Johnston v. Standard Shoe Co.

24 S.W. 580, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 398, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 614
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 29, 1893
DocketNo. 89.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 24 S.W. 580 (Johnston v. Standard Shoe Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnston v. Standard Shoe Co., 24 S.W. 580, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 398, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 614 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

LIGHTFOOT, Chief Justice.

On January 31, 1889, the mercantile firm of Hunstable & Moore executed to appellant, John T. Johnston, their clerk, as trustee, a chattel mortgage upon their stock of merchandise and *399 fixtures, to secure certain debts therein named; among others, a debt for $3700 to the Blake Mutual Building and Loan Association. The deed of trust was duly filed for registration, and the trustee took ostensible possession of the property, and while in such possession it was levied upon by the sheriff of Dallas County, under a writ of attachment sued out in the case of the Standard Shoe Company v. Hunstable & Moore. The trustee sued the sheriff and appellee for damages for conversion of the goods. Judgment was rendered below for the defendants, from which the trustee, Johnston, has appealed.

The first four assignments of error, setting out objections to the testimony of the witnesses Clark, McCormick, Wright, and Doremus, are not well taken. The appellees had in their pleadings alleged that Hunstable & Moore were insolvent and being pressed by their creditors before the execution of the chattel mortgage, and that it was executed for the purpose of hindering, delaying, and defrauding their creditors. In such cases the courts have not been inclined to restrict too closely inquiry into the financial condition of the partners; the testimony was admissible.

The main question involved in the case grows out of the contest over the claim of the Blake Mutual Building and Loan Association, which was the principal debt, and about the only one which can plausibly lay claim to an acceptance of the mortgage.

The charge of the court complained of by appellant in his assignment of errors is to the effect, that if the debt of the Blake Mutual Building and Loan Association secured in the mortgage was not the firm debt of Hunstable & Moore, but the individual debt of William Hunstable, then the same would not avail against the Standard Shoe Company, who are shown to have been creditors of said firm at the time. This raises the important question, as to how far an insolvent partnership can prefer the individual debts of one of its members, to the exclusion of the partnership creditors.

A party who is insolvent may execute a chattel mortgage upon his property to pay his honest debts, and may give preference among his creditors. But a mortgage executed by a failing debtor with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud his creditors, is void as to any such creditor who has notice of such fraudulent purpose and assists in the execution of it.

The weight of authority holds to the doctrine, that as a rule partnership debts claim a priority of payment out of partnership assets before the individual debts of one of the members of the firm, unless it is made to appear that there is enough partnership property to satisfy both. De Caussey v. Bailey, 57 Texas, 669; Converse v. McKee, 14 Texas, 20; Phipps v. Sedgwick, 96 U. S., 3; Phillips v. Ames, 87 Mass., 184; Vernon v. Upson, 60 Wis., 418; Herman v. Hart, 55 Mich., 64; Patterson v. Seaton, 70 Iowa, 689; Brecher v. Fox, 1 Fed. Rep., 273; Goodbar v. Cary, 16 Fed. Rep., 317; Keith v. Fink, 47 Ill., 272; 1 Bates on Part., sec. 566.

*400 If a partner should attempt, without the consent of his copartner, to appropriate to the payment of his own debts a portion of the firm assets, it would be a fraud upon the partner whose assent was not given, and he could set aside such appropriation. In case of insolvency, the creditors of a firm, by proper proceedings, can set aside such wrongful appropriation of the firm assets. De Caussey v. Bailey, 57 Texas, 669; Converse v. McKee, 14 Texas, 20; 1 Bates on Part., sec. 410.

In the case of De Caussey v. Bailey, above, there was an attachment sued out against J. H. McCarty & Co., a firm composed of McCarty, De Caussey, and Anderson, and levied upon the property of the firm of De Caussey & Anderson, composed of only two members of the first named firm. One of the firm creditors of De Caussey & Anderson, having obtained an attachment against them, intervened in the suit, claiming the prior right to subject the assets to their debt. The court found the law against them, on the ground that there was no proof of insolvency, and because it did not appear that there was not enough property to satisfy both the firm creditors and those debts upon which they were bound outside.

In this case it appears from the testimony, that the firm was insolvent, and that the mortgage embraced all the assets of the firm, and was not enough to pay the debts. The mortgage was executed by Mr. Hunstable, for the firm; the other partner, Mr. Moore, did not testify in the case, and it does not appear that the mortgage was executed with his consent; but the right of a managing partner to execute a mortgage on the firm property to pay firm debts is fully recognized by this court in the case of Keller v. Self, decided at the present term [ante, 393].

How far a partner can go, by consent of all the partners, in mortgaging the firm assets to secure the individual debts of one of the partners, has been the subject of much discussion. In the case of Fitzpatrick v. Flannagan, 106 United States, 654, which is quoted with approval in the later case of Huiskamp v. Moline Wagon Company, 121 United States, 323, Judge Mathews says: “The legal right of a partnership creditor to subject the partnership property to the payment of his debt consists simply in the right to reduce his claim to judgment, and to sell the goods of his debtors on execution. His right to appropriate the partnership property specifically to the payment of his debt, in equity, in preference to creditors of an individual partner, is derived through the other partner, whose original right is to have the partnership assets applied to the payment of partnership obligations. And this equity of the creditor subsists as long as that of the partner, through which it is derived, remains; that is, so long as the partner himself, in the language of this court in Case v. Beauregard, 99 United States, 125, ‘ retains an interest in the firm assets, as a partner, a court of equity will allow the creditors of the firm to avail themselves of his equity, and enforce through it the application of *401 those assets primarily to payment of the debts due them, whenever the property comes under its administration” And in the case of Huiskamp v. Moline Wagon Company, 121 United States, 323, above, it is held that one partner, by the consent of the other, may appropriate the partnership effects to the payment of his individual debt.

There is no specific lien upon the partnership assets in favor of partnership creditors. The quasi lien, so often referred to, and about which so much confusion has arisen, exists only through the primary right of the other partner to have the assets of the firm so applied as to do justice to him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 S.W. 580, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 398, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-standard-shoe-co-texapp-1893.