Waring v. Robinson

1 Hoff. Ch. 524, 1840 N.Y. LEXIS 307
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 16, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1 Hoff. Ch. 524 (Waring v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waring v. Robinson, 1 Hoff. Ch. 524, 1840 N.Y. LEXIS 307 (N.Y. 1840).

Opinion

The Assistant Vice-Chancellor:

This case involves a principle of considerable importance, viz., how far a partner, after a bill has been filed for a dissolution, an injunction issued restraining his intermeddling with the property, and a receiver obtained, may give a cognovit in a suit against the firm, and whether the judgment obtained shall have a priority against the assets of the firm.

In the case of Pratt v. Robinson, July, 1839, I decided that a judgment obtained adversely against the partners, was entitled to such priority. The reasons for that decision will appear in the present opinion.

It is well settled that one partner cannot, by bond and warrant, confess a voluntary judgment so as to bind another. The bond is an extinguishment of the partnership debt. (Green v. Beals, 2 Caines, 254. Crane v. [526]*526French, 1 Wendell, 312.) In the case cited, however, the Chief Justice says, that had French (the joint debtor who gave a confession) been actually brought into court by a regular service of process against him and his partner, he was of opinion that he might have confessed a judgment which would have bound the joint property. French, there, had endorsed his appearance on the capias after the return day. In Grazebrook v. McCreedie, (9 Wendell, 439,) a suit had been commenced by declaration, which was served upon Senior, one of the partners, but not upon McCreedie. The former admitted service, and authorized an attorney to give a cognovit. The Chief Justice, after stating that if the suit had been commenced by a capias against all the partners, and served upon one, the plaintiff might, by virtue of the statute, proceed against all; and noticing the case of Wakeman v. French, observes : “ Here, declarations were served on one partner, “ and service admitted by him to be good. In neither case “ was there a suit in fact regularly commenced. Had Senior, “ in this case, confessed a judgment in person by cognovit, signed by himself, the case would have been precisely “ similar in principle to that of Wakeman v. French ; it “ would have been a voluntary confession by one partner, “ and valid as to him, but void as to his partner.”

This case was decided in October, 1832. In the session of 1833, an act was passed, providing, that where an action against two or more persons, upon any joint obligation or contract, shall be commenced by filing a declaration, and it is served upon either, the judgment shall be against all the defendants, in the same manner as if all had been served with such declaration ; which judgment shall have the like effect, and execution thereon shall be issued, as if process against such defendants had been served on one of them. Under this act the case of Pardee v. Haynes, (10 Wendell, 630,) was decided, in which it was held, that where a suit was commenced against joint debtors by declaration, and it is served upon one, he may confess judgment, and bind the joint property of all the defendants, in [527]*527the same manner as if he had been served with process. See also St. John v. Holmes, (20 Wendell, 609.)

■ The fourth section of the statute, (2 R. S. 378,) enables the plaintiff to levy his execution out of the personal property of the defendant not served with process or declaration, owned by him as a partner with the other defendants served, or with any of them.

It is, then, clear, that the judgment and execution were perfectly valid to bind at law the joint property of the partners. But this cognovit was given by Robinson, and" judgment obtained after Smith, one of the partners, had filed his bill in this court against Robinson and Waring his co-partners, stating a dissolution, and praying an account. Robinson was enjoined in that suit from collecting, receiving, selling, transferring, or in any way using or disposing of any goods, debts, property or effects belonging to the firm. As to the injunction, it is, however, only necessary to refer to the case of McCreedie v. Senior, (4 Paige, 380,) to show that the confession of the judgment was- not a violation of the injunction.

Next, it is urged, that the filing of the bill, and appointment of a receiver, was a dissolution of the partnership, and that this precludes one partner from giving such a preference to a creditor in case of an insolvency. This point requires a careful examination.

In Law v. Ford, (2 Paige, 310,) the chancellor held, that where either party had a right to dissolve the partnership, and the agreement between them made no provision for closing up the concern, it was of course to appoint a receiver upon a bill filed for that purpose. That in such case the court would direct the receiver to apply the partnership property to the payment of all the debts of the firm rateably, without giving a preference to the favorite creditor of either party.

In Egbert v. Wood, (3 Paige, 521,) the chancellor says, that, although by the law merchant, the effects of a partnership upon the insolvency of a firm, were in equity considered a trust fund for the payment of partnership debts, and any of the partners might apply to this court [528]*528for the purpose of having the funds thus appropriated rateably among all the creditors, yet either of the partners before the dissolution, or all of them afterwards might appropriate the funds in payment of one creditor in preference to another.

In McCreedie v. Senior, (11 Paige, 378,) a bill was filed by one partner alleging a violation of the partnership articles, by applying the effects of the firm to their private transactions, and seeking a dissolution of the partnership, an injunction, and receiver. After service of the injunction, one of the partners confessed a judgment to a partnership creditor. The injunction prohibited him from intermeddling with the property and effects. The chancellor held that the injunction did not prohibit the partner, from giving a preference to a .bona fide creditor of the firm, and that the facts stated in the bill did not entitle the complainant to an injunction to restrain the creditors of the firm from proceeding at law to recover their just debts, or to restrain any member of the firm from confessing a judgment to such creditors, so as to give them a preference in payment.

It is undeniable that the authority of each partner over unclosed matters continues after the dissolution. A payment made to one, or any arrangement for a settlement, binds all. (Combs v, Boswell, 1 Dana's Rep. 478. Pritchard v. Draper, 1 Tamlyn's Rep, 332. Ault v. Goodrich, 4 Russell, 430.) But where a partnership was dissolved and a receiver appointed, notice of which was published in the gazette which circulated in the town where the defendant lived, payment of a debt to one of the partners was held void if notice of the appointment • of the receiver could be brought home to the debtor. (Manning v. Bricknell, 2 Hayward, 133.)

It is true, the appointment of a receiver in a cause, when a bill is filed for a dissolution, is not a dissolution. The authorities showing that the court will not appoint a receiver, unless it can clearly see that at the hearing a dissolution must be decreed, prove this.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Shafer Bros. v. Kite
406 A.2d 673 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1979)
Geo. W. McAlpin Co. v. Finsterwald
57 Ohio St. (N.S.) 524 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1898)
Jackson v. Lahee
2 N.E. 172 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1885)
Holmes v. McDowell
22 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 585 (New York Supreme Court, 1878)
Hooley v. Gieve
9 Abb. N. Cas. 8 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1878)
Williams v. Amsinck & Co.
38 Md. 345 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1873)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Hoff. Ch. 524, 1840 N.Y. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waring-v-robinson-nychanct-1840.