Tracy v. Walker

24 F. Cas. 115, 1 Flip. 41
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio
DecidedNovember 15, 1861
StatusPublished

This text of 24 F. Cas. 115 (Tracy v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tracy v. Walker, 24 F. Cas. 115, 1 Flip. 41 (circtndoh 1861).

Opinion

WILLSON. District Judge.

This cause was heard upon bill, answers, replication, exhibits and testimony. The complainants are judgment creditors of the late firm of Walker & Ouland, of the city of Tiffin, Ohio. They seek, by this proceeding, to subject certain equities in the hands of some of the defendants, to the payment of their judgment.

The leading facts, disclosed by the record, are not controverted. In the fall of 1856, the defendants, Walker & Ouland, were a mercantile firm of good credit, doing business at Tiffin. They had purchased goods of the complainants, from time to time for cash, and on deferred pajrments. One of their notes for - $570.41, matured on the 15th of May, 1857, and was protested for non-payment. The complainants, becoming anxious about the safety of their claim, immediately called upon Walker for security, but failed to obtain it. On the third day of June, 1857, they again attempted to obtain security, and for that purpose sent their agent to Tiffin. Walker then and there made an exhibit of the affairs of the concern to this agent, in which he represented the assets at his disposal to be worth $54,500, and the liabilities of the firm of Walker & Ouland not to exceed $13,000, leaving an excess of assets over liabilities in his hands of $41,500. Upon this representation the paper was renewed without security. On the same day, to-wit, the 3d of June. 1857, Walker sold and transferred all of the aforesaid property and assets to his father-in-law, Josiah Hedges, and other relations, in payment of his own individual liabilities. It appears, that some time in the spring of 1857, Ouland sold to his partner his entire interest in the property and effects of the firm, and in retiring from the concern took Walker’s agreement to furnish him a bond of indemnity with good security, against the liabilities of the firm, which bond of indemnity has never been given. It further appears, that the complainants obtained judgment against Walker & Ouland in this court at the July term, 1857. for $684.25 damages, upon said renewed note. Execution was issued on the judgment in January. 1859, and duly returned by the marshal, but he found no goods, chattels, lands or tenements, of either Walker or Ouland on which to levy. The judgment remains wholly unsatisfied, and it is conceded that both Walker and Ou-land are insolvent.

It is insisted by the complainants — 1st—that the creditors of the firm of Walker & Ouland have an equitable lien upon the property and assets of the partnership, and that such property cannot be diverted to the payment of the individual debts of the partners, to the prejudice of the creditors of the firm. 2nd— That if such lien shall be held not to exist, it is nevertheless insisted, that the sale by Walker to Hedges and others was, in fact, fraudulent, and therefore void.

Mercantile partners are joint tenants in the copartnership stock and effects. Each has a specific lien upon the assets. This lien is not only applied to the property and effects [116]*116brought into, the concern at its organization, but also to everything coming in lieu thereof, during the continuance, or after the determination of the partnership. Upon a dissolution, the lien of the individual members of the firm continues, as well for the indemnity of each as for his proportion of the surplus. But, in strict law, creditors have no lien upon the partnership property for their debts. It is only worked out through the equity of the partners, over the whole funds, in a court of chancery. That the company property should first be liable for the company debts, and that joint creditors should have a priority or privilege of payment before separate creditors, are rights which the law secures to each and all the members of the firm. They may relinquish these rights to one and the other, or to third persons, or they may enforce them in a court of equity for their own benefit, or become the instruments by which creditors may, in like manner, enforce them for the benefit of creditors. Hence, when the primary rights of partners to apply the partnership property to the extinguishment of the company debts is gone, the light of the partnership creditors to enforce the application of the property of the firm to the payment of their debts, is also gone. That the general creditors of a firm before levy or seizure, have not. as such creditors, any specific lien on the assets of the firm, and that the preference of the company creditors over the separate creditors in the distribution of the joint assets, arises from, and must be worked out through, the rights of the partners to insist upon such application, are principles now too well established to admit of question. Sigler v. Knox County Bank, S Ohio St. 511; 5 Ohio St. 101, 516; 11 Ohio, 399; Ex parte Ruffin, 6 Ves. 126-129; Ex parte Williams, 11 Ves. 3; Hoxie v. Carr [Case No. 3,802]; Story, Partn. § 357 et seq.

Nor does the right of appropriation of the joint assets to the separate creditors, by consent of the other partner, depend upon the solvency of the firm. “Mere insolvency, as commonly understood, no fraud intervening, will not deprive the partners of their legal control over the property, and their right to sell and dispose of it as to them shall seem just and proper.” A contrary rule would produce incalculable mischief and great inconvenience, and would be attended with absolute injustice to bona fide purchasers of such property. But, it is said, that in this case, the legal right, title and interest of Ouland in the partnership effects, never passed to Walker', inasmuch as the latter failed to comply with his agreement to give bond with surety, against the company debts. And the objection is put on the ground, that the agreement between the parties was executory. The case of Ex parte Rowlandson. 1 Rose, 416, would seem to sustain this doctrine. In that case, after a dissolution and assignment of the partnership effects to one of the partners, a bill was filed by the retiring partner against the other, alleging fraud'in the non-performance of the articles of dissolution, and praying an injunction and receiver, which was ordered. It was held, that such interference of the court, arising from the non-performance of the articles, restored the property to its original character as joint property, unless the plaintiff in equity, by his conduct, rendered nugatory the effect of such interference. But in Young v. Keighly, 15 Ves. 558, where the agreement to convert separate into joint property was only in part performed, the court treated the conversion as complete.

It seems just and reasonable, that where the retiring partner thus sells and transfers all his interest in the joint property, to his copartner, who then assumes exclusive control over it, and disposes of it to bona fide purchasers, he should not be permitted to follow such property in the hands of third persons, but should be remitted to his action at law for a breach of the agreement. As between the partners themselves, when the property has not changed hands, a court of equity will always interpose and protect one of them against the fraudulent contract or fraudulent conduct of the other, and for that purpose will appoint a receiver, and finally adjust the affairs of the partnership. But what are the facts of the case in this regard? In the spring of 1857, Ouland sold to Walker his interest in the concern, including the goods in the store and the entire assets. Walker took exclusive possession, and exercised absolute control over them. He traded them off on his own account, paid company and private debts from their proceeds, without objection or interference on the part of Ouland.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 115, 1 Flip. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tracy-v-walker-circtndoh-1861.