Posner v. Little Pine Lumber Co.

102 So. 16, 157 La. 73, 1924 La. LEXIS 2174
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 3, 1924
DocketNo. 26629.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 102 So. 16 (Posner v. Little Pine Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Posner v. Little Pine Lumber Co., 102 So. 16, 157 La. 73, 1924 La. LEXIS 2174 (La. 1924).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

This is a contest over the distribution of a fund in the hands of the sheriff of the parish of Rapides.

On February 4, 1920, J. D. Colbert, a member of the partnership known as the Little Pine Lumber Company, sold his entire undivided interest in and to the partnership to the remaining partners, L. R. Baker and J. W. Stell. The consideration of this sale, which was by notarial act, was $1,700, of which amount $1,000 was paid partly in cash and partly in its equivalent, and for the balance of the purchase price the purchasers executed two notes of $300 and $400 respectively. The note of $300 was paid. Plaintiff became the owner of the note for $400.

The notes evidencing the credit portion of the said sale were identified by the notary with the act of sale, which, among other stipulations, contained the following:

“It is declared by the parties that this purchase of Colbert covers and includes his interest in all of the property of the said partner *75 ship, whether specifically described herein or not.
“It is further stipulated by the parties that, in further consideration of the sale by the vendor of his interest in said partnership, the sa’id Baker and Stell assume all liabilities of the Little Pine Lumber Company, and release the said Colbert from all responsibility therefor.”

The real estate and the most valuable portion of the personal property owned by the partnership was described in the' act of sale, which was recorded in the conveyance records, ■ but not in the mortgage records, of the parish of Grant, where the property was situated.

Plaintiff, as the owner of the note for $100, brought suit against the makers to recover the amount thereof, and for the recognition and enforcement his vendor’s lien and privilege on the “undivided one-third interest of J. D. Colbert in and to the partnership of the Little Pine Lumber Company, and particularly in and to the following described property” (here followed a description of the property).

Attached to the petition was defendant’s confession of judgment, waiver of citation, and legal delays for answering, and consent to the jurisdiction of the district court for the parish of Rapides. On the day the petition was filed judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff as prayed for.

Subsequently, George C. Vaughan & Sons, Inc., claiming to hold, a conventional mortgage and a chattel mortgage upon the partnership property, to secure an indebtedness of $36,00.0, filed a third opposition, and, for various reasons set forth in the opposition, prayed that its mortgages be decreed to prime the vendor’s privilege claimed by plaintiff, and that they be granted preference on the proceeds of the sale of the property.

The district court rejected the demand of the third opponent, and ordered the fund in the hands of the sheriff to be paid over to the plaintiff. This judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit, and the case, upon the application of third opponent, is now before us for review.

In support of its opposition, third opponent is relying upon only two of the grounds alleged therein. These grounds are:

First, that the deed from Colbert shows on its face that it is a sale of the undivided interest in an unliquidated partnership, which does not create, in law, a vendor’s lien on specific articles of partnership property to secure the deferred portion of the purchase price of the sale of such interest; and

Second, that the said act of sale, never having been recorded in the mortgage records of the parish of Grant, is ineffective to preserve a vendor’s lien on the property described therein to the prejudice of opponent’s rights as a mortgage creditor on said property.

It is unnecessary for us to pass upon the second ground, since, in our opinion, the first ground relied upon by the third opponent is sufficient to grant the relief sought in its opposition.

The Court of Appeal, in the two opinions which it delivered in this casé, one on the original hearing and the other on rehearing, admits the correctness of the legal principle that the sale by one of the partners of his interest in an unliquidated partnership is not a sale of specific property or of any interest in specific property, and that, therefore, no vendor’s lien can be created by such a transaction. It holds, however, that the act of sale from Colbert to Baker and Stell evidenced a dissolution of the partnership and a liquidation of its affairs, and that the sale by Colbert of his undivided one-third interest in the partnership property was not the sale of an unliquidated interest in an unliquidated partnership.

If the position assumed by the Court of Appeal be legally correct, then every time one partner disposed of his interest in a partnership to his copartners it would con *77 stitute a sale of an interest in specific property, and operate as a dissolution and liquidation of the partnership. Such is not the law.

The Court of Appeal concedes that there is no evidence in the record showing that the partners made up a statement of the partnership affairs, setting forth its assets and liabilities, and showing the net share due each of the partners. It based its opinion that a liquidation had taken place “upon conclusions,” says the court — •

“Which we drew from facts which were admitted, or else fully established by the record rather than from any direct evidence on the point.”

And the court said further:

“The real trouble we encountered was because of the absence of positive evidence of what was done or intended to be done by the parties to the sale of Colbert’s interest.”

The act of sale, however, is unambiguous. The vendor therein, in express terms, sold his undivided interest in and to the partnership known as the “Little Pine Lumber Company” and consisting more particularly of the property which is then described. The deed, on its face, establishes the fact that the partnership was unliquidated, because the vendees therein assumed the payment of the debts of the partnership.

The Court of Appeal in its reasoning, by means of which it reached the conclusion that there must have been a settlement among the partners and a liquidation of the partnership affairs, uses the following language:

“ * * * Colbert and his two partners owned equal interests in the partnership, Colbert sold his one-third interest to his copartners for $1,700, and they a'ssumed the debts of the business. The net value of the property was therefore $5,100. Now, the total value of the property must have been largely in excess of this last amount, because the day of the sale intervenors loaned StelJ and Baker, Colbert’s vendees, $14,000 on the whole property, and a few months later increased this loan by $22,-000. It was impossible for the partners to arrive at a net valúe which each owned in the property, unless they cast up accounts of assets and liabilities. * * * In short, we think that the sale from Colbert to his two partners was in itself a liquidation and settlement of the partnership.”

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Bluebook (online)
102 So. 16, 157 La. 73, 1924 La. LEXIS 2174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/posner-v-little-pine-lumber-co-la-1924.