Williams v. Gillespie

5 S.E. 210, 30 W. Va. 586, 1888 W. Va. LEXIS 2
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 5 S.E. 210 (Williams v. Gillespie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Gillespie, 5 S.E. 210, 30 W. Va. 586, 1888 W. Va. LEXIS 2 (W. Va. 1888).

Opinion

SNYDER, Judge:

On August 24,1882, B. P. Williams executed and delivered to 1. T. Gillespie, for Gillespie & Lindsay, a writing in the words following: “ I have this day sold to the firm of Gillespie & Lindsay all the poplar, from 22 inches up to the largest size, on a boundary of land shown to I. T. Gillespie and Wm. Oalfee; also all the walnut in the same boundary; with the privilege of a mill-site, and the right of way through his land for the hauling of other timber to said mill-site, and the moving of the lumber when manufactured to the line of the East River R. R., free of charge to the said Gillespie & Lindsay. Eor which the said Gillespie & Lindsay agree to pay the sum of $230.00, all of which is to be paid as the timber is taken off said land. ” Soon after the date of this contract, Thomas E. Gillespie, the acting partner of the firm of Gillespie & Lindsay, placed a saw-mill upon the land, and began and continued to cut the timber from the land, and remove it to tlieir mill, where it was manufactured into lumber, and stacked upon the premises. One dollar was paid on the timber at the date of the contract, and the residue of the $230.00 remained unpaid. In September, 1883, Williams' made an affidavit, upon which he obtained from a justice an attachment, and had it levied upon the lumber as the property of Gillespie & Lindsay to pay the purchase-money still due him. Upon the promise of Gillespie that the lumber should not be removed until Williams was paid, he dismissed his attachment suit. Afterwards, by deed dated July 7,1884, which was duly recorded in Mercer county on the day of its date, Thomas E. Gillespie, as a partner and on behalf of the firm of Gillespie & Lindsay, conveyed said lumber to L. L. Hern, as trustee, to secure certain specified debts due to S. B. Zink, A. J. Davis and others, by the firm [588]*588of Gillespie & Lindsay. After this deed had been recorded, Williams in August, 1884, made another affidavit, and obtained a second attachment from a justice, which he caused to be levied upon said lumber to pay $242.74, the amount he claimed to be due him from Gillespie & Lindsay. For this sum the justice gave judgment against said firm, and made an order for the sale of the lumber. In January, 1885, L. L. Hern, the trustee in the aforesaid trust-deed, advertised the lumber therein conveyed for sale, and, before the sale was made, B. P. Williams filed his bill in the Circuit Court of Mercer county against the firm of Gillespie & Lindsay, and the trustee and the oestuis que trust in said trust-deed, for the purpose of enjoining any sale of said lumber by said trustee, and having the lumber sold, and the proceeds applied to the plaintiff’s debt. The defendants other than Gillespie & Lindsay answered the bill. Proofs were taken. The lumber was sold by order of the court, and so much of the proceeds as equalled the plaintiff’s claim was directed by the final decree to be paid to the plaintiff; and the defendant, A. J. Davis, having died during the progress of the suit, his administrator obtained this appeal. The appellant contends that the decree of the Circuit Court is erroneous, because, according to the settled law, when applied to the case made by the record, the bill should have been dismissed. On the other hand, the appellee, Williams, insists that the said decree is right; and in support of this position he claims that he was entitled to the relief granted him upon one or all of the following grounds: First,'the trust-deed, having been .made by only one of the partners, is, at the most, but an executory assignment, and nota valid conveyance, such as will of itself transfer to the trustee the right and title to the property; second, the sale of the timber being a sale of real estate, the plaintiff held a vendor’s lien upon the timber for the purchase-money; and, third, the lumber was held by the plaintiff as a pledge for the amount due him. I shall consider these grounds in their order.

1. Did the trust-deed. vest in the trustee the title to the lumber in controversy? In Anderson v. Tompkins, 1 Brock. 456, (decided by Marshall, C. J., in 1820,) it was held that [589]*589“ one partner has the right to convey the partnership effects (other than real estate).to the creditors of the firm in .payments of their debts, — either to the creditors directly, or through the intervention of trustees; and, if bona fide, the deed will not be set aside, although the consent of the other partner was not obtained. When all the partners of a mercantile firm are present, they have a' right to be consulted in giving a preference to particular creditors, but this necessity is dispensed with if one of the partners is absent in a foreign country. The doctrine that a partner cannot bind his co-partner by deed does not apply to a case in which the property purported to be conveyed by the deed is of such a description that a title to it passes by the mere act of delivery. The mere circumstances of affixing a seal to the instrument of conveyance, in such case, does not annul a transfer so consummated.” Referring to the opinion of Marshall, C. J., in this case, Judge Carr, in McCullough v. Sommerville, 8 Leigh, at page 433, says: “Following this high authority, 1 conclude that a partner has a right to convey the social effects (save real estate) to trustees to pay specified creditors of the firm; and this, without the consent of his co-partner, where that co-partner resides out of the State, and the grantor is the sole manager of the concern. ” And in the same case, at page 436, Judge Cabell says: “ That one partner living in this State, and having the management of all the business of the company, (the other partners residing out of the State) has the power to deliver over and assign the goods and choses in action of the company to the creditors of the company, in discharge of the partnership debts, is too clear, in my opinion, to require either argument or authority. If he can do this directly, I think it equally clear that he may indirectly, by delivering and assigning to an agent or trustee, to be applied in payment of the partnership debts. And, if he may do this as to all the creditors, he may do it as to any one or more of them; and hence he may give a preference to a particular creditor, or to a class of creditors, although the consequence of such preference may, in case of a deficiency of funds, defeat the claims of postponed creditors.” And the decision of the court was an affirmance of the doctrine thus declared. This [590]*590decision has ever since been considered the settled law in Virginia, and it is therefore the law of this State. Gordon v. Cannon, 18 Grat. 387, 404; Burrill, Assignm., §§ 43-64; Pars. Partn. (166,) 181. The record in the case at bar shows that Lindsay, one of the partners, is a non-resident of this State, and that Thomas E. Gillespie, the partner who executed the deed, was the business and managing partner of the firm; and the fact that the trustee in the deed had advertised the lumber for sale, and the plaintiff found it necessary to resort to an injunction to prevent the sale, is sufficient evidence to establish the fact that the lumber had been delivered to the trustee, and that it was in his possession before this suit was instituted. It is apparent, therefore, according to the principles of law above stated, that the trust-deed was a valid conveyance of the lumber to the trustee, L. L. Iiern, and that by the settled law of this State the said trustee was a purchaser for value. Mining Co. v. Coal Co., 8 W. Va. 406.

2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 S.E. 210, 30 W. Va. 586, 1888 W. Va. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-gillespie-wva-1888.