Ives v. Miller

19 Barb. 196, 1855 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 26
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 1, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 19 Barb. 196 (Ives v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ives v. Miller, 19 Barb. 196, 1855 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 26 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1855).

Opinion

By the Court,

Hand, P. J.

Ho judgment having been entered up, it is objected that the appeal is premature. The demurrer is to a part only of the answer, and leave to amend was given. I had susposed it to be settled that an appeal from an order would lie in such a case. (2 Whitt. Pr. 200, 2d ed.) And in this district, under, the 2d subdivision of § 349 in its present form, I believe we have invariably held that where a demurrer has been sustained or overruled, the appeal in all cases may be as from an order, if judgment has not been actually entered up. King v. Stafford, (5 How. Pr. Rep. 30; S. C., 6 Id. 127,) was an attempt to appeal from the decision of a judge, under § 247; and the reasons given in 6 Howard for the decision, and the case itself may, perhaps, be considered as substantially overruled by the court of appeals in Swarthout v. Curtis, [199]*199(4 Comst. 416 ; and see 3 Sandf. 723.) Besides, Bentley v. Jones, (4 How. Pr. Rep. 335;) and King v. Stafford, were decided before the amendment of § 340. The remarks of the court in Reynolds v. Freeman, (4 Sandf. 702,) and in Notten v. West. R. Co., (10 How. Pr. Rep. 97,) on this point, seem to me to be correct. And a different rule might sometimes be very inconvenient; as if a demurrer to a complaint to wind up an alleged copartnership, because it did not set out the facts constituting a copartnership, should be overruled, there would be the delay and expense of taking an account, and yet, on appeal, the demurrer might finally be sustained.

On the merits, I think the answer shows no counterclaim against the plaintiff arising out of a cause of action on contract existing at the commencement of the suit. (Code, § 150.) The defendant says, that the firm became indebted to him for the purchase of goods, <fec., and for board furnished and expenses and debts paid for the firm, $1000 ; and that the plaintiff is liable to pay one half of this to him, according to the terms and conditions of the copartnership. But he does not state that those terms and conditions were special, or what they were, and he asks for an accounting, and that what shall be found due to him shall be. allowed; and that such part thereof as the plaintiff shall be liable to pay, be set off in this cause. But he does not allege that the plaintiff owes the firm; or that any thing will be due from the plaintiff to the defendant on the first winding up of the copartnership concerns. In this respect, the answer falls short of that in the case of Gage v. Angell, (8 How. Pr. R. 335,) where it was averred, that on a settlement a balance was due from the plaintiff to the defendant. But with all respect for the able judge who decided that cause, and whose opinion contains all that can be said on that side of the question, I think, if this answer had contained such an allegation, it would have still been insufficient; I do not understand that one partner has a demand, debt, or counterclaim against his copartner before or after dissolution, until a final" settlement, where there is no fraud, nor an express agreement, nor any special circumstances. Bach partner has a specific lien on the partnership [200]*200effects ; not only for the amount of his share, hut for moneys advanced by him for the use of the firm beyond his share, and for money abstracted by a copartner beyond his share. (Perk. Colly. on Part. § 125, and cases there cited. Buchan v. Sumner, 2 Barb. Ch. 165.) Upon dissolution, each party may insist upon a sale of the property. (Colly. §§ 273, 313. Evans v. Evans, 9 Paige, 178. 3 Kent, 64. Featherstonhaugh v. Fenwick, 17 Ves. 309. Fereday v. Wightwick, 1 Taml. 250.) The funds and other assets are to be collected, an account taken, and all the creditors ascertained and paid. (Cary, 292. Perk. Colly. B. 2, ch. 3, § 4. Paynter v. Houston, 3 Meriv. 297.) On the final accounting, each partner is to be allowed, as against the other, what he has brought into the business; and may charge his copartner with what the latter has not but should have brought in; and with what he has taken out, beyond his. proportionate share ; and nothing is to be considered his share but his proportion of the residue or balance of the account. (West v. Skip, 1 Ves. 239. Cary on Part. 89. Colly, on Part. § 318.) The answer makes out no case for contribution ; and where that is not the case, and there is no special agreement, nor fraud, no action at law would lie, unless there has been a balance struck. ( Westerlo v. Evertson, 1 Wend. 532. Pattison v. Blanchard, 6 Barb. 537. Colly. §§ 284, 289. Smith v. Barrow, 2 T. R. 479. Butter, I, Fromont v. Coupland, 2 Bing. 170. Crass v. Cheshire, 7 Exch. R. 43. Gage v. Angell, supra, and cases there cited.) And, until the affairs of the concern are wound up, what one partner may owe the firm is not a debt, due to a copartner; nor is the indebtedness of the firm to one of the members a debt due from the other members to him. The rights of the parties were very clearly stated by Lord Cottenham, so late as in 1838, in Richardson v. Bank of England, (4 My. & Cr. 165.) That was a motion to compel a partner to pay into court a large sum, which it was insisted he had admitted he had drawn out with the consent of the partners, before dissolution. The lord chancellor remarked upon the ordinary use of the words “ creditor” and11 debtor,” as applied to partners who advance to, or draw [201]*201money from the firm by consent, and added: “but though these terms, ‘creditor’ and ‘debtor,’ are so used, and sufficiently explain what is meant by the use of them, nothing can be more inconsistent with the law of partnership, than to consider the situation of either party as in any degree resembling the situation of those whose appellation has been so borrowed. The supposed creditor has no means of compelling payment of his debt; and the supposed debtor is liable to no proceedings, either at law or in equity—assuming always that no separate security has been taken or given. The supposed creditor’s debt is due from the firm of which he is a partner; and the supposed debtor owes the money to himself, in common with his partners; and pending the partnership, equity will not interfere to set right the balance between the partners.” And again: “ But if, pending the partnership, neither law nor equity will treat such advances as debts, will it be so after the partnership has determined, before any settlement of accounts, and before the payment of the joint debt, or the realization of the partnership estate 1 Nothing is more settled than that, under such circumstances, what may have been advanced by one partner, or received by another, can only constitute items in the account. There may be losses, the particular partner’s share of which may be more than sufficient to exhaust what he has advanced, or profits more than equal to what the other has received; and until the amount of such profit and loss be ascertained, by the winding up of the partnership affairs, neither party has any remedy against, or liability to the other, for payment from one to the other, of what may have been advanced or received.” {

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Bluebook (online)
19 Barb. 196, 1855 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ives-v-miller-nysupct-1855.