Lenow v. Fones

48 Ark. 557
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 48 Ark. 557 (Lenow v. Fones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lenow v. Fones, 48 Ark. 557 (Ark. 1886).

Opinion

Cookiull, C. J.

The first question presented by the record [ is, are lands bought with partnership funds for partnership purposes to be regarded as realty or personalty under the laws of descents and distribution ? Or, to state the question with more particularity, shall Ella D. Lenow, as the wfidow of a late member of the firm of Eones Bros., the business of which has been closed and the debts paid, take her dower in the real estate assets of the firm remaining after the winding up of its affairs, absolutely, as in personal property, or for life, as in real estate?

1. Dower: In part* nershir real ty.

The estate is valuable, and the solution of the question is important to Mrs. Lenow and the infant heir of her deceased husband, as the interest of one will be increased or diminished at the expense of the other.

The question is presented for determination to this court for the first time.

The doctrine which obtains wherever the English system of jurisprudence prevails that “ equity converts real estate, held for partnership purposes, into personalty, so far as may be necessary to settle all the equities between the firm and its creditors, and between the partners themselves,” was recognized, in the language quoted, by this court in the case of Percifull and Wife v. Platt, 36 Ark., 456. But the court' have not, as we are aware, approached nearer the solution of the question. See, too, Drewry v. Montgomery, 28 ib., 256; Jones, McDowell & Co. v. Fletcher, 42 ib., 422.

This assumed conversion is an equitable fiction, devised for the accomplishment of equitable results and to carry into effect what is presumed to be the intention of the partners themselves; for when they put land into a commercial firm it must be taken that they intend it to be considered or treated as personalty, since commerce concerns itself with personal property- alone.

“If the partners mean to deal honestly,” says Kent, “ they cannot have any other intention than the appropriation of the investment, if wanted, to pay the partnership debts;” and so the law necessarily implies the agreement that the partnership lands shall be treated as other partnership stock. 3 Kent’s Com.,* 39, n. (b).

When there is an agreement between the partners for an out and out conversion and sale of the lands after the partnership affairs are closed, and for a distribution of the proceeds, equity regards the lands as personal property, not only for partnership purposes, but for distribution as well, upon the principle that what the parties have directed to be done shall be taken as actually done. Foster’s Appeal, 74 Penn. St., 391; Lowe v. Lowe, 13 Bush., 688.

The authorities are uniform upon these questions. But when the case goes further and is relieved, as this is, from any special agreement to affect the consideration of the ■question, and is left to stand alone upon the fact that lands are a part of the residue of the stock of a solvent defunct ■firm, the question whether they are distributable, like other partnership stock, as personalty, or converted into and descend as realty, is one upon which a great deal of learning -and more discussion, with much conflict of opinion, have been expended.

The doctrine that is drawn from the conflicting cases in the English courts, seems to be that the partners having evinced the design to treat the lands as personalty by putting them into the partnership stock, the conversion into personalty is presumed to continue for all purposes unless the contrary intention is in some way shown; and while the legal title upon the death of a partner will go in the ordinary course of descent without survivorship, yet the equitable interest will, after an ascertainment of its value by sale, be distributable, according to the supposed intention of the deceased partner, as personal property. Collyer on Part., 76; Gow. Part., 256 et seq.; 3 Kent, supra; Randall v. Randall, 7 Sim., 271; Bell v. Phyn, 7 Vesey,453, and note; Thornton v. Dixon, 3 Brown Chy., 166, and note; Buchan, v. Sumner, 2 Barb. Chy., 199.

American judges have entertained opposite opinions upon this question, but the stronger tendency in this country, and it seems to us more in keeping with the reason of the thing, is to limit the doctrine of equitable conversion strictly to the purposes which demand its operation. The doctrine was invented for the convenience and accommodation of trade, and when that purpose is accomplished in any given case, the reason for the rule fails and its operation ought naturally to cease. This would seem more nearly to attain the object the partners themselves aimed at. The basis of the principle of both classes of the conflicting cases is the presumed intention of the deceased partner. Hoxie v. Carr, 1 Sumner, 173, 183; 1 Am. Lead. Gases, sup. When men enter into an agreement of copartnership, or purchase land with partnership funds for partnership use, and omit from their' articles of agreement or' their deed of conveyance, all mention of facts looking-to the creation of a trust to reach out beyond the end of the commercial project they have in view, and which will work a sale of the lands and convert them into cash after the successful close of the joint enterprise, and alter the rule, of descent — to say that they had these results in contemplation when they have not been alluded to and were not necessary to the accomplishment of the purposes about which they have contracted, is to push the doctrine of implied intention to great length. But eminent judges have held to that view.

When the partnership is closed, the joint enterprise ended, and the equities of all parties concerned in it or interested in the joint stock worked out through the doctrine of conversion, why should not conversion cease, and the realty resume its natural character for those having no relation to the partnership ? AH partnership rights and obligations would thereby be secured, and “all equities growing out of that relation met and answered.” “ To require equitable interference to go further ” (say the Massachusetts court in Shearer v. Shearer, 98 Mass., 107), “and convert all real estate into personalty, for the mere purpose of a division, seems to us to be an unnecessary invasion of the rights of the copartners, and when undertaken in the interests of one class of the representatives of a deceased partner against another class of representatives of the same partner, it seems to he a departure from the legitimate sphere of equitable jurisdiction.

“ It is not the province of equity to seek to counteract or modify the operation of the laws of descent and distribution.”

According to the American cases, equitable conversion of real estate, in the absence of an agreement, goes no further than this. The mere circumstance that land is bought with joint funds for partnership use is not regarded as sufficient to convert it into personalty after the partner-' ship is closed and its affairs settled. This proposition may be taken as clearly established by the cases, viz.: “As between the personal representatives and heirs at law of a deceased partner, his share of the surplus of the real estate of the copartnership, which remains after paying the debts of the copartnership, and adjusting all the equitable claims of the different members of the firm as between themselves, is considered and treated as real estate.” Buchan v. Sumner, sup.; Foster’s Appeal, sup.; Shearer v.

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Bluebook (online)
48 Ark. 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lenow-v-fones-ark-1886.