Thomas Adams & Co. v. Albert

49 N.E. 929, 155 N.Y. 356, 9 E.H. Smith 356, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 881
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 22, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 49 N.E. 929 (Thomas Adams & Co. v. Albert) 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
Thomas Adams & Co. v. Albert, 49 N.E. 929, 155 N.Y. 356, 9 E.H. Smith 356, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 881 (N.Y. 1898).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The sole question in this case is one of equitable priority. The controversy is between the plaintiff and the defendant Midiólas Albert, each claiming the prior right to a fund in court which represents the proceeds of a stock of goods that on December 23rd, 1893, was owned by the firm of Albert, Haager & Company. That firm was composed of Henry Albert and Charles Haager, and on the day last mentioned was, and for some time had' been, utterly insolvent. On that day Henry Albert confessed an individual judgment to his father, Midiólas, for $50,000. On the 28th of December he confessed an individual judgment to the plaintiff for about $40,000. Executions were promptly issued upon both judgments to the sheriff and levies made upon the firm goods, that in favor of Midiólas being, of course, prior in point of time. The plaintiff, however, has claimed from the beginning that its debt, by reason of the facts and circumstances hereafter disclosed, had the prior and superior right. In order to avoid a sacrifice of the goods they were sold in *359 due course of business under a written agreement of the parties, and the proceeds deposited to await the result of this action, which the agreement contemplated and provided for.

While both parties claim to be prior creditors, the judgments, as we have seen, are not against the firm, but against one of its individual members. This seems to have occurred from the mistaken notion that the other partner had retired on the 1st of January previous to the failure and that the defendant in the judgments had assumed all the firm debts and had acquired all the firm property. But such was not the fact as clearly appears in this case. The firm expired by limitation on January 1st previous to the failure, but there was no actual dissolution, and both partners, in fact, continued as before in the business. The title to the firm property was not changed, and there was no assumption by either partner of the firm debts. In this situation the individual judgments against Henry became liens only on his individual interest in the firm assets, and as the firm was hopelessly insolvent, that interest was nothing at all.

. We cannot, therefore, perceive how these judgments' or executions play any material part in the controversy. Both parties are remitted to their original rights or claims against the firm property. They stand now in that respect where they stood before the judgments were entered. The party that then had the superior lien in equity upon the goods, if either, has now the superior right to the proceeds or fund that represents them. That fund is in court, and the purpose of this action is to determine and adjust the conflicting claims of the parties in law or equity. The written stipulation is broad in its scope and purpose, and requires the court to look beyond the judgments and determine what the equities of the respective parties were as against the firm property. Neither party has gained nor lost any right or advantage in consequence of the recovery of the judgments or the levies made under them by the sheriff. The case is controlled by principles of equity founded upon the law of partnership in the marshalling of th& firm assets and the adjustment of the claims of partnership *360 creditors. In order to apply these principles it is necessary to state some antecedent facts that appear in the case and that •are undisputed.

The plaintiff is an English corporation engaged in the. manufacture and sale of lace goods at Nottingham. The defendant Nicholas Albert came to this country from Europe about 1854. In 1867 he became a member of a firm in New York that was largely engaged in dealing in lace goods. When that firm was dissolved two years later, he formed a partnership with two other persons in the same business. This firm was dissolved December 31st, 1885, and he retired from business, and soon afterwards went to reside at or near St. Gall, in Switzerland, where he has since resided. His son Henry took his place in the firm, the other two members being the same persons who were in the firm when the father retired. The same private ledger that had been used by the old firms was continued by the new firm, in which the partners’ capital account was entered. When Nicholas retired and the new firm -was formed on the 1st day of January, 1886, his nominal interest in the business, as appears from this book, was $115,000, but the business of the old firm was never wound "up by any settlement or actual liquidation. This interest was ascertained by deducting the debts of the firm from the nominal assets. What his interest would have been upon an actual liquidation cannot now be known, and never was known with anything like accuracy.

But whatever it was it remained with the new firm. All that was done upon the retirement of Nicholas was to make certain entries in the ledger referred to, containing the capital account, by which it was made to appear that the son had an individual interest in the new firm of $50,000, and the firm itself the balance of the father’s interest. The father took no obligation or promise of any kind from the son or from the firm, and none was created otherwise than by the entry on the ledger. It cannot be doubted that it was the interest thus left by Nicholas in the business that gave and was intended to give the new firm, of which the son was the head, credit and stand *361 ing in the business world. The plaintiff had considerable -dealings with the old firms and continued to supply the new firm with a large part of their stock, which was^ always purchased on credit. The name of the new firm was the same as that of the old. In 1888 one of the members of the new firm dropped out, and this left the son and the other partner the sole members of the new firm, but no other change was made.

The interest of Nicholas still remained in the business, he receiving in each year payments or credits of various sums of money, representing sometimes six per cent and sometimes five per cent on what he left with the firm. This, with some other comparatively small amounts, was the only money that he ever drew from the business. After the retirement of the father the business was not prosperous. The new firm, especially in later years, was continually behind in their payments to the plaintiff, upon whose forbearance and credit the success of the firm largely depended. In July, 1891, the firm was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of about §50,000 for goods.

The managing director, feeling anxious and uncertain about the safety of this debt and the condition of the firm, visited Nicholas, the father, at his home near St. Gall. The condition of the firm with reference to its ability to pay, and the propriety and safety of extending future credits, was the subject of their interview. The father then gave to the plaintiff’s agent assurances which not only resulted in forbearance as to the debt due, but further credit. They differ somewhat now with respect to what these assurances were, but for all the purposes of the case they may be here stated in the language of the findings of the learned trial judge dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint, and which are based upon the testimony of Nicholas himself.

He finds that Nicholas said to the plaintiff’s agent, “ You need not have any fear at all. That is all right.

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.E. 929, 155 N.Y. 356, 9 E.H. Smith 356, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-adams-co-v-albert-ny-1898.