McAllister & Simmons v. Millhiser & Co.

Lumpkin, Justice.

An action upon an open account was brought by Millhiser & Co. against McAllister & Simmons as a partnership, and also expressly against A. H. McAllister and J. B. Simmons, who appear to have been the members composing that firm, in their individual capacity. Certain pleas of the defendants were stricken by the court, which is the error complained of in the bill of exceptions.

1. One of these pleas alleged, in substance, that the partnership had delivered to the plaintifis certain promissory notes belonging to the partnership, as collateral security for the payment of another debt due to the plaintiffs, which debt, before the bringing of the present action, had been fully paid off and discharged; that a return of these collaterals had been duly demanded; that the plaintifis had wrongfully refused to return the same; and that the defendants, as a partnership, had been thereby damaged in an amount stated. This plea set forth the facts in great detail, but the foregoing is, in condensed form, what it amounted to. We are at a loss to perceive why this was not a good defense to the plaintifis’ action. This action sounded in contract; the demand set up by the plea was based upon the breach of an implied contract to return the defendants’ collaterals upon the payment of the debt they had been pledged to secure; and these demands were mutually existing between the parties at the time the plaintifis’ action was brought. It is true the defendants might have treated the unwarranted detention of their collaterals as a conversion of the same, and have maintained' an action of trover for their recovery, in which they might have had a verdict either for the collaterals themselves, or for their value. But the defendants were *476not obliged to pursue this course, and had, beyond question, the right to bring an action for the breach of the implied promise to return; and if they could bring an action of the latter kind, they surely could obtain the same results by filing a set-off to an action brought against themselves by the plaintiffs, a plea of set-off being really in the nature of a cross-action.

2. One of the defendants, Simmons, filed a plea in his own behalf, not entirely consistent with the foregoing plea of the partnership. He alleged, in effect, that having bought out the entire interest of his partner in all the assets of the firm, and having assumed all its liabilities, he alone would be injuriously affected by a judgment rendered in the plaintiffs’ favor; and further, that the collaterals already referred to belonged to him, and that he was entitled, as against the plaintiffs, to the damages occasioned by their failure to return the same.

In testing the merits of this plea, it is all important to notice the precise character of the plaintiffs’ action. As has been seen, it was brought, not only against the partnership, but in terms against each of its members as an individual. The plaintiffs might have contented themselves by bringing an action against the' partnership alone, and a judgment rendered therein would have bound, not only the property of the partnership, but also the individual property of each of the members who was served with the process. The plaintiffs did not, however, choose to sue the partnership alone. It may be that they were unwilliug to risk their case upon their ability to prove that the partnership was its debtor, and preferred also to take the chances of showing that the members of the firm were indebted to them as individuals. Be this as it may, the plaintiffs certainly sued Simmons as an individual; and this being so, we see no reason why he could not lawfully set off against them a demand alleged to be due him individually by them, *477which was in existence at the time their action was commenced. Whatever may have been the proper disposition of the plea now under review if the plaintiffs’ action had been brought against the partnership only, we are satisfied that in view of the declaration as actually brought, this plea was appropriate.

3. Both the special pleas above referred to were good, and ought not to have been stricken by the court.

Judgment reversed.