McGahan v. Bank of Rondout

156 U.S. 218, 15 S. Ct. 347, 39 L. Ed. 403, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2130
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 4, 1895
Docket104
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 156 U.S. 218 (McGahan v. Bank of Rondout) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGahan v. Bank of Rondout, 156 U.S. 218, 15 S. Ct. 347, 39 L. Ed. 403, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2130 (1895).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

*232 It is argued that' the Circuit Court should have held that the withholding of the mortgage from record invalidated it as against the creditors of the firm, hut no such defence to the mortgage was set up in the answer, and there having been no issue thereon below, it cannot be made in the first instance on appeal. ■ The decree of the Circuit Court refers to no such defence, and it is now too late to raise it. Nor do we find anything from which to conclude that the firm was given a fictitious credit by the conduct of Crane in this particular, or that the withholding of the mortgage from record amounted to a fraud upon creditors of which these defendants could complain. McGahan was not a creditor, but claimed to have been a purchaser after the mortgage had been recorded; D. B. Smith was not a creditor and was not misled; and there is no evidence in the record that any creditor dealt with D. B. Smith & Company on the faith that the three-fourths interest in the lands standing in Crane’s name was partnership real estate. The error assigned in this regard is untenable.

The Circuit Judge was of opinion that Crane held the undivided three-fourths of the lands in question in individual ownership in fee, unaffected by any trust, and that it was competent for him to make an absolute conveyance thereof in virtue of- such ownership. But, although the deeds were made to North, Crane, Tompkins, and Smith as individuals, and the purchases were made in severalty, and they held, and Crane and Smith subsequently held, as tenants in common, yet if an equity resulted to firm creditors because the purchases were made in furtherance of the joint enterprise, and the lands were devoted to its use, it seems to us nevertheless quite clear that the mortgage by Crane -of the three-fourths standing in his name to secure a partnership debt was valid, and could be enforced against these defendants.

The settled rule in this country is, that' where a deed is executed on behalf of a firm by one partner, the other partner will be bound if there be either a previous parol authority, or a subsequent parol adoption of the act; and that ratification may be inferred from the presence of the other partner *233 at the execution and delivery, or from his acting under it or taking the benefits of it with knowledge. 3 Kent, *48; Cady v. Shepherd, 11 Pick. 400, 405, 406; Peine v. Weber, 47 Illinois, 41; Frost v. Wolf, 77 Texas, 455; Schmertz v. Shreeve, 62 Penn. St. 457; Wilson v. Hunter, 14 Wisconsin, 683; Rumery v. McCulloch, 54 Wisconsin, 565; Pike v. Bacon, 21 Maine, 280; Russell v. Annable, 109 Mass. 72; Gunter v. Williams, 40 Alabama, 561; Sullivan v. Smith, 15 Nebraska, 476.

This is the accepted doctrine in New York: Smith v. Kerr, 3 Comst. (3 N. Y.) 144; Graser v. Stellwagen, 25 N. Y. 315; Van Brunt v. Applegate, 44 N. Y. 544; and in South Carolina: Stroman v. Varn, 19 S. C. 307; Salinas v. Bennett, 33 S. C. 285.

In Stroman v. Varn, the Supreme Court of South Carolina laid down the general rule that one partner might bind his copartners by deed if the others were present and authorized it, or if authority to do so was fairly inferable from the evidence of their conduct and the course'of business, and it was held, where there were four partners in a sawmill, two of whom owned the land, and one of the others mortgaged it in the name of the four and signed the firm name, that the mortgage was a valid lien on the land, the two owners having received the consideration and in many ways acknowledged and ratified the mortgage, and that a purchaser of the interest of one of the owners in both land and partnership after record of the mortgage was bound by its lien.

In Van Brunt v. Applegate it was held that a conveyance by one partner having the legal title to one-half of certain real estate, (the other half being in the other partner,) the whole of which was in equity partnership property, to a creditor of the firm in payment of a partnership debt, vested good title to such undivided half in his grantee, notwithstanding it was executed without the knowledge or consent of the other partner, the firm was insolvent, and its effect was to give a preference to the grantee. The argument that a partner holding the legal title of one-half held a moiety of it for himself and a moiety for his copartner was rejected, and it *234 was decided that a partner holding the legal title for the firm has the same power over it as over firm personalty, and that his conveyance for firm purposes passes the title free óf the firm’s equities; that if he were a trustee as to his copartner the separate deeds of both partners would leave one-half the tract unconveyed, but that a joint deed was not necessary to convey the firm title.

In this case the title to three-fourths of the lands stood in Crane. It is said that the legal title to Tompkins’ three-eighths (one-eighth having been conveyed by North to Tompkins and one-eighth to Crane) was never conveyed to Crane, but we regard the case made as sufficient in this respect. The bill alleged that Crane was “ seized and possessed in fee of all the undivided three-fourths of all those tracts and parcels of land,” and this averment was not denied in the answer, while appellants admit that Crane “ had the right to compel Tompkins to make a conveyance of the legal title.” No question arises as to a conveyance in the name of the firm, as, in order to apply this three-fourths in security or payment of partnership liabilities, a conveyance by Crane in his own name was required, and the mortgage was given by Crane accordingly to secure partnership notes and their renewals, as appeared on the face of the mortgage. ■ The character of the transaction was not changed because Crane may have desired to protect his own endorsements made for the benefit of the firm, nor by the fact that the 'mortgage, pursuing the legal title, happened to provide that any surplus after sale should be paid to Crane, “his heirs or assigns.” Moreover, Smith Avas not called as a witness, and although the testimony of the president of the bank tended to show that Smith objected to the giving of a mortgage in the name of D. E. Smith & Company, we concur Avith the finding of the Circuit Judge that Smith knew of the execution by Crane of the mortgage of the three-fourths, Avhich as betAveen them belonged to Crane, and accepted the benefits of the rene Avals secured thereby Avithout pbjection. The necessary conclusion is that-the partnership indebtedness to the bankAvas properly secured by the mortgage- as against other firm creditors, even if *235

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Bluebook (online)
156 U.S. 218, 15 S. Ct. 347, 39 L. Ed. 403, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgahan-v-bank-of-rondout-scotus-1895.