Liverpool, Brazil & River Platte Navigation Co. v. Agar & Lelong

14 F. 615
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 14 F. 615 (Liverpool, Brazil & River Platte Navigation Co. v. Agar & Lelong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liverpool, Brazil & River Platte Navigation Co. v. Agar & Lelong, 14 F. 615 (circtedla 1882).

Opinion

Billings, D. J.

The facts relating to the exceptions in this case are undisputed. This is a suit to recover upon a demand in favor of the plaintiff against the defendants as constituting the commercial firm of Agar & Lelong, domiciled and doing business in the city of New Orleans, and there incurring the obligation sought to be enforced. The partnership and each of the members have been cited, and have severally pleaded the want of jurisdiction in this court, on the ground that the plaintiff is an alien, and that Lelong, one of the defendants, is also an alien. It is conceded that Agar is a citizen of Louisiana; that the partnership of. Agar & Lelong was a commercial partnership, domiciled and doing business in the city of New Orleans, and composed of the defendants, Agar and Lelong, and that the obligation sued on originated there. It is urged, as legal consequences of these admitted facts, (1) that since the partnership of the defendants is in active existence under the laws of Louisiana, it alone can be sued upon a partnership obligation; (2) that since plaintiff and one of the defendants’ firm are aliens, the court is without jurisdiction as between the plaintiff and defendants’ firm.

I think the first proposition is correctly stated. Under the law of Louisiana a commercial partnership is an entity, capable of being sued, is brought into court as defendant by service of citation upon one of its members, and while the ultimate liability of the partners is in [616]*616solido, — i. e:, joint and several, — they, during the life of the partnership, cannot be charged individually except through the partnership; that is, during the life of the partnership a partner is, like a corpora-tor in a corporation, liable and made to respond individually only through a judgment against the intellectual being of which he is a component part. In Breedlove v. Nicolet, 7 Pet. 413, under circumstances exactly similar to those in this case, with reference to a Louisiana partnership, the supreme court maintained jurisdiction and gave judgment in favor of an alien plaintiff against two members of a partnership, though the third was not suable by reason of residing in Alabama. But this point as to the liability of the partnership alone in the first instance, and so long as its active existence continues, was not presented. . I think the proposition of law here presented must be maintained as resulting from our peculiar law, though it would be true in no other state of the Union. Elsewhere the partners are always individually liable, and the partnership as a distinct being cannot be cited. In Louisiana, during the existence of a commercial partnership, it alone can be sued for a partnership debt, and the citation may be served upon the firm by service upon the partner. The exception of the individual partners must therefore be maintained, so far as the attempt is made to sue them individually.

2. This brings us to the remaining question. In a suit by an alien against a partnership consisting of two partners, one of whom is also an alien, the partnership being domiciled in Louisiana, and the obligation sought to be enforced originating there, does this court have jurisdiction? I think it has. See Marshall v. Baltimore R. R. 16 How. 325, and Inbusch v. Farwell, 1 Black, 566. Indeed, under the provisions of the law of Louisiana a partnership is, so far as this question of jurisdiction is concerned, placed in the category of corporations. Both are creations of a state law, and' domiciled in that state. Both may have members who, by themselves, could not be brought within the jurisdiction of the circuit court. Nevertheless, the supreme court has finally settled the doctrine that state corporations, domiciled within the state by which they are created, are, so far as relates to the enforcement of rights of action by suit, citizens of that state, although some of the corporators would not be within the jurisdiction. Louisville R. R. v. Letson, 2 How. 554; Ry. Co. v. Whitton, 13 Wall. 283. The reasoning which leads to this conclusion, with reference to corporations, leads to the same conclusion with reference to Louisiana commercial partnerships.

[617]*617The exception, so far as relates to jurisdiction over the partnership as a defendant, is overruled, and five days are allowed in which to file an answer.

A partner’s interest in the partnership property may be attached or levied upon and sold on execution for his individual debt;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 F. 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liverpool-brazil-river-platte-navigation-co-v-agar-lelong-circtedla-1882.