Stansell v. Fleming

16 S.W. 1033, 81 Tex. 294, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1355
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1891
DocketNo. 7025.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 16 S.W. 1033 (Stansell v. Fleming) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stansell v. Fleming, 16 S.W. 1033, 81 Tex. 294, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1355 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

STAYTON, Chief Justice.

Prior to January, 1886, J. C. Stansell and J. E. Pritchard were partners in a furniture business, but about that time the partnership was dissolved, Stansell selling his interest in *296 the firm assets to Pritchard, who, as between themselves, assumed all firm debts and executed to Stansell a note for $500, payable January 1, 1887. On. October 23, 1886, Pritchard executed to B. D. Stansell his note for $241.55, payable one day after date, and of this note J. C. Stan-sell became the owner at some time prior to January 12, 1887. On date last named J. C. Stansell brought an action against Pritchard on the two notes mentioned, and to secure their payment he sued out a writ of attachment that was levied on a lot of furniture belonging to Pritchard. During the continuance of the partnership between Pritchard and Stan-sell they purchased a stock of furniture from J. R. Fleming on credit, and therefor executed promissory notes aggregating about $3000, which were unpaid when Stansell brought this action against Pritchard.

When this action was brought Fleming, by agent, filed affidavit and claimant’s bond to try the right to the attached property, whereupon the property attached was delivered to him, and the claim and bond filed by him were filed in the District Court in which this action was brought, but subsequently he filed in this cause his petition in intervention, in which he set up the indebtedness of Stansell & Pritchard to him as would be necessary in an ordinary action against them; that they were insolvent, and that as a partnership creditor he had a lien on the attached property which he asked might be enforced. He also made known to the court that the steps taken to try the right to attached property were taken by mistake by his agent; that the same issues would be involved in such a trial as were presented by his petition in intervention, and for this reason he prayed consolidation, that the two actions be tried together, and that Stansell be restrained from proceeding to trial and judgment in the proceeding to try right to the property until this case should be disposed of. He also prayed for judgment against the firm composed of Stansell and Pritchard and against each of them individually for the sum due on the notes executed by them to him, and for a decree declaring and enforcing a lien in his favor on the attached property, because the indebtedness to himself was one created while the partnership between Stansell and Pritchard existed.

Stansell filed exceptions which questioned the sufficiency of the averments of the petition in intervention to entitle Fleming to intervene, but these were all overruled. He further denied that the property levied upon was partnership property or that Fleming had any lien upon it either legal or equitable, and alleged the dissolution in January, 1886, of the partnership theretofore existing between Pritchard and himself, and the sale of his interest in partnership assets to Pritchard.

By supplemental petition Fleming alleged that the sale by Stansell to Pritchard of his interest in the assets of the partnership was made to hinder, delay, and defraud the firm creditors; that the firm was at time of dissolution in failing circumstances; and also denied the fact of dis *297 solution, and claimed that the attached property as to him was still ■partnership property on which he had an equitable lien.

A trial was had upon the merits, without a jury, and judgment was entered in favor of Stansell against Pritchard for the sum claimed in the petition, but foreclosure of attachment lien was refused. The court thereon rendered judgment in favor of Fleming against Stansell and Pritchard as partners and individually for the sum due to the former, which declared and directed to be enforced an equitable lien in favor of Fleming on the attached property; all of which was directed to be sold and the proceeds applied to the satisfaction of the judgment. The judgment went further and enjoined Stansell perpetually from proceeding to judgment in the suit for trial of right to attached property against intervenor and the sureties on his bond given as a claimant.

The evidence leaves no question as to the reality of the sale by Stan-sell to Pritchard of all the interest of the former in the firm assets; the fact of dissolution was made known by publication of the fact in the newspaper of the town, and of it Fleming was not ignorant, for Stan-sell had sought to be relieved from liability for this firm debt, and Fleming had refused to release him and had failed to take steps to make his money out of the property in the hands of Pritchard, although notified by Stansell to do so as early as April 26, 1886, and of the fact that Pritchard had assumed the payment of all the firm liabilities.

Many questions are presented by brief of counsel for appellant bearing on the jurisdiction of the court to render a personal judgment against Stansell, and upon other matters which we do not deem it necessary to consider.

The important inquiry in this ease is, does the intervenor show such facts as entitled him to intervene in this action? To confer upon him this right he must have such interest in the subject matter of litigation as makes it necessary or proper for him to come into the case for the preservation of that right. Eecognizing .this fact, appellee asserts a lien on the attached property and states the facts from which this lien is claimed. He has no lien, as a vendor, on the property attached, even if it was shown that the property was the same sold by him to Stansell and Pritchard, for he sold on a credit and parted with the possession, but he asserts a lien because the debt which he seeks to enforce is a partnership debt, and the property, in part at least, once partnership assets. The pleadings as well as the evidence show indisputably that the partnership between Stansell and Pritchard was dissolved, and that this was consummated by a sale made by Stansell to Pritchard of all his interest in the partnership assets, the latter as a part of the consideration for this sale assuming liability for all partnership indebtedness of the firm,’ and for the balance executing one of the notes now sued upon. Such a transaction openly made could not operate to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors of the firm; for after the *298 sale, as before, any firm creditor could subject the property to sale in satisfaction of his debt through judgment and execution. During the existence of the partnership appellee, as a firm creditor, had no such lien as he could have enforced in the manner in which he now claims and seeks to enforce a lien; although through equities between the partners on acquiring a lien by levy of execution, or in any other lawful manner, his right would be superior to that of any creditor .of one member of the firm.

That partners by agreement between themselves and without reference to the wishes of firm creditors may convert partnership property into the separate property of one partner is well settled, and when this is done the right of the partner to have the property.subjected to the payment of firm debts as it before existed ceases, and with the cessation of his right goes every right in the nature of a lien the firm creditors through him had. White v. Parish, 20 Texas, 689; Rogers v. Nichols, 20 Texas, 719; Weaver v. Ashcroft, 50 Texas, 427; Swearigen v. Bassett, 65 Texas, 272; Kendall v.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W. 1033, 81 Tex. 294, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stansell-v-fleming-tex-1891.