Symms Grocer Co. v. Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co.

1898 OK 23, 52 P. 918, 6 Okla. 618, 1898 Okla. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 18, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1898 OK 23 (Symms Grocer Co. v. Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Symms Grocer Co. v. Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co., 1898 OK 23, 52 P. 918, 6 Okla. 618, 1898 Okla. LEXIS 90 (Okla. 1898).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Tarsney, J.:

On November 26, 1894, O. W. Crawford, James Shriver and Pearl Shriver, as partners, were engaged in mercantile business at Edmond, O. T., under *619 tlie firm name and style of Crawford, Shriver & Co. On that day the firm failed, and attachments were levied on the partnership property in the order and for the amounts following: Coyle & Smith, $352.85; Raney-Alton Mercantile Co., $158.75; Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co., $1,267.45; McCord-Collins Commerce Co., $282.09; Symms Grocer Co., $431.87; Barton Bros., $668.45; and Smith-McCord Dry Goods Co., $387.74.

The suit of Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co. was brought against W. Crawford and James Shriver,. and the summons and writ in said cause ran in the names of W. Crawford and James Shriver, as defendants.

On January 12, 1895, Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co. filed an amended petition in their cause against “W. Crawford, James Shriver, and Pearl Shriver, partners as Crawford, Shriver & Co.” None of the other processes or papers in the case were ever amended; no new summons or writ was issued and no service of any process was ever had in the cause against Pearl Shriver. None of the defendants appeared or answered in any of said actions, but judgments were taken against all of said defendants, including Pearl Shriver. By an order of the court made in the Burnham, Hanna, Munger case, the property seized under the attachment writs, which included all of the partnership property of Crawford, Shriver & Co., was sold by the sheriff and the proceeds, amounting to $2,605, was ordered to be deposited with the clerk of the court and held to await the further order of the court for its distribution.

Before the attached property was sold, Charles P. Kellogg & Co. began a replevin suit against the sheriff, who held the property under the attachment writs, to recover *620 a certain portion of said property, claiming' tlie same to have been fraudulently purchased by Crawford, Shriver & Co. Under this writ of replevin about $800 worth of the property seized under the attachment was taken from the sheriff, who gave a re-delivery bond therefor and placed the same back into the stock held under the attachments, and said goods were sold under the order of sale and were included in the $2,605.

On January 19, 1895, the district court made an order distributing the funds so in the hands of the clerk according to the priority of the liens o¥ the respective attachments, directing the payment in full of the judgments of Coyle & Smith, Raney Alton, Mercantile Co., and Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co., and that the balance remaining in the hands of the clerk should so remain to await the final determination of the replevin suit.

■ On February 4, 1895, the plaintiffs in error, who are all the attaching- creditors, (except the three first named,) filed a motion to vacate and modify the order of January 19, 1895, and on February 14, 1895, the said plaintiffs in error filed a supplemental motion, asking for an order vacating said order of January 19, 1895, and that the defendants in error be required to pay back to the clerk of said court the money that had been paid to them under said previous order. This motion was by the court overruled and plaintiffs in error bring the case here.

The defendants in error move the dismissal of this appeal for the reason that the original defendants, W. Crawford, James Shriver and Pearl Shriver, are not made parties to this proceeding in error. This motion cannot be sustained. While it is true that the failure to serve a case-made upon any one of the parties to an action, *621 who might be prejudicially affected by a modification or reversal of the judgment, defeats the jurisdiction of the supreme court and requires a dismissal of the proceedings in error; yet this rule cannot apply to this case, for the reason that Crawford, Shriver & Co. are not a party to this proceeding and cannot be affected by any order of this court that can be made herein. The only point in controversy between the parties to this record is with ■reference to the priorty of liens and the distribution of the fund among the attaching creditors. The amount of the fund being insufficient to satisfy all of the judgment creditors, a vacating of the order of distribution and a re-distribution, cannot in any manner affect the rights of Crawford, Shriver & Co. It follows that if their rights cannot be affected by this proceeding they are not necessary parties.

The substantial question in the case is, whether the court below erred in refusing to sustain the motion of plaintiffs in error to vacate the order of distribution previously made, and this depends upon the validity and effect of the proceedings had in the case of Burnham, Hanna, Monger & Co. against the attachments of defendants. It is conceded that those proceedings were commenced and the writ therein levied upon the property prior in point of time to the commencement of proceedings by the plaintiffs in error and before the levy of any writ in the actions commenced by them. It is conceded that the debt for which Burnham, Hanna, Hunger & Co. brought their suit, was a partnership debt due from Crawford, Shriver & Co., and was the joint and several obligation of each and all the members of said firm, and that the property seized under the writ in that case was the property of *622 said firm; but the contention of plaintiffs in error is that the proceedings instituted by Burnham, Hanna Hunger & Oo. gave, them no priority over the subsequent attaching creditors, for the reason that their action was begun and prosecuted against two of the partners only, whereas the subsequent attaching creditors began their suit against all three of the partners; that a suit against a portion of the partners is. simply a suit against them individually and does not constitute a lien upon the partnership effects as against subsequent attaching creditors whose action is brought against all the members of the partnership, as such; and plaintiffs in error rely upon the rule stated by Mr. Bates in his work on partnerships, secs. 1098, 1099, as follows:

“It is to be noticed that a creditor of the partnership, who has brought his action against a single partner or partners, and not against all, or who, having brought his action or obtained a judgment against all the partners, levies his attachment or execution upon the interest of an individual partner, is goverened by the same principles that apply to attachments or executions by the separate creditors of a single partner.”

Therefore, that as a creditor of the partnership, when he sues a single partner, or less than the whole number of partners, stands in the same relation to the assets of the partnership as does a separate creditor of a single partner, and as such separate creditor can only reach the interest of such partner in the surplus of the partnership assets, after all debts due by the firm have been paid, the defendant in error, Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co., is brought, within these rules, and their proceeding-only reached the right of W. Crawford and James Shriver to their share of the ■ surplus of the partnership *623

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1898 OK 23, 52 P. 918, 6 Okla. 618, 1898 Okla. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/symms-grocer-co-v-burnham-hanna-munger-co-okla-1898.