. In Robbins v. Fuller, supra, the court say: “The partners may, notwithstanding the disolution, still perform any act relating to debts and contracts existing before dissolution which they might have performed as partners before the dissolution, such as releasing or giving a receipt for partnership debt, signing a bankrupt’s certificate, etc. The signing of a bankrupt’s certificate is the highest exertion of authority referred to, for it releases the debtor and discharges his future acquisitions, but the power to do it is well established.” Page 573. And see Arton v. Booth, 4 J. B. Moore, 192; S. C. 16 E. C. L. 373, which is a strong illustration of the power to release after dissolution. Partners are more notably bound by the acts of each other in proceedings under the bankrupt laws. One may, on behalf of all, prove a debt, vote in the choice of assignees, and sign the certificate. Coll. Part. §§ 444, 467; 3 Kent, 49; Pars. Part. 172, note w, at page 175; Eden, Banky. 397, in 25 Law Library, 302; Ex parte Hodgkinson, 19 Ves. 291; Ex parte Mitchell, 14 Ves. 597; Ex parte Hall, 17 Ves. 62; and other cases cited in Mr. Sumner’s notes to these cases in Vesey.

In this last ease, Ex parte Hall, it was the signature of the certificate by one partner after a dissolution.

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Related

N. Rogers & Sons v. Batchelor
37 U.S. 221 (Supreme Court, 1838)
Robbins v. . Fuller
24 N.Y. 570 (New York Court of Appeals, 1862)
Bulkley & Wheeler v. Dayton
14 Johns. 387 (New York Supreme Court, 1817)
Napier v. McLeod
9 Wend. 120 (New York Supreme Court, 1832)
Daniel v. Daniel
48 Ky. 195 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1848)
In re Stevens
23 F. Cas. 4 (D. California, 1870)

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. 715, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sauls-tnwd-1880.