Stewart v. . Robinson

The defendants are brought before the court as trustees and executors of the estate of Joseph Colwell, *Page 331 deceased. It appears that Colwell, in his lifetime, and one Samuel S. Hepworth carried on business as copartners, under the name of S.S. Hepworth Co., for the manufacture and sale of centrifugal machines and some other machinery, under articles of agreement, one of which was entered into February 22, 1877, and provided for the continuance of the partnership for five years from January 1, 1877, and for a capital in cash not exceeding $4,000, to be furnished by Colwell, and be represented "by the good will of the business, its shops, fixtures, tools, machinery and materials for manufacture, all of which should belong to and be his individual property," profits to be shared equally, and all losses of the business, including loss of capital, borne equally. Hepworth was to devote his time and personal attention to the business, but Colwell was not required to do so further than might be convenient for himself.

The seventh clause of the articles declared that: "Should either partner die during the term of said copartnership the firm shall not be deemed dissolved thereupon, but the wife and children of the decedent shall immediately succeed to his interest, which, thenceforward, shall be prosecuted for the remainder of the term for the benefit of them and the surviving partner. Either partner may designate by will what interest his wife and children, as between themselves, shall have in his said copartnership interest in the event of his death as aforesaid."

Before the expiration of the stipulated time, and on the 18th of October, 1881, a further agreement was made that the copartnership should continue until dissolved by mutual consent or terminated by six months notice in writing by one party to the other, and that "in the event of the death of either, the business shall be continued by the survivor until the expiration of five years from the first day of February next, succeeding such death, the estate of the deceased partner to have the same share and interests in the profits, and to bear the same share of the losses of the business as would have been received and borne by the deceased partner had he lived, *Page 332 provided, however, that if the survivor shall think it necessary to employ an additional clerk in consequence of the death of the deceased partner, in such case the expense shall be charged to and shall be borne by the share in the profits of the deceased partner."

The firm business was thereafter continued under these instruments until the 1st day of June, 1882, when Colwell died, leaving children and a will. He appointed the above-named defendants executors and trustees, and gave them, in trust for his children, the greater part of his estate, and directed a distribution of the whole, making no reference to the business of the firm of S.S. Hepworth Co., or to it in any way, or to the agreement above set out, and revoking all other wills theretofore made by him. It also appeared that from the death of Colwell to September, 1887, the business of S.S. Hepworth Co., was continued and carried on by Samuel S. Hepworth, he assuming to do so under the agreements of February 23, 1877, and October 13, 1881. In the course of that business in September or October, 1887, or five years after Colwell's death, he contracted debts with the plaintiffs and with other persons or firms, in the name of S.S. Hepworth Co., for some of which he gave promissory notes in that name, and others of which rest in account.

On the 4th of October, 1887, Hepworth, individually and as surviving partner, was insolvent to the extent of about $500,000, and on that day made an assignment in both capacities for the benefit of his creditors. The individual debts of Colwell have been paid, and property remains in the hands of his executors. The plaintiffs, either as original creditors or by assignment, are the owners of the debts contracted by Hepworth and set out in the complaint, amounting in the aggregate to about $15,000, and they seek to recover the amount from the individual estate of Colwell, and in the meantime ask for the appointment of a receiver of his property, assets and estate, and an account thereof from the defendants as his representatives. Various defenses were interposed by them, but, so far as material upon this appeal, their effect *Page 333 depends upon the single question whether the general estate of Colwell was, by virtue of the above agreements, rendered liable for debts contracted by Hepworth in the firm name, after the death of Colwell. The trial court and the General Term have held against the plaintiffs, and the defendants had judgment accordingly.

It is a general rule that a contract of partnership is dissolved by the death of one of the parties, whether entered into for a fixed time or not, and that after his death the former partner cannot bind the estate of the decedent by new contracts; and although the partnership be expressly extended to executors, they could not be compelled to carry it on, and would be entitled to a dissolution and an account of the assets, subject to the liabilities of the firm incurred up to the time of dissolution. These are familiar and well-settled principles. Here the representatives of the deceased partner were not to be partners with the survivor, nor were they to have anything to do with the conduct of the business or its management. On the contrary, the business is "to be continued by the survivor." We have only to inquire, therefore, whether the partnership agreements take the case out of the general rule.

The frame of the last articles shows that the parties contemplated and bargained for a continuance of the business for the term of five years from the first of February next preceding the death of either, but the residue of the clause containing this stipulation depends, to some extent, for its interpretation upon the preceding or original article. The second agreement refers to the first as containing the terms and conditions on which the business is to go on; and looking there we find that the capital, however represented by money, tools, machinery or material, was not to exceed $4,000, and was to be provided by Colwell and to remain his individual property. That contribution made him an equal partner, and upon dissolution of the firm was to be repaid to him, with interest, before any division of surplus earnings should be made. Death of a partner, however, was not as, of course, to work a dissolution, but the wife and children of the decedent were immediately *Page 334 to succeed to his interest in the business, which thenceforward was to be prosecuted for their benefit and that of the surviving partner. We do not need to ascertain whether this clause could have any effect without the assent of the parties named, for it never came into operation, being suspended by that of the agreement of October thirteenth, which provides for the continuance of the business "by the survivor" and the distribution of profits or losses "to the estate of the deceased partner, as would have been received and borne by him had he lived." It is to be seen, therefore, that the capital invested was to remain the same; it was not to exceed $4,000; it belonged to Colwell, but was to continue in the business notwithstanding his death, and could not be withdrawn until the expiration of five years from that event. So much the surviving partner might insist upon. I do not see that he could rightfully exact more, and if he could not, how could third persons? There is, in fact, no partnership, for there are no partners. There is a surviving partner. Under the first article it might be said that if the wife and children assented they would have become partners. The executors cannot be deemed partners, for that capacity has not been put upon them, nor have they assumed it, directly or indirectly, by taking any part of the management of the business. They knew of its continuance and loaned Hepworth money upon security. Nothing more. A new partnership was not formed, nor can one be implied. But it is said the "estate" of the deceased partner is to share in profits or bear a portion of the losses — of what? Not a partnership, but a business conducted by a surviving partner. An estate cannot be a partner. I think the provision in the agreement means nothing more than that the capital actually invested in the business before or at the death of the partner shall continue to be so subject or liable.

The general rule already adverted to does, upon the death of a partner, terminate the power of his associate or copartner to contract new debts on the credit of the firm. Assuming with the appellant that this general result of law may be varied by an express agreement, it will then depend upon the *Page 335 particular terms of that agreement to what extent the estate of a deceased partner may be bound by the surviving member of the firm, "whether his estate shall be generally liable for all the debts, or only to the extent of the property embraced and left in the partnership to be employed by the survivors." (Story on Partnership, 201a.) But it is said in Burwell v. Mandeville'sExecutors (2 How. [U.S.] 560), "Nothing, however, but the clearest and most unambiguous language, showing in the most positive manner an intention on the part of the testator to render his general assets liable for debts contracted after his death, will justify a court in extending the liability of his estate beyond the actual fund employed therein at the time of his death." In that case (Burwell v. Mandeville Exrs.), it appeared that the testator died while in partnership with one Cawood, leaving a will by which he distributed his estate, and a codicil made during the existence of the firm, by which, in substance, he directed that the business of the copartnership existing between Cawood and himself should be carried on by Cawood and his (the testator's) interest therein continued until the expiration of the term limited by the copartnership articles, and the profit and loss distributed as those articles provided. Cawood carried on the business, and, before the time limited for the partnership expired, failed, and an action was brought against him and the executors of the deceased partner, by a creditor of the firm upon debts contracted with Cawood on account of and in the name of the firm after the death of the testator. The executor denied that the assets were liable. The answer was demurred to, but the defense was held good and so the action failed, the court holding that the general assets of the testator were not bound for debts contracted after his death in behalf of the partnership, and that the rights of any creditor in respect to such death were exclusively restricted to the funds actually embarked by the testator in the business, and to the personal responsibility of the surviving partner, the court saying, "the interest" of the partner dying "in the firm was his share of the capital stock and profits, after the payment of all debts *Page 336 and liabilities of the firm. It is this interest, and not any new capital, which he authorizes to be embarked in the firm. He does not propose to add anything to his existing interest, but simply to continue it as it then was. How, then (the learned judge continues), can the court say that he meant to embark all his personal assets in the hands of his executors as a pledge for the future debts, or future responsibilities, or future capital of the firm. That would be to enlarge the meaning of the words beyond their ordinary and reasonable signification," and he says, "no court of justice ought, upon principle, favor, much less adopt it." And adds, "there is no authority to support it." On the other hand, several cases are cited by the learned court as reasoned out and sustained upon the broad and general principle that only the partnership fund was involved, and the new creditor confined, in pursuing his remedy, to so much of the estate of the decedent as was embarked in the trade, and to the personal responsibility of the party who continued the business, whether as trustee, executor, or partner, unless, indeed, the testator had otherwise plainly and expressly bound his general assets."

The same doctrine was established in the courts of Connecticut at an earlier time (1829) in Pitkin's Case (7 Conn. 307); also cited with approval by Judge STORY in Burwell v. Mandeville'sExecutors (supra).

The general subject of the construction of language giving power or authority for the continuance of a trade, after the death of one member of a firm, has also been under consideration in this court and its conclusion expressed in the decision ofWillis v. Sharp (113 N.Y. 586). Among other cases referred to was Burwell v. Mandeville's Executors (supra), and the general proposition there laid down restated. It was assumed that the courts, with reasonable unanimity, sustained as valid a direction in the will of a testator that his trade should be continued whether his business was that of a sole trader, or of a firm of which he was a member, but it was held that a mere power to carry on the testator's trade, or to continue his business in a firm of which he was a partner, *Page 337 without anything more, will be construed as an authority simply to carry on the trade or business with the fund already invested in it at the time of the testator's death, and to subject that fund only to the hazards of the trade and not the general assets of the estate; and, also, that the property already embarked in the business is the trade fund, unless it appears from the will that the executor was authorized to use the general assets in the business.

These views were sustained upon authority. They require us to search for the intention of the deceased partner in the language used by him in giving his directions. In the case then before us (Willis v. Sharp, supra) the testatrix, at the time of her death, was engaged in "the merchant tailoring business," and by will directed that after her death "some legitimate business should be carried on by her executors for the benefit of her son Harry, and that her husband, the defendant, should be retained as manager thereof at a salary of $1,500 a year;" and this was followed by a provision empowering her executors "to sell or make such other disposition of my real and personal estate as the safe conduct of such business shall seem to require," and in favor of a creditor who became such in the course of the business so carried on, we held that this provision indicated an intention to subject her general assets to the debts of that business, and that her general estate was bound by the debt contracted; but we also said: "If, in this case, there was in the will simply an authority or direction to the executors to carry on a trade, and in pursuance of the power the executor continued the existing business, we think, under the authorities cited, the plaintiffs could have no remedy except to pursue the assets embarked in the trade at the death of the testatrix."

In the case now before us the directions or authority are such only, as we said in the former case, would be insufficient to enable a creditor to reach the general assets of an estate. They are almost literally, in every sense, substantially the same as those actually presented by Burwell v. Mandeville *Page 338 (supra), and, in view of the decisions thus referred to, it would be useless to go on in this discussion as a new one or do more than call attention to the terms of the contract on which appellants must succeed or fail in their contention against the decision of the court below:

First. The "capital" is fixed at $4,000, the sole property of Colwell.

Second. It is with that capital that "the business of the copartnership" is to be conducted.

Third. The profits of the business are to be divided between the parties at convenient periods.

Fourth. At the dissolution of the partnership, and the liquidation of its business, the cash capital is to be repaid before any division of surplus earnings.

These terms and conditions are, by reference, incorporated into the new agreement on which the appellants rely. The second agreement repeats the same general language. In the event of death "the business" shall be continued, i.e., "the business already described as employing a certain capital," not an additional capital; and the profits and loss of the same "business" are to be shared in the same manner as if the deceased partner were alive, with only one addition, viz., the survivor might, if he thought necessary, in consequence of his partner's death, employ an additional clerk, the expense of whose employment should be borne by "the share of the profits of the deceased partner." Here are no words from which can be implied an intention to bring into the concern other capital, or make new debts a charge upon any assets outside of those already pledged to the business of the firm. It is nothing more than an authority to the surviving partner to continue an existing business, and, therefore, within the authorities cited, and upon reason and common sense, the plaintiffs cannot have the relief they seek in this action.

The respondents assail the validity of the agreement for any purpose. I do not think it necessary to determine the question so raised. It is enough to dispose of the present case that we find no language on the part of the deceased *Page 339 partner which indicates any intention to put in hazard his general estate, or which, by fair construction, furnishes any ground for the present action.

It follows that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur, except EARL, J., not voting.

Judgment affirmed.

THE appeal in the case second entitled is from a judgment of the General Term of the Supreme Court in the first judicial department, entered upon an order made December 12, 1888, which affirmed a judgment dismissing the complaint entered upon a trial at Special Term.

This action was brought by plaintiff as receiver of the firm of S.S. Hepworth Co., to charge the executors and trustees under the will of Joseph Colwell, deceased, as copartners with S.S. Hepworth from the time of the death of said Colwell to October 4, 1887.

The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion.