French v. Chase

The substance of the following opinion was given by the Court in the county of Waldo at the ensuing July term ; after which it was drawn up by

Mellen C. J.

The plaintiffs claim title to the goods in question under a sale of them by Walter Brown. The report states that they paid a fair and valuable consideration for them ; and the jury, under the instructions they received, have found that the transactions which terminated in the sale, were conducted on the part of the plaintiffs in good faith. Though it does not distinctly appear that Brown & Quinby were partners in trade at any time, yet a connection of that kind is alluded to in the report; and in the argument it was admitted ; and also that the firm was insolvent. The partnership, however, was a secret one ; and at one time the business was carried on in the name of Quinby; and afterwards in the name *169of Brown ; Quinby then not having any apparent agency or interest in it. Such was the case at the time the plaintiffs made the purchase ; bat there is no evidence when the note was given by Brown to the plaintiffs, or the note by Quinby to the attaching creditor. In both cases the notes were signed in the usual manner, each with the individual name of the protnissor. Upon these facts we are to decide whether the requested instructions were properly refused, and whether those which were given were correct. Both questions may bo considered at the same time ; for whatever is a legal answer to one, is equally so to the other ; if the instructions given were correct, those refused would have been incorrect.

The defendant contends that he has a right to the goods by virtue of the attachment, superior to that of the plaintiffs under the sale, on the ground that the note in suit was given for a partnership debt, though signed only with the name of Quinby, and heredes on the well known principle that the partnership funds must first be applied to the payment of partnership debts ; and that until such debts are satisfied, a creditor of one of the firm cannot appropriate any portion of them. But the question here is, whether this principle is applicable in the present case, where Brown alone was the ostensible owner, and the existence of any partnership was wholly unknown to the plaintiffs. To extend the principle thus far would be unreasonable and unjust, and farther, we apprehend, than it has ever been carried by any judicial decision. The reason upon which the doctrine is founded, cannot exist where the business of a secret partnership is all transacted by and in the name of one of the partners, who appears to all the world as the sole owner. Persons contracting with him, look, and have a right to look, to the property as well as the ability of the person in such cases for the security of their debts ; and there is nothing in the case, as presented to us, which shews that the plaintiffs and the attaching creditor did not both reason, calculate and act upon the same principle at the time they received their respective notes. They must therefore both be considered as standing on the same ground, contracting under the same circumstances, and entitled to the same rights as creditors. Both looked to the visible funds of the person with whom they respectively dealt; and as the plain*170tiffs, if they had attached the goods in question prior to the attachment by the defendant, would have been entitled to hold them, for the same reason they are entitled to hold them under and in virtue of the sale by Brown to them ; they being fair and honest purchasers, having paid a full consideration in the manner mentioned in the report. In this view of the cause, and laying out of the case the attaching creditors’ supposed priority of right, it is clear that the plaintiffs had an unquestionable right to secure their demand by means of the purchase of the goods, although the creditors of the firm might thereby be defeated, and such consequences have been foreseen. They gave up to Brown his note for about .$'230 — gave their own note for about $600 to secure the ICitteridge demand, which they had paid before the trial, and also a note to Brown for the balance ; amounting in all to $1030, for the goods in question, estimated at 1054 93; though there was proof that they would not, in the opinion of the witness, have produced, if sold on execution, more than sufficient to have paid the Kitteridge debt of $600 and costs. The principle above stated is distinctly maintained by the decision in Bartels v. Harris, 4 Greenl. 146, and How v. Ward, ib. 195. We are all of the opinion that the decisions of the judge, in relation to the subject of instructions to the jury, were correct.

Since the last term in the county of Waldo, when the opinion formed by the court in this case was made known, and before it was drawn up, the case of Lord v. Baldwin, 6 Pick. 348, has been seen and examined by us j in which it was decided that in case of a dormant partnership, an attachment of the stock in trade in the hands of the ostensible partner, in a suit against him alone, has preference before a subsequent attachment of the same goods by another person in an action against the partners. The principles upon which that decision is founded apply with equal propriety and force in the case at bar as in that, though the plaintiffs claim in virtue of a prior sale of the goods, and not of a prior attachment. The Chief Justice, in delivering the opinion of the court says, “ the basis upon which the rule rests, is, that the funds shall be liable upon which the credit was given. Those who sell goods to, or make a contract with a company or firm, are supposed to trust to the ability or prop*171erty of the firm. Those who trust the individual member, rely on his sufficiency alone.” Where all the creditors have trusted the man of business and apparent owner of goods, one of such creditors, who is behind the rest in his attachment, shall not be permitted to supplant them and gain a priority, because he has discovered the concealed liability of a secret partner.

Judgment on the verdict.