Moline Wagon Co. v. Rummell

14 F. 155

This text of 14 F. 155 (Moline Wagon Co. v. Rummell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moline Wagon Co. v. Rummell, 14 F. 155 (circtwdmo 1882).

Opinion

Krekel, D. J.,

(charging jury.) The Moline Wagon Company, an Illinois corporation, sued Rummell and Cutler, in their firm name of Rummell & Son, in the circuit court of Putnam county, Missouri, on four notes and an account, and in aid of their suit obtained an attachment. Under this attachment the property in controversy, a stock of merchandise, was seized and sold, and the proceeds of this sale now in court is the matter in dispute. In the attachment suit between the Moline Wagon Company and Rummell and Cutler, Rum-mell filed what in law is termed a plea in abatement; that is, he denied the facts alleged in the affidavit made by the company to obtain the attachment. The law allows attachments to issue and property to be seized in cases only where debtors have or are about to deal with their property in an illegal way. The affidavit made by the Moline Wagon Company at the time they sued out their attachment, in appropriate legal language, charged that Rummell and Cutler had conveyed or were about fraudulently to convey, their property so as to hinder and delay their creditors in the collection of their debts. This charge Rummell denied. A trial which was had on this issue resulted in the sustaining of the attachment; that is, the charges made in the affidavit by the Moline Wagon Company that Rummell had fraudulently conveyed, or was about fraudulently to convey, the property in controversy to hinder and delay creditors, were true. Cutler, the defendant with Rummell in the attachment suit, did not appear, and thereby confessed the charges of fraud.

While this controversy was going on, Huiskamp Bros., a firm In Keokuk, Iowa, filed their interplea in the case, alleging that the property in controversy was theirs, claiming title thereto in two ways— First, by the mortgage which has been read in evidence; and, next, by obtaining actual possession of the property in satisfaction of their claim. The question, therefore, is, shall the Moline Wagon Company hold the property under the attachment, or shall it be adjudged the property of Huiskamp Bros. And this is the issue you are to determine under the evidence and the law as given you by the court. Both the Moline Wagon Company and Huiskamp Bros, claim the property as property of Rummell and Cutler; the Huiskamp Bros., in one view they take of their case, asserting that it was the individual property of Rummell.

It is an undisputed fact that up to January, 1878, Rummell and Cutler, under the name of Rummell & Son, carried on partnership business in which the partners were equally interested. It is claimed by Huiskamp Bros, that in January, 1878, a dissolution of the partner[157]*157ship of Bummell & Son took place, and that thereafter each partner, under the division of the property made, held property in their individual rights only. It is true, and you are instructed, that if you shall find from the testimony that a division of property between the partners took place, and that thereafter the property was held separated by each partner as individual property and not as the property of the firm, then each partner could deal with his own property as he chose; could convey or mortgage the same and deliver possession thereof to any one, without creditors of the firm having a right to complain. But if no legal dissolution of the partnership took place in January, 1878, or since, and the partners continued to hold the property in controversy as partnership property, bought, sold, and advertised it as firm property, such property remained partnership property so far as creditors are concerned who knew nothing of the division and who trusted the firm.

Under the view of the case last presented, you will have to determine whether there was a dissolution of the partnership. As already stated, it is an undisputed fact that up to January, 1878, a partnership between Bummell and Cutler did exist; that that partnership dealt in general merchandise, including farming implements, wagons, etc.; and that dealings prior to that time wore had between the Moline Wagon Company and the firm of Bummell & Son. The Moline Wagon Company had a right to presume that the persons once composing a firm, and who continue doing business under the firm name, are still partners, and that the partnership continued to exist until notice of a dissolution was given. No agreement or understanding between the partners, no division of the property of the firm, can relieve either the firm or the partners of their legal liability as to creditors who extend credit to the firm; nor are creditors who extend credit to the firm bound to regard public rumors, even if they heard them, if the partners continue the partnership name and avail themselves of the partnership credit. You are therefore instructed that the partnership between Bummell and Cutler, existing in 1878, continued to exist up to the time of the creation of the debts sued on by the Moline Wagon Company, unless public notice of the dissolution of the partnership was given, or actual notice of such dissolution was brought home to the Moline Wagon Company. If, under this view of the law, you shall find from the evidence that plaintiff, the Moline Wagon Company, gave credit to the firm of Bummell & Son, composed of Bummell and Cutler, then the firm and each of the partners are liable for the debt thus contracted. All of the assets of the [158]*158partnership, both merchandise, notes, and accounts, as well as all wages and property of the partnership, which Cutler may have handled in his division of the partnership, as well as all notes and accounts which Cutler may have taken, together with all property of the partners, in ease of insufficiency of partnership assets, are liable for debts created by the partnership. If yon shall find that the partnership once existing between Rummell and Cutler had not been dissolved, and the property in dispute to be partnership property then Rummell could not take -such partnership property and pay an individual debt with it, such as Huiskamp Bros, claim to have, and the mortgage read in evidence given them is void as against creditors of the firm.

We now come to the inquiry as to the good faith of the parties to the mortgage in making it. This becomes important in case you " shall find from the evidence that the debt of the Moline Wagon Company was a partnership debt; for in that ease the Moline Wagon Company, as creditors of both Rummell and Cutler, had a right to inquire how Rummell dealt with his individual as well as partnership property. Under the law, partnership property is the first or original fund out of which partnership debts are paid; but the individual property of partners is also liable for the debts of the partnership ; so that Rummell must honestly deal with'' either. A debtor in Missouri has a right, under the limitations of its laws, to pay, secure, or prefer one creditor over another, and in honestly doing so he commits no fraud on his creditors. Rummell had a right to prefer Huiskamp, and make the mortgage to secure an individual debt, and out of his individual property; but the transaction must be an honest one, and not donet to defraud, hinder, or delay his creditors. So far as the intent to defraud, hinder, and delay creditors on the part of Rummell is concerned, a trial of that issue has been had in this court, with the result brought to your notice by reading from the records. The intention of Rummell in making the mortgage to Huiskamp Bros, was found to have been fraudulent, but this of itself is not sufficient to make the mortgage fraudulent as to Huis-kamp Bros.

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Bluebook (online)
14 F. 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moline-wagon-co-v-rummell-circtwdmo-1882.