The main action in which the garnishee proceedings were instituted was not against Parks, Iiomsted & Co., and Iiomsted was not made a party thereto. It was in form, so far as the title was concerned, against George Parks and J. H. Bigler. The averments of the complaint, so far as material to the present inquiry, were, that George Parks and J. II. Bigler agreed to pay all of the debts of Parks, Homsted & Co., in consideration of the retirement of Iiomsted from the firm, and their retention of all of the property and assets of the old firm, and that the note in suit was one of the debts which they agreed to pay; that George Parks and J. Ii. Bigler continued the business of the old firm, and became and continued partners under the firm name of George Parks & Co.; and that they retained all of the property and assets of the firm of Parks, Iiomsted & Co, These averments, taken together, substantially charge tjie firm of George Parks & Co. with the 1 ,ability 'to pay this note of Parks, Homsted & Co. by virtue of said agreement. Parks was not served with process, and Big-ler answered, denying such agreement to pay the debts of the old firm by George Parks & Co.; and the court found that none of the allegations of his answer were true, and rendered judgment against both Parks and Bigler, and ordered that the money bé made out of their joint property, and out of the separate property of Bigler. This judgment was, therefore, substantially against George Parks &Oo., following the complaint, *567and based upon said agreement. The plaintiff, therefore, not only thereby became a judgment creditor of George Parks & Co., but the finding of the court upon the issue formed by the allegation and denial of said agreement, and the judgment of the court in the action, establish the fact that such agreement was made as alleged, and such fact became thereby res adjudi-caba. Therefore, from the time of the formation of the partnership of George Parks & Co., the note in suit has constituted one of the debts of the firm. On the trial of the issue formed on the answer of the garnishee, Bigler was allowed to testify that no such agreement was made, and the court found in due form that George Parks & Co. never assumed or agreed to pay the co-partnership debts of the firm of Parks, Homsted & Co. This finding was not only immaterial and irrelevant to the issue, but contrary to the fact, which was res adjudicata in the main action. It follows that the plaintiff was one of the creditors of George Parks & Co.- wdien both assignments were made by them for the benefit of their creditors, and may attack their’ validity, but he cannot question their right to make them on the ground that he is a creditor of the old firm of Parks, Homsted & Co., any more than the garnishee can deny his right to question their validity on that ground. There may be a question whether the plaintiff can hold Homsted as one of the old firm, now or hereafter, since he has availed himself of the agreement of George Parks & Co. to pay his claim, on the principle of novation. But if he may still pursue Homsted, it would be. merely resorting to an additional security, which other creditors of George Parks & Co. do not have, and for that reason he certainly has no right to complain of their assignments.
Ve have had some difficulty in arriving at the real situation and legal bearings of the ease on account of the uncertain and confused allegations of the complaint in the main action-and" the complications of the record; but we think the above is substantially the correct view to be taken .of the whole case, and the plaintiff’s legal relations to the assignments.
*568In this view of the case, the plaintiff in this garnishee proceeding stands in relation to George Parks & Co., and their two assignments, as an attaching creditor seeking a preference against the assignments which were made for the benefit of all the creditors alike, including himself, and attacking their validity. It appears that Ilomstead retired from the firm • and George Parks & Co. succeeded to all of the property and business of the late firm in September, 1875, and in December following George Parks & Co. made an assignment to the defendant garnishee of all of their property, rights, credits and effects, for the benefit of their creditors without preference. This .assignment appears to have been made according to the requirements of the statute, and to have been valid in all respects, except in the affidavit of justification of the sureties upon the assignee’s bond, which omitted to state that their property was within the state; and for this reason it was held invalid by this court in Smith v. McCulloch, 42 Wis., 564. It further appears that the assignee took full possession of all of the property of George Parks & Co. under that assignment, and proceeded to dispose of the same and make due application of the proceeds thereof, until said assignment was so declared void, and has continued to hold said property and the residue of the proceeds thereof until the present time; that soon after the execution of the first assignment the said Parks left the United States and went to the dominion of Canada for permanent residence therein, and has never returned to this country;' and that he abandoned all interest in or control over the property and business of George Parks & Co.; and that Parks and Bigler owned no other property jointly except that so assigned. Under these circumstances, J, H. Bigler, one of said firm, executed a second assignment in the name of the copartnership of all of their property in August, 1877, as he testified on the trial, “ for the purpose of correcting the first assignment.”
This assignment, so far as appears, was made without the knowledge of Parks, and is made without preference, and is in every respect regular and unquestionable except that it was *569made by one partner only. The defect on account of which the first assignment was held void as to attaching creditors, was not in the assignment itself; and, though declared invalid in consequence of the defect in the justification of the sureties on the bond, it was nevertheless valid as between the assignors and assignee, and. the title to the property passed to the assignee in trust. Burrill on Assign., 494; Geisse v. Beall, 3 Wis., 367; Lincoln v. Cross, 11 Wis., 91; Fargo v. Ladd, 6 Wis., 106. The second assignment cures and corrects the defect of the first, and they will both stand together — the first as having passed the title of the property, which had not been reconveyed to the assignors before the making of the new assignment; and the second to correct a 'defective bond in the first.
The case of Brahe v. Eldridge; 17 Wis., 184, is clearly in point on this question. In that case, upon the discovery of the defect in the bond, the assignee delivéred back the property, and there was a new assignment made, which cured the defect. There was no reconveyance of the property before the second assignment, and it was contended’that there was, therefore, no property in the assignors to pass by the second assignment. This court, by Mr. Justice PaiNE, held that, even if that was the case, the property passed by the first assignment, and that was sufficient. In this case the property has remained in the assignee, both as to title and possession, since the execution of the first assignment. The above case answers fully the point, made by the learned counsel of the appellant, that the first assignment dissolved the partnership, and therefore it could make no new or other assignment. The mere granting part of the assignment, by which the assignee obtains his title in trust, is the same in both, and the second is but a repetition of the first. The defect corrected was in the justification of the sureties to the bond, which, it would seem, one partner, as the agent of his copartners, might correct at any time without their special assent; but this, however, we do not decide. Sumner v. Hicks, 2 Black (U. S.), 532.
*570We may, however, presume and infer, from the execution of the first assignment by Parks, his design and intention to make an effectual assignment, and imply therefrom authority and consent that such assignment should be made by Bigler effectual for the purposes expressed in it, and to correct the same, if necessary to that end, either by another assignment or in any other proper way; and we think it proper to hold, in his case, that such authority and consent are clearly implied, because Parks has never made any objection to either assignment, and no rights have intervened between the first and second assignments, which would render the making of the second, for the purpose of correcting the first, wrong or improper.
It may be said here, in ariswer to the objection that one partner cannot assign real property without the express assent of the other partners, and cannot bind his copartners under seal, that the title to the real estate, if the partnership had an}', passed by the first assignment to the assignee; but if it lias not passed at all, then the plaintiff can have his remedy upon it by execution or attachment, and the assignment will remain valid without it. Bates v. Ableman, 13 Wis., 644; Estabrook v. Messersmith, 18 Wis., 545. But finding as we do that the absent partner, Parks, had impliedly consented to the making of the second assignment and authorized it, the other partner, Bigler, could execute the assignment under seal so as to transfer the real estate of the firm. Waterman v. Dutton, 6 Wis., 265; Wilson v. Hunter, 14 Wis., 683.
Again, if the last assignment did not transfer the real estate, and it did not pass to the assignee by the first, then it follows that the assignee, McCulloch, does not hold it and cann’ot be made to answer for it as garnishee.
But aside from the above propositions the question remains whether Bigler, one of the partners, had the right under the circumstances to make the second assignment. The learned counsel of the appellant states correctly the law in his brief, that “ mere absence of a non-executing partner does not give by implication a power to the partner present to execute an *571assignment to a trustee for the benefit of creditors.” This is clearly implied in the case of Brooks v. Sullivan, 32 Wis., 444. In that case the non-executing partner was not actually present, but was within convenient reach and might have been consulted; and it was because he was in the city and might have been consulted and was not, and did not join in the execution of the assignment or assent to it, that it was held invalid. The counsel of the appellant in that case claimed in his brief that, “whenever an assignment has been sustained that was executed by less than the whole number (of the partners), the circumstances of the case have been such that the remaining partner was held to have consented to the assignment, as where one partner had absconded or was traveling i/n foreign countries, so that he could not be consulted in an emergency, and the responsibility of the business was thrown entirety on the remaining partners.” To this statement of the law a great number of authorities were cited.
In Parsons on Partnership, § 166, the learned author, upon a review of the authorities, states in his text: “We think the weight of authority sanctions his (one partner’s) assigning the whole property in trust for all the creditors, especially if this be done without preference of any kind;” and in his note to this te.xt he says: “As to what is actually established by'the cases, it seems to be pretty generally admitted and laid down that one partner may make a valid general assignment of all the partnership property to trustees for creditors, if such an act is justified by the situation of the firm at the time, and if the other partners are absent from the countyry, or have made the assignor sole managing partner, or if in any other way, expressly or by implication, they may be supposed to have conferred upon the assigning partner sufficiently extensive authority.”
In Brooks v. Sullivan, supra, it seems to be implied that if the non-assigning partner is not-present or so near at hand that he could at the time be consulted, the assignment would be valid if executed by one partner.
*572In the leading case of Anderson v. Tompkins, 1 Brock., 456, one of the partners had embarked for England, and the remaining partner made an assignment with preferences, and it was held valid by the opinion of Chief Justice Mabshall. This learned chief justice gave a similar opinion in Harrison v. Sterry, 5 Cranch (S. C.), 289, in a case where the non-assigning partner resided in London, England, and the assignment was made by his partner in the city of New York, where he had tlie management of the business. Eollowing and approving this case, is the case of Robinson v. Crowder, 4 McCord (Law), 519, where some of the partners resided in Liverpool, England, who made the assignment, and the others in Charleston, South Carolina. The case of McCullough v. Sommerville, 8 Leigh, 415, was of a similar character, and Anderson v. Tompkins is especially approved.
In Deckard v. Case, 5 Watts, 22, the non-assigning partner had left the country, and the assignment was held valid for that reason. In Fisher v. Murray, 1 E. D. Smith (N. Y.), 841, it was held that an assignment by one partner without preference will be upheld if it be shown that it was made under circumstances that rendered it impossible to consult the other partners. In Welles v. March, 30 N. Y., 344, the non-assigning partner had absconded, and the assignment by the other was held good. Many other authorities might be cited to show that the last assignment, made by Bigler alone, after his partner, Parks, had conveyed away all his interest in the property of the firm, and had left the United States for permanent residence and business in another country, and had not returned, and the firm was insolvent and had suspended business, is a valid assignment and made upon sufficient implied authority.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.