Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. v. Walston

187 N.C. 817
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 31, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 187 N.C. 817 (Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. v. Walston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. v. Walston, 187 N.C. 817 (N.C. 1924).

Opinion

Plaintiff’s appeal.

Stacy, J.

There are only two questions presented by plaintiff’s appeal, and they arise upon the following exceptions and assignments of error:

“1. For that his Honor erred in holding that the claim of plaintiff is allowable against the estate of W. M. Moore only to the extent of the balance due thereon after crediting dividends received in settlement of the partnership estate of Corbett & Moore.
“2. For that his Honor erred in holding that the defendant, Sue E. Moore, has not waived her dower right.”

It is the general rule in equity that partnership creditors are entitled to have the partnership assets first applied to the payment of the debts of the partnership, and the separate and private creditors of the individual partners are entitled to have the separate and private estate of the partners, with whom they have made individual contracts, first applied to their debts. The individual property of the respective partners is not to be applied in extinguishment of partnership liabilities until the separate and individual creditors of said partners have been satisfied, so that neither class of creditors may be allowed to trespass on the fund primarily liable to the, other, until the claims of that other shall have been paid in full. Thus, only the excess of either fund would go in aid of the other; and this' upon the principle that joint creditors should first look to the joint estate, and individual creditors to the separate estate of the partners, as joint creditors have presumably ex[821]*821tended credit upon the faith of the firm assets and the individual creditors on the faith of the separate .estates of the respective partners. Hassell v. Griffin, 55 N. C., 117; 20 R. C. L., 1026.

But this reasoning does not obtain with respect to general partners where, by statute, as with us, they are made jointly and severally liable for the debts of the partnership, for the very good reason that the force and effect of the statute, to all intents and purposes, is to convert the creditors of the firm into individual creditors of each member of the partnership. C. S., 3259; Norfleet v. Ins. Co., 160 N. C., 327; Allen v. Grissom, 90 N. C., 90; Mode v. Penland, 93 N. C., 292; Hassell v. Griffin, supra. Hence, where the liability of partners is both joint and several, the inference is entirely permissible, and so understood among our merchants and in business circles, that credit is extended quite as often upon the reputed solvency of the individual members of a partnership, as upon the strength of the assets of the firm.

Speaking to this question in Rankin v. Jones, 55 N. C., 169, Pearson, J., said: “In Hassell v. Griffin, ante, 117, it is decided that the English doctrine, i. e., where, in consequence of the death or bankruptcy of a partner, a fund composed of the effects of the firm and individual effects is to be applied under the direction of a court of equity, the firm creditors are first to be paid out of the effects of the firm and the individual creditors out of the individual effects, the excess of either fund, if any, going in aid of the other, is so far affected by our statute making all contracts joint and several, and giving an action at law against the personal representative of a deceased joint obligor, that in this State individual creditors hav$ no equity to insist that the individual effects shall be first applied to the payment of their debts. Whether the other branch of this doctrine obtains here, so as to give firm creditors an equity in regard to firm effects, is a question that we are not now called on to decide, because the doctrine, even in England, is not applicable to a ease like that now under consideration.”

And in Hassell v. Griffin, 55 N. C., p. 119, the same learned Justice further observed: “So, according to our law, a creditor of the firm is under no necessity of coming into equity, and of course the court of equity has no right to impose any terms upon him; and it is also a matter of course that a court of equity cannot, at the instance of an individual creditor, interfere and direct that the two funds should be applied, the one to pay firm debts in the first instance and the other to pay individual debts in the first instance, and the surplus of either fund to come in aid, for the plain reason that by the force and effect of the statute a creditor of the firm is made, to all intents and purposes, an individual creditor of each member of the firm.

[822]*822“It being tbe pleasure of tbe makers of our law to put tbe creditor of a firm upon tbe footing both of a creditor of tbe firm and a creditor of eacb and every one of tbe members of tbe firm, tbe English doctrine can bave no application, for tbe very ground upon wbicb it is built is taken away, and a creditor of a firm, under our law, must be supposed to deal as well upon tbe credit of eacb member of tbe firm as of that of tbe firm, because be bas a direct legal remedy against eacb and all of tbem.”

Where tbe liability of general partners is joint and several, and tbe firm assets are not sufficient to pay tbe firm debts, tbe creditors of tbe partnership are entitled to bave their claims allowed in full, both as against tbe assets of tbe firm and also as against tbe individual assets of a partner, to the end that they may thus concurrently enforce tbe two liabilities and obtain their ratable share- of eacb fund. See In re Peck, 206 N. Y., 55. This rule is stated by Walker, J., in Chemical Co. v. Edwards, 136 N. C., p. 76, as follows: “If a.creditor bas a right to resort to a fund wbicb is open to him alone, be shall not be thereby precluded from coming in upon tbe assets of an insolvent estate wbicb are common to all tbe creditors of tbe deceased debtor and obtaining a dividend on tbe full amount of bis debt, subject to tbe common sense and necessary qualification that be does not receive more than tbe sum due.”

It follows, therefore, that plaintiff’s first exception, to tbe extent above indicated, must be sustained.

As to whether tbe individual and private creditors of tbe deceased partner, W. M. Moore, are entitled to share ratably with tbe creditors of tbe partnership in the deceased partner’s interest in tbe firm assets, as well as in tbe separate assets of tbe estate of tbe deceased partner, is not before us for decision, -and. we refrain from any discussion of tbe matter. A determination of this question would call for a consideration of tbe rights of tbe surviving partner as well as those of tbe firm creditors, and tbe point is not raised by any exception appearing on tbe present record.

Plaintiff’s second exception and assignment of error must be overruled as there is nothing in tbe facts agreed to show any waiver, on tbe part of Sue K. Moore, widow of W. M. Moore, of her right to dower. Trust Co. v. Stone, 176 N. C., 270; Lee v. Giles, 161 N. C., 541.

Error.

DEFENDANTS’ APPEAL.

Staoy, J. The questions presented by tbe appeal of tbe defendants arise upon tbe following exceptions and assignments of error:

“1. For that bis Honor erred in bolding that tbe claim of Yirginia-Carolina Chemical Company against tbe partnership of Corbett & Moore [823]

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Bluebook (online)
187 N.C. 817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-carolina-chemical-co-v-walston-nc-1924.