Robertson v. Miller

20 F. Cas. 946, 1 Brock. 466, 1820 U.S. App. LEXIS 253
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia
DecidedNovember 27, 1820
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 F. Cas. 946 (Robertson v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robertson v. Miller, 20 F. Cas. 946, 1 Brock. 466, 1820 U.S. App. LEXIS 253 (circtdva 1820).

Opinion

MARSHALL, Circuit Justice.

William Brown, a citizen of Virginia, and Boyd Miller, a British subject, entered into partnership, and carried on trade and commerce, by the name of “William Brown & Co.” During the partnership, William Brown purchased a house and lot in Lynchburg, with the funds and for the benefit of the company, but took the conveyance to himself. Some time in the year 1811, William Brown departed this life, having first made his last will in writing, which was properly recorded in February, 1812; by which, after certain legacies, his estate was devised to his relations in Scotland, who are British subjects. By this devise, the interest of William Brown, in the house and iot in Lynchburg, passes to the devisees, subject to any claim Boyd Miller may have upon it, as surviving partner. Boyd Miller became a resident of Virginia, and in November, 1S15, while a resident, sold the house and lot in Lynch-burg, to Archibald Robertson, the complainant. for $8,000. A suit was, at that time, depending in this court, brought by the executors of William Brown, against Boyd Miller and others, to which the devisees and legatees of William Brown were afterwards made parties, for a settlement of partnership transactions, and a distribution of the partnership fund. In this suit, it is understood, that the sum for which the house and lot in Lynchburg sold, was considered as one item in the total amount of the fund. Boyd Miller was decreed, as surviving partner, to. pay to the representatives of William Brown, the sum of $225.204.04, with interest, and, of course, became entitled to the partnership effects. Archibald Robertson, the purchaser of [947]*947tlie house and lot in Lynchburg, after paying the whole purchase-money, except. $1,717.78, became apprehensive, that the property had become escheatable to the commonwealth, and that the title conveyed to him, by Boyd Hiller, was not a good one. Under this apprehension, he has filed his bill, praying that the title may be considered; that if it is a good one, the eseheator may be enjoined from instituting proceedings of escheat: and that, if it is not a good one, Boyd Miller may be decreed to refund the purchase-money, and may be enjoined from all proceedings to collect the residue. The answer of Boyd Miller admits the several allegations of the bill, and contends, that the proceeds of the said house and lot have been rightly applied, under orders of this court, to the payment of partnership debts. There has been no explicit direction of the court on this subject, nor has any question on it ever before been made. The only points decided by the court are, that the debts of the company should be paid, and that the residue of its property should be divided according to the articles of co-partner}’, which had expired, but under which the parties had continued to act. This question, therefore, is still open, and ought to be determined on the principles which would have applied to it, had it been made in November, 1815. William Brown, having held the legal title to the property in question, in trust for the firm, it will be considered, in a court of equity, as if the conveyance had been made to the firm; and the inquiry will be, what is the operation of the law of escheat, upon such property, where one of the partners is an alien?

If an alien merchant, who is alone, purchases a house and lot for the purposes of trade, either in fee. or for life, that house and lot are escheatable; and I can see no reason, if he be a member of a firm, why his interest should not be escheatable. The commercial law does not extend its protection to real estate acquired by alien merchants. The debts of the firm may attach on his interest, as his own private debts would attach on his own private estate, but no farther; that is, I presume, that what remained after exhausting his personal, might charge his real estate. This would, I presume, be the rule, in the case of an estate at law; and a court of equity, in the absence of peculiar circumstances, would follow the rule of law. In the lifetime of William Brown, a court of equity would have subjected the interest of Boyd Miller to the claim of the commonwealth, chargeable, only, with such debts as the personal fund of the company was insufficient to pay. On the death of William Brown, the whole legal estate passed to aliens, and became escheatable. Would the property, if then escheated, have been chargeable with the debts of the company? However this may be had there been no other effects for the payment of debts, I know of no law or principle which would subject this real property to the payment of debts, in exoneration of the personal fund. In this view of the subject, the fact that the escheat has not taken place, can make no difference. If a court of equity would not interfere, to subject the proceeds of escheated land to the jjayment of debts in exoneration of the personal fund, neither, I presume, would it interfere to order the sale of escheatable land, and the application of the proceeds to the discharge of that fund. 2 If, then, there was nothing peculiar in the articles of copartnership, the real estate, composing a part of the capital stock of the firm, would, on the death of some of the partners, pass by the will of the decedents, or go in moieties to the two partners, subject to the title of the commonwealth, which, charged with the payment of debts, would act on each moiety, according to the law, as applicable to that party. Both being aliens, both moieties would be es-cheatable.3

But it is contended by the defendants, that the articles of copartnery, in this case, transfer the whole property to the survivor. The articles of copartner}' were entered into on the 14th da}- of April, 1S03, between Boyd Miller, William Brown, and John M'Oredie, and were to continue in force for four years from the 1st day of September, 1803, and might “be renewed by the joint consent of the whole, in writing, given one year before the expiration.” The books were to be balanced in the month of September, in each year, and an inventory of all their effects, with a true state .of all their affairs, was then to be made out. In the fourth article, it is agreed, that “in case of the death or bankruptcy of any of the said parties, in order to prevent any altercation with the heirs, executors, administrators, or assignees of the deceased, or bankrupt, it is agreed, that the shares of the profits, as well as capital of the deceased or bankrupt, shall be paid by the survivors or solvents, agreeable to the yearly statement of the company’s affairs, prior to [948]*948his death or bankruptcy,” &c. It is very material to settle the extent of this article. If it be an agreement, to transfer the real and personal estate of the company, to the surviving, or solvent partner or partners, entitling the representatives of the deceased, or the insolvent to “his share of the profits, as well as capital,” “agreeable to the yearly statement of the company’s affairs, prior to the death or bankruptcy,” then it is equivalent to an agreement, that the right of sur-vivorship shall take place between the parties, as to the subject itself, giving the assignees of the bankrupt, or the representatives of the deceased partner, his share of the capital, and profits according to the last yearly statement, instead of that interest to which, independent of special compact, he would be entitled by law. It is the substitution of a rule, by the act of the parties, for that rule which the law makes, where the parties are silent.

After the best consideration I can give the subject, I am in favour of this construction for several reasons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 946, 1 Brock. 466, 1820 U.S. App. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-miller-circtdva-1820.