In re Suprenant

217 F. 470, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1517
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedOctober 21, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 217 F. 470 (In re Suprenant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Suprenant, 217 F. 470, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1517 (N.D.N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

From about March 10, 1913, C. W. Moody and F. Rae Suprenant (Suprenant being the above-named bankrupt), [471]*471were copartners doing business under the firm name of Moody & Suprenant. More than four months prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy by Suprenant he bought out the entire interest of Moody in the firm’s property, his sole partner in the business, and thereafter continued the business openly in his own name, having gone into sole and exclusive possession of all the firm’s property, and treating it as his own. As part of the consideration Suprenant assumed and agreed to pay all the firm’s debts and liabilities. In continuing this business in his own name he purchased goods to replenish the stock, some for cash, some on credit, and some was partly paid for in cash and credit given for the balance. He paid something on the old debts of the firm pursuant to his agreement that he would pay all. No judgment or judgments existed against the firm at the time of this sale and transfer. On the 4th day of September, 1914, the voluntary petition in bankruptcy of Suprenant was filed and adjudication made. A receiver was appointed on the 8th day of September, 1914. On the 25th day of September, 1914, the trustee herein duly qualified. First the receiver and then the trustee succeeding went into the possession of all the property in Suprenant’s possession, including that in question. About April 30, 1914, certain firm creditors sued on their claim, and at some later time, not stated, obtained judgments against Moody and Suprenant on debts owing by the firm at the time of such sale, and September 2, 1914, executions were issued and a levy made by the sheriff, it is claimed, on the property of Moody and Suprenant. No petition in bankruptcy has been filed against the firm or copartnership, or Moody. Other judgments have been obtained against the partners of the firm on firm debts.

It is claimed by these judgment and execution creditors of the former firm or copartnership of Moody & Suprenant that, notwithstanding the said sale of Moody to Suprenant, the property which the copartnership owned at the time of such sale remains the property of the firm, and is subject to levy and sale on execution against the members of that firm notwithstanding the bankruptcy of Suprenant and the appointment of. a receiver and trustee in the bankrupey proceedings against him, and that such property does not pass to the trustee of Suprenant. Whether or not, after a sale of the property and its conversion into money in the pending bankruptcy proceedings, the firm creditors will, in equity, be entitled to the proceeds of the property found and identified as firm property at the time of the sale to Suprenant in satisfaction, so far as it will go, of their claims, is not now up or before the court. The question is, notwithstanding any equity or equitable claim or lien (if any) which these firm creditors have, shall the property remain in custodia legis, where it now is — that is, in the possession of the court in bankruptcy for purposes of administration and distribution — or may these judgment and execution creditors of the firm of Moody & Suprenant hold it on execution and sell same as property owned by the firm and not by Suprenant? This, of course, involves the question whether or not the title of the property passed to Suprenant on the sale by Moody to him. If the title did pass to Suprenant it passed to the trustee, even if subject to [472]*472some equity which may be enforced, and is lawfully in custodia legís, and this court may enjoin any levy on and sale thereof,-and it may be sold by the trustee. The judgments created no lien until execution issued and levy made, and all judgments were docketed within four months of the bankruptcy of Suprenant.

In the state of New York and many other jurisdictions it seems to be the well-settled law, in the absence of fraud making the sale or transfer voidable, one of two partners may sell or relinquish to the other all his interest in the partnership property, such other agreeing to pay the firm debts, and that in such case the purchasing partner acquires the same ownership and dominion of the property as if it had ever been his own separate property, and that, the sale being made in good faith, the title vests in the purchasing partner as his own private estate, free from any lien or equity in favor of partnership creditors. This assumes, of course, that the law had not at the time of such transfer taken the partnership property into its custody for purposes of administration and distribution. This is true even if the purchasing partner turns out to be insolvent at the time of buying out the other partner, and this seems to be the rule as well laid down by the Supreme 'Court o°f the United States. Partnership creditors have no lien on partnership assets growing out of the partnership, at least' until the property passes into custodia legis and is being administered and a lien is declared. Prior to that time partnership creditors may have an equity to have the partnership property applied to the payment'of partnership debts, but this equity of the creditors of the partnership is a derivative one. It is not held or enforceable in -their own right. It is derived from the right of the partners to have the partnership property applied to the payment of the partnership debts in preference to those of any individual partner. So long as the partnership exists and the partners are in a situation to enforce this right, the creditors may.appeal to the courts, or either partner may, but when there are two partners and the one has sold out to the other, the purchasing partner taking the property as his own individual property, the creditors are in no situation or condition to enforce the right or equity referred to.

The leading case in Néw York on this subject is Dimon, Receiver, etc., v. Hazard, 32 N. Y. 65, where it is held:

“Where one of two partners retires from business, relinquishing to the other all his interest in the partnership property, the remaining partner acquires the same dominion as if it had ever been his own separate property. The assignment being made in good faith, the title vests in the assignee as his own private estate, free from any lien or equity in favor of partnership creditors. Such assignee may lawfully transfer such property in payment of his individual debts.”

This case is cited, approved, and followed in Stanton, as Receiver, etc., v. Westover et al., 101 N. Y. 265, 267, 4 N. E. 529, where it was held one of two partners, on retiring from the business, transferred to his copartner his interest in the firm property, each agreeing to pay one-half of its debts. ■ The firm was solvent, but the remaining partner was . in fact insolvent at‘ the time. This, however, was not known to him or the retiring partner, and the transfer was made in good faith. In an [473]*473action wherein creditors of the firm claimed a preference over the individual creditors of the remaining partner, held that by the transfer the title vested in the remaining partner as his own private estate; that he acquired the same dominion over it as if it had always been his own separate property, free from any lien or equity on the part of partnership creditors, and that transfers by him of the property in payment of individual debts were lawful. And as to this case, see 10 N. Y. Annotated Digest, p. 814.

This is stated to be the law in Parsons on Partnership (4th Ed.) note 1 to section 248, on pages 330, 331. It is there said:

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Bluebook (online)
217 F. 470, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-suprenant-nynd-1914.