Gillilan v. Sun Mutual Insurance

Lott, J.

The policy of insurance issued by the appellants created a legal obligation on them to pay the loss, which subsequently occurred, to Slate & Co. It was issued to them, and in their name, and the loss was, by its terms, payable to them, and by its payment the appellants have complied with and fulfilled that obligation. Such, it is conceded, would be its ordinary and general effect; but it is claimed on behalf of the respondent that the insurance, although made in the name of Slate & Co., “ was for the benefit of, and in trust for all the joint owners as a copartnership fund,” that “by the loss of the ship the partnership became of necessity dissolved,” and that the payments after the notice of 24th December, 1859, by the respondent, apprising them that he had an interest, and forbidding payment to Slate & Co., followed by this suit, were unauthorized and fraudulent as to him. Such is not the legitimate operation or consequence of that notice.

Assuming, as the plaintiff claims and the court below held, that the relation between the owners was that of partners, the only facts of which the appellants were notified, were that he was one of those partners, that the insurance was for their account, that Slate & Co. had failed and become insolvent, and that he would, without delay, take measures to enforce his claim to the policy. They at most place him in the same situation as if the policy had been issued in the names of all the partners as such, and the loss had been declared to be payable to them instead of “ Slate & Co., on account of whom it may concern, loss payable to them.”

Conceding that the policy may be so construed, the appellant was, nevertheless, authorized to pay the loss to Slate & Co., and was thereby discharged from all liability therefor.

It must be considered as settled by the decision of this court, in Robbins v. Fuller (24 N. Y. Rep., p. 570), after a full and able examination of the question, that either partner-may, after the dissolution as well as during the continuance of a copartnership, receive a debt due to it, and give a valid and effectual release therefor, notwithstanding notice of such dissolution to the debtor.

*380An agreement between the partners, that one of them shall collect and be entitled to the assets for his own benefit to the exclusion of the other, does not affect or interfere with that right and authority in respect to persons unacquainted with that fact. (King v. Smith, 4 Carr. & Payne, 108; 19 Eng. Com. Law Rep., 299.) The case of Cram v. Cadwell (5 Cow., 493), cited by the respondent, is not inconsistent with that doctrine.

It there appeared, that the debtor had notice of the agreement, which the learned justice giving the opinion, said was “ a virtual conveyance ” by one partner, “ of his interest ” to the other.

It was, therefore, treated as the release of a debt by the original creditor after notice of an assignment thereof-to another person, and properly held to be a fraud on the assignee, and therefore ineffectual and imperative as against him.

I may add that it was distinctly stated in that opinion, that during the existence of a partnership, each partner may receive the debts due and give discharges. So after a partnership is dissolved without some contract or conveyance by one to the other.”

The views above expressed lead us to the conclusion that the appellant was not bound or in any manner affected by any equities as between the owners, resulting from the partnership transactions, by reason or in consequence of the notice referred to. Ho reference or allusion whatever was made to such a claim. It has already been shown that a debtor is not affected by any express agreement between the partners, without notice thereof, and there is no reason or principle, why he should be charged with any undisclosed equities. He never could pay either partner with safety, and the allowance of such equities would, in effect, nullify the general power and authority vested in each to settle the partnership business.

In the case of Robbins v. Fuller (supra), when the whole of the debt there in question, amounting to nearly $3,000, was sold and assigned, and afterward discharged for $100, *381without the knowledge or consent of one of the partners, it appeared that there were no copartnership debts existing at the time of the assignment, and it was claimed that one-half of the debt, after crediting 'the $100 paid, was collectible. Denio, J., after considering the effect of the dissolution of the firm, on the rights of the several partners, and coming to the conclusion that this circumstance did not of itself deprive the partner with whom the purchaser of the debt dealt, of the power to dispose of it at such sum as he should consider it worth, and then, after stating that such purchaser was unacquainted as to any other facts which might change the situation or impair the powers of the respective partners, he adds: “ My own opinion is, that the fact that the debts against the firm had all been discharged, would not affect the question, where the accounts between the partners was not shown to have been adjusted, though the persons dealing with the single partner were acquainted with that fact, but certainly the authority of each partner, in regard to matters of liquidation, would continue in respect to persons who were unacquainted with the fact that no indebtedness of the firm existedand Smith, J., after delivering, as is stated in the report of that case, an opinion to the same effect, in respect to the general authority of the partners after dissolution, concluded by saying the right of the respective partners, after dissolution, to collect or discharge the debts of the copartnership cannot depend upon the state of the accounts between the partners. Third persons cannot know the state of such accounts and cannot be required to ascertain, at their peril, whether the partnership debts are or are not paid.” The majority of the court concurred in those Opinions.

It then remains to be considered whether the notice by the respondent to the appellants not to make payment to Slate & Co., in consequence of their failure and insolvency on the commencement of this suit, made the subsequent payments invalid and ineffectual.

I know of no rule or principle by which the inability of an insolvent member of a copartnership to pay his individual *382debts should, of itself, deprive him of or interfere with his general power or authority as a partner, or by which, the notice of such fact, by another partner to a debtor, should make a payment to such insolvent member invalid. That would operate as an injunction more summary in its effect than is recognized by the most liberal rule applicable to such a remedy.

The subsequent commencement of this action did not have any greater effect than the notice.

It was commenced by the service of a summons upon the appellant,' on the 19th day of January, 1860, but it appears from a statement in the case that the complaint was verified on the 31st day of March, and was not served till the 4th day of April thereafter. At that time, the whole insurance money had been paid to Slate & Co.. Until the service of that complaint, the appellant .had no knowledge or information of any additional facts beyond that contained in the notice, or of ' any further claim than was made therein.

In that, the respondent, after referring to the nature of his claim, concluded by saying, “ I shall take measures to enforce my claim to these policies.” The appellant was, from the terms and tenor of the notice, justified in assuming that the facts stated therein were those on which relief was demanded' in the action. If, however, he is chargeable with notice of all the statements in the complaint from the time of the service of the summons, the additional facts alleged tending to show that the respondent, on the settlement of the unadjusted accounts of the partnership, would be entitled to more than a share of the insurance proportional to his interest in the ship, were not within the principle of the decision in Robbins v. Fuller (supra), as stated in the opinions referred to, sufficient without an injunction or the appointment of a receiver by the court, to prevent the payment of the money subsequently paid to Slate & Co. See also Green v. Sluyter (4 Johnson Ch. Rep., p. 38, &c.)

There are no allegations in the complaint of fraud, or any facts or circumstances to raise the presumption that there *383would be - a misappropriation of the funds by Slate & Co. All that is stated bearing on that question, beyond the fact of their failure and insolvency on the 12th day of November, 1860, is, that they “ are no longer fit depositories of the said moneys,” and there is no other found by the judge at Special Term in his findings of fact. On the contrary, there is a finding “ that on the 10th day of March, 1860, after the commencement of this action, Slate & Co. rendered to the plaintiff an account of the earnings and disbursements of the ship, of the proceeds of said insurance on her freight, and of their charges in respect thereof for the period from and after the 1st day of July, 1859,” and that at the time of rendering such last mentioned account, Slate & Co. paid the plaintiff $992.61, being the share or proportion due him, as stated in said account; and it also appeared by those findings that “due accounts” had been rendered to the plaintiff from “ time to time of the earnings of the ship and his proportion thereof, down to July 1st, 1859, and had also rendered him a recapitulatory dated December 10th, 1859,” of which a copy is set forth in the findings.

There was therefore nothing in the case that warranted any judgment whatever against the appellant, and the complaint as to him should have been dismissed with costs. It is therefore unnecessary to examine whether the accounts of Slate & Co. were properly stated.

The judgment against the appellant at Special Term, and that affirming it at General Term, must, for the reasons above stated, be reversed, and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.

Mason, J., also read an opinion for reversal.

All the judges concurring for reversal.

Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.