Thomas & Schmitz v. Schmitz

87 P. 996, 15 Wyo. 181, 1906 Wyo. LEXIS 13
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 P. 996 (Thomas & Schmitz v. Schmitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas & Schmitz v. Schmitz, 87 P. 996, 15 Wyo. 181, 1906 Wyo. LEXIS 13 (Wyo. 1906).

Opinion

Potter, Chief Justice.

The defendant in error, Anna Schmitz, brought this action in the District Court for the foreclosure of a chattel mort[184]*184gage, and incidentally prayed the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the property covered by the mortgage. An order was made appointing a receiver on the same day that the suit was brought. Before the trial of the cause the receiver so appointed had taken possession of and sold the goods and «chattels described in the mortgage, and pursuant to an order of the court had delivered the net proceeds, amounting to $874.70, into the custody of the attorney for the plaintiff below to be held by him subject to the further order of the' court, and thereupon the receiver had been discharged. At the trial, therefore, the controversy related to the rights of the respective parties to that fund, depending, of course, upon their rights respectively to the property from which it had been derived. The property originally belonged to Thomas & Schmitz, a partnership composed of J. H. Schmitz and J. M. Thomas, Jr., the former being the husband of the plaintiff below; and when the suit was commenced and the receiver appointed, the property was in the possession of Harry Beale, as trustee for certain creditors of Thomas & Schmitz, under a trust agreement or bill of sale excuted by that firm. The suit was brought against the firm in the partnership name, and Beale as trustee.

The trial court found generally for the plaintiff below, and that she had a prior lien upon the fund aforesaid, as the proceeds of the property covered by the chattel mortgage referred to in her .petition; and she was awarded a judgment against the firm of Thomas & Schmitz for the sum of $1,170, the amount found to be due upon the note, to secure which the alleged mortgage was given, together with one hundred dollars attorney fee; and the custodian of the fund was ordered to surrender the same to the plaintiff, to be applied on the judgment, as the proceeds of the sale of the property covered by her mortgage.

The defendants below bring 'the case here on error. Schmitz did not appear to the action in the court below. Separate answers were filed by Harry Beale, as trustee, and by J. M. Thomas, Jr., on his own behalf and on behalf of the firm, each answer denying any indebtedness from [185]*185the firm to the plaintiff, and- alleging the invalidity of the mortgage.

The face amount of the note and mortgage under which plaintiff claims is $3,950, but the note bears the following endorsement: “Credit by note given on or about Dec. 20th, 1903, for $2,950.” Mrs. Schmitz explained this by stating that she had agreed to advance money to assist the firm in paying its creditors, and had advanced one thousand dollars when the note was made; but on or about December 20, not having furnished more, she gave the firm a note for $2,950, to cover the difference between the face of the note and the one thousand dollars advanced by her, which note was handed to and retained by Thomas.

The note and mortgage were each dated November 6, 1903. The note appears to have been signed in the firm name of Thomas & Schmitz by J. H. Schmitz, and by J. M. Thomas, Jr., although the latter did not sign it until some time in December. The mortgage recites upon its face that it is given by Thomas & Schmitz by J. H. Schmitz, a member of said firm, and it is signed “Thomas & Schmitz by J. H. Schmitz,” and J. H. Schmitz alone acknowledged its execution. Thomas did not sign the instrument in any manner, nor did he acknowledge it. Not having been signed or acknowledged by Thomas, a member of the partnership, it was charged in the separate answers and is here contended that the mortgage is void.

Section 2808, Revised Statutes of 1899, provides: “It shall be necessary for each and every member of a co-partnership to execute and acknowledge a mortgage, bond, conveyance or other instrument intended to operate as a chattel mortgage for and on behalf of the co-partnership; Provided, That a chattel mortgage may be given to a co-partnership in its co-partnership name without enumerating the several members thereof.”

Section 2810 provides: “A chattel mortgage given to a co-partnership shall only be released, satisfied and discharged or assigned, transferred and set over, either by endorsement upon the original instrument or by an instru[186]*186ment executed and acknowledged by each and every member of the co-partnership.”

This court had occasion to consider Section 2808, above quoted, in the case of Lellman et al. v. Mills, Trustee, decided at the present term, and it was held that, by reason of that statute, a chattel mortgage executed by one partner alone did not create a lien upon the partnership property. As said in the opinion in that case, the clear effect of the statute is to deprive a partner of any power as such to alone act for the firm in executing a chattel mortgage. It restricts the general agency of the partner in that particular, and, therefore, takes away the only support of the rule prevailing in some jurisdictions that one partner may make a valid chattel mortgage of partnership property to secure a partnership debt without the concurrence or consent of his co-partners. The statute, indeed, goes further than that, and in effect denies the power of a partner to execute such an instrument even with the consent of his co-partner, unless the latter shall also by signing the same join in the execution thereof.

It is contended that Thomas had authorized, or at least had afterwards ratified, the making of the mortgage by Schmitz, and we suppose that the District Court so found. Previous authority or subsequent ratification was not, however, admitted by Thomas; but it is not necessary that we consider the evidence upon that subject, for clearly, we think, the statute eliminates such a question from the case. It was not competent for Thomas to authorize his partner to alone execute the mortgage, or to sign it in the firm name, so as to render it a binding instrument upon the firm property, without his signature, and, therefore, subsequent ratification or attempted ratification on his part would be equally unavailing. The statute does not provide that a chattel mortgage may be executed by one partner alone, or in the firm name, with the consent or authority of his co-partner. If it did, then without previous authority suelvan act might be ratified. No doubt Thom'as could afterwards have signed and acknowledged the instrument, and thus [187]*187have joined in its execution in the method pointed out by statute. And we suppose that one partner may by a properly executed power of attorney authorize a co-partner as well as another person to sign his name to such an instrument and acknowledge it for him. But neither of these things were done. The statute does not permit one partner to authorize a partnership chattel mortgage to be executed in the firm name, without the signature of all the partners, nor to ratify a mortgage so executed so as to make it a valid lien upon firm property. On the contrary, it expressly and plainly requires the signature of “each and every member” of the co-partnership to an instrument intended to operate as a chattel mortgage “for and on behalf of the co-partnership.” Something more than mere authority or consent is made necessarjc Each partner is required to sign the mortgage, and it is not perceived that 'the statute can be construed as permitting the consent of a partner to the execution of such an instrument to be expressed in any other manner than by signing it.

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Related

Sterling Lumber Co. v. Thompson
41 P.2d 264 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1935)
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92 P. 624 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
87 P. 996, 15 Wyo. 181, 1906 Wyo. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-schmitz-v-schmitz-wyo-1906.