Penn v. Stone

COLLIER, C. J.

From the frame ef the plea, we infer that the contract between the plaintiff'and Strange, was made previous to the time when the former became the proprietor of the note. This being the case, the substitution of the plaintiff for Strange, as a partner with the defendants, and the undertaking to pay the proportion of the latter, in all the partnership debts, did not ipso fado extinguish the note — It had no effect whatever upon its continuing vitality. But if the plaintiff had been the holder of it at the time he was initiated into the concern, we cannot very well perceive that the case would have been different.

We do not understand the plea to insist that any thing like a technical release was executed by the plaintiff to Strange. The form of pleading does not warrant such an inference— in fact there could have been no release, either in respect to the note or other demands against the firm, unless the plaintiff himself had been the creditor. It is an inappropriate use of language, then, to say that the plaintiff released and absolved Strange from the payment of his engagements as a partner.

The case, when denuded, is this, the plaintiff purchases the interest of a partner in a mercantile concern, becomes' a member of it, undertakes to pay all the liabilities of that partner as such, and to occupy his situation in respect to the partnership ; afterwards he acquires a note made by the firm previous to his initiation. Is it competent for him to maintain an action against any one of the makers, in virtue of the in-dorsement to him, unless it be the partner to whose place he has been substituted.

It is a clear principle, that courts of law will not entertain suits for the recovery of money due by one partner to another by simple contract, on the partnership account, because it would be useless for one partner to recover, what, upon taking *212a general account amongst all the partners, he might be liable to refund. Frustra petem quod mox restitutes es^ii. But the question here is, not whether an action will lie_by one partner against another to recover money due by a verbal contract on that partnership account — it is this, can a party who is introduced into a firm by purchasing the interest of one of its members, and who has undertaken to pay all the debts to which that partner is liable as such, maintain an action on a note of the partnership, which he afterwards purchases ? If two persons commence business as partners, and one advance the whole capital, he may maintain an action against his copartner for a moiety, because as to the share of the partner who has not paid, the partnership may be considered as not commenced. So if one partner give the other his promissory note, or his separate acceptance for value received on the partnership account, an action will lie on such note or bill. And if one partner draw upon all the others by name, and they individually accept, he may recover of them because by such acceptance a separate right is acknowledged to exist. [See Grigsby’s Ex’r v. Nance, 3 Ala. R. 347, and cases there cited.] In Lyon v. Malone, 4 Porter’s Rep. 497, it appeared that all the debts of the concern had been paid, but the accounts of the partners as between themselves were unsettled, and it was held that a note given by one partner to another for his proportion of a partnership debt, which the latter had paid, was recoverable by action at law. [Smyth v. Strader, Perrine & Co. 9 Porter’s Rep. 446.]

There is nothing ill the contract between the plaintiff and Strange, which could prevent the former from purchasing a note against the partnership, and upon being invested with the legal title to it, maintain an action thereon. The other members of .the concern cannot avail themselves of that contract to defeat a recovery ; especially as it is allowable by statute to sue all or any of the makers or obligors of a joint and several note or bond. If the plaintiff saves Strange harmless from the debts of the firm, this is all his undertaking requires him to do; and whether he does this or not, the other partners are not interested to inquire, unless they are chargeable in consequence'of his default.

If in acquiring the note, the plaintiff had intended to pay *213and extinguish it, in consequence of his undertaking to contribute to the payment of the partnership debts, then,-perhaps no action coirld be maintained upon it. But the defence is not, nor is there any thing in the record to indicate, that it could be placed on that ground, and our decision must be adapted to the case as it is, presented.

The judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded.