Peyser v. . Myers

32 N.E. 699, 135 N.Y. 599, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 825, 90 Sickels 599, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1655
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 29, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 32 N.E. 699 (Peyser v. . Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peyser v. . Myers, 32 N.E. 699, 135 N.Y. 599, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 825, 90 Sickels 599, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1655 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

It will be convenient to consider the validity of the preference to the estate of John K. Myers for the sum of $102,872, made in the assignment of the firm of Halsted, Haines & Co., dated July 12, 1884, irrespective of the claim

claim *602 that the preference exceeded the amount of the debt owing to that estate. The parties assailing the preference are creditors of the firm, whose debts arose subsequent to February 1,1882, the date on which Bentley became a member. The debt to the Myers estate preferred in the assignment, existed at the time of the admission of Bentley as a partner, except as it was increased by interest accruing thereafter. If the debt had not become the debt of the assigning firm, and there was no equitable right to prefer it in the assignment, the preference was void, because in that case it would be in contravention of the rule which forbids an insolvent firm' from appropriating its property to the payment of other than debts of the firm, or debts for which the members of the firm were jointly liable, to the prejudice of the firm creditors. ( Wilson v. Robertson, 21 N. Y. 587; Citizens1 Bank v. Williams, 128 id. 77.)

It is indisputable that an incoming partner is not as, of coiu'se, hable for the debts or transactions of the firm, and that he can be made hable in an action at law by the creditor only by some agreement on his part to assume such liabihty. The mere fact that he becomes a member of the firm creates no presumption of the existence of such agreement. The fact, however, may be established by indirect as well as by direct evidence, and may, in the absence of an express agreement, be inferred from facts and circumstances which justly raise an implication of its existence. (Serviss v. McDonnell, 107 N. Y. 264; Hannigan, v. Morrissey, 37 N. Y. St. Rep. 138; Lind, on Part. p. 208.) The facts in the record justify the conclusion that Bentley came into the firm upon'the tacit understanding that there was to be no break in the business, and the debt to the Myers estate was to be treated as the debt of the new firm.

The stock and assets of the prior firm went into the possession and ownership of the new firm. There was no inventory, and the business was conducted, after Bentley became a member of the firm, in precisely the same manner as before. Bentley had been a salesman of the preceding firm of the same name for several years. He brought no capital into the firm, *603 and the firm had no capital except that which was represented by the stock and assets derived from the prior firm. The debt to the Myers estate was credited to the estate on the books of the firm of 1882, and was credited with interest and debited with items for goods and money had by the executors from the firm up to the time of the assignment. On the 1st of January in the years 1883 and 1884, and again on the 11th of January, 1884, the new firm of Halsted, Haines & Co. rendered statements of account to the executors of Myers, showing credits and debits and the net balance due to the estate. It seems that Bentley, when he became a partner, did not examine into, nor did he know, the financial condition of the firm. He had nothing to do with the books, and while he knew that the firm was using money of the estate of Myers, he did not know the amount and made no inquiries. He testified that it was his intention when he went into the firm “ to take the affairs of the old firm as he found them, and go on with them as a member of the new firm.”

While it is doubtless true that Bentley joined the firm in ignorance of its financial condition, it is difficult to resist the inference that it was the understanding of all the partners that the debt of the Myers’ estate was to be treated and regarded as a debt of the firm. In 1884 Bentley joined in the execution of the firm assignment, in which the debt was preferred, and afterwards made no defense to an action brought by the estate against himself and the other members to recover the debt as the debt of the firm, in which action judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs. If it was essential to maintain that there was a technical novation of the debt and a substitution of the members of the^firm of 1882 as the debtor in exoneration of or in place of the persons originally liable thereon, in order to render the preference valid, the undertaking would encounter serious difficulties. Such a novation could only be effected by the agreement of the original debtors, the new firm and the creditor. It would be difficult to establish from the circumstances disclosed in the record that the creditor agreed to take the new firm as his debtor in place of the former members of *604 the firm (one of whom had withdrawn in 1879, and another had died in 1880). So also, if the case depended upon the application of the principle of Lawrence v. Fox (20 N. Y. 268), it would be difficult to find the existence of such a promise for the benefit of the estate of Myers made between Bentley and his copartners, as would support an- action at law by the executors of that estate against the firm of 1882, to recover the debt. But the doctrine now well settled that in case of the insolvency of a firm the joint property must be first applied to pay the joint debts, has its foundation in the equity that the credit given to the firm is presumed to have been extended upon the faith of the joint liability and on the fact that the property of the firm is in many and, perhaps, in most cases a fund derived in part at least from the creditors who have dealt with the firm in the ordinary course of business. The corpus of the firm property belongs to the firm as an entity, and not to the individual partners, their separate interest being only in the surplus after an adjustment of the partnership debts and accounts, and hence the right of individual creditors is the right of their debtors in such surplus.

This priority of lien of the firm creditors is not divested by a transfer by an insolvent firm of the firm assets to one or more of the partners, nor can it be affected as we conceive by any mere change in the personnel of the firm, as by the withdrawal of one partner from the firm or the introduction of a hew member. It is found and is undisputed that when Bentley became a member of the ’firm in 1882, the firm of Halsted, Haines & Go. was insolvent and had been insolvent from 1875, although the fact does not seem to have been known to the firm. The stock and property of the firm prior to and at the time Bentley became a member was subject to the equitable lien of the then existing creditors of the firm, among whom was the estate of Myers. This stock and property was transferred to the firm of which Bentley became a member. It was, as has been said, the understanding between the partners, inferable from the circumstances, that the new firm should assume the Myers debt, and when the open insolvency occurred in 1884, *605 this debt was preferred as a debt of the insolvent firm. In this we think there was no violation of any legal or equitable right of the intervening firm creditors. The Myers estate had at least an equal equity to payment out of the firm assets.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.E. 699, 135 N.Y. 599, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 825, 90 Sickels 599, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peyser-v-myers-ny-1892.