In re Wells

298 F. 109, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 467, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1609
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 12, 1924
DocketNo. 6475
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 298 F. 109 (In re Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Wells, 298 F. 109, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 467, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1609 (S.D. Ohio 1924).

Opinion

HICKENLOOPER, District Judge.

For some time prior to the dates hereinafter mentioned Albert O. Wells and E. E. Wells, both of the city of Ironton, Ohio, were engaged in the transaction of a partnership business under the' name of A. O. Wells. E. E. Wells died on February 2, 1924, and on February 19, 1924, Albert O. Wells filed a petition in the court of common pleas of Lawrence county to have a receiver appointed to administer the-partnership property as upon dissolution, and one D. C. Davies was named as receiver by the .-state coyrt. On the same day Frances Wells, widow of E. E. Wells, was appointed administratrix of his estate by the probate court of Lawrence county. On February 27, 1924, A. O. Wells, not being satisfied with the expedition displayed by the state receiver, who had done nothing more than take formal possession of the property, filed his petition in voluntary bankruptcy as surviving partner. -Adjudication was made on February 27, 1924, and a trustee in bankruptcy was subsequently elected, who took actual possession of the partnership property; A. O. Wells, individually, being without estate. The trustee in bankruptcy is proceeding to administer the estate, and has advertised for sale, not only the partnership assets, but also certain real estate standing in the name of E. E. Wells.

Answers were filed in the case by Frances B. Wells, administratrix, and by the Iron City Savings -Bank, a creditor both of the partnership and of E. E. Wells individually, and on March 13, 1924, the Iron City Savings Bank filed its motion to dismiss the petition in bankruptcy on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction to adjudicate a partnership a bankrupt, where one of 'the partners had died prior to the filing of the petition and the partnership had thus been dissolved, and upon the further ground that A. O. Wells was estopped from filing a voluntary petition in bankruptcy by the fact that he had theretofore petitioned the state court for the appointment of a receiver to wind up the partnership affairs. This motion we construe to be a motion on behalf of, a creditor to. set aside the adjudication already made, and thereafter to dismiss the debtor’s petition.

Without commenting upon the apparent absence of right in a creditor of a proposed voluntary bankrupt to file answer im opposition to his petition for adjudication (In re Jehu et al. [D. C.] 94 Fed. 638; In re Ives [C. C. A. 6] 113 Fed. 911, 51 C. C. A. 541), and without passing upon the question of whether the attack in the instant case goes to the jurisdiction of the court, and the apparent absence of the right to have the adjudication vacated, except on a ground which goes to such jurisdiction (In re S. & S. Mfg. & Sales Co. [D. C. Ohio] 246 Fed. 1005, 1008), we pass to a consideration of the question principally argued, namely, whether a petition in bankruptcy can be filed by the surviving partner or partners, or against the partnership as an [111]*111entity, where one of the partners has died prior to the filing of such petition.

It may be conceded at the outset that one already deceased cannot be adjudicated a bankrupt, nor can the property of such /decedent be administered in the courts of bankruptcy. It may also be conceded, as was said in Francis v. McNeal, 228 U. S. 695, 701, 33 Sup. Ct. 701, 703 (57 L. Ed. 1029, L. R. A. 1915E, 706), that:

“If, as in the present case, the partnership and -individual estates together are not enough- to pay the partnership debts, the rational thing to do, and one certainly not forbidden by the act, is to administer both in bankruptcy.”

In this case the court also comments upon section 5 of the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. § 9589), saying:

"“But we do not perceive that the clause imports that the partnership could be in bankruptcy, and the partners not.”

This decision was not upon the identical point here presented, but upheld the order of the District Court, directing that the separate estate of a member of a firm which had been adjudicated bankrupt be turned over to the trustee for administration. We do not, therefore, consider the dicta last above quoted as precluding the possibility of the adjudication of a partnership in every case where one of the partners cannot be so adjudicated, or where the private estate of such partner cannot be administered in the bankruptcy court. It is upon the inability of the bankruptcy court to administer the estate of E- E. Wells that the present argument against the validity of the adjudication of the partnership, as such, is founded.

Section 1 of the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. § 9585) specifically provides that “persons” 'shall include partnerships; and section 5a provides that:

“A partnersbip, during the continuation of the partnership business,& or after its dissolution and before the final settlement thereof, may be adjudged a bankrupt.”

General Code Ohio, § 8088 et seq., provides the machinery for the conduct of a partnership business after the death of one partner, and for the purchase of the partnership property by the surviving partner; otherwise, a receiver must be appointed to wind up the partnership affairs. The precise question here involved is whether partnerships constitute such independent entities as to be siisceptible of adjudication without regard to the adjudication of the individual partners comprising the firm. In the case of Francis v. McNeal, supra, the court recognizes the firm as an entity “for certain purposes, the most important of which, after all, is the old rule as to the prior claim of partnership debts on partnership assets and that of individual debts upon the individual estate.” While it is there stated that, when it -can be done, the partnership and individual estates both were to be administered in the bankruptcy courts, the prime reason for recognizing the firm as an entity is not negatived, nor the advantage lost, if it be held that the individual estate of the surviving partner and the partnership estate shall be administered in the bankruptcy court, while the- estate of the decedent is administered in the probate court. In such event partnership [112]*112debts are given a prior claim on partnership assets, and the individual debts of the decedent upon his individual estate.

Nor does'the converse, that a partnership may not be adjudicated a bankrupt as long as there are solvent partners, in the sense that tbe individual estates of such partners are sufficient to pay their individual and the partnership debts, establish the rule that such partnership may not be adjudicated, except and unless the administration of the individual estates of the partners may be drawn into the bankruptcy court. Conceding that, if there be such solvent partners in the sense above mentioned, an adjudication will be denied (Vaccaro v. Security Bank [C. C. A. 6] 103 Fed. 436, 43 C. C. A. 279), yet we, feel that, in this circuit, at least, the courts are now firmly committed to the holding that a partnership is to be regarded as such an entity as to justify an adjudication of bankruptcy against it, as such, and irrespective of any adjudication of bankruptcy against its individual members. This position was suggested in the case of Vaccaro v. Security Bank, supra, at page 442 (43 C. C. A. 285), as a question which it was not necessary there to decide, and was subsequently expressly so held by Mr. Justice Burton (then Circuit Judge) in the case of Mills v. J. H. Fisher & Co., 159 Fed. 897, 899, 87 C. C. A. 77, 16 L. R. A. (N.

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Bluebook (online)
298 F. 109, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 467, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wells-ohsd-1924.