— Kate Tootle & Co., an incorporated mercantile company, brought their action by attachment against Meek & Atterbury, a mercantile partnership, and caused a writ of attachment to be levied upon a certain stock of goods as the property of the partnership. In this action Ewart filed an interplea claiming the absolute ownership of the attached goods. The attaching creditors answered, denying the interpleader’s claim.
The interpleader introduced as the basis of his claim a chattel mortgage dated January 11, 1888, exe*325cuted by Meek to Mm, whereby the latter conveyed to the former an undivided one-half of said stock of goods for the purpose of securing a promissory note made by Meek to the interpleader for $2,500, which was dated October 23, 1886. The interpleader in his brief states that he was in possession of the goods when the attachment was levied on January 13, 1888, but this is controverted by the attaching creditors; but the evidence is not preserved, or, if so, it is not set forth in the abstract.
It appears that Meek & Atterbury, in September, 1887, became indebted to the attaching creditors in the sum of $310.15 for merchandise sold by the latter to the former. It further appears that on the same day that Meek executed the mortgage to interpleader, that the other partner, Atterbury, executed a mortgage to one Low to secure a debt due by said Atterbury to him for $2,162.07. It is further stated that there was evidence introduced tending to show that the said stock of merchandise on the day before the levy of the attachment invoiced $6,100, and that the partnership debts amounted to about $4,500. It further appears that Atterbury, ten days before the attachment was levied, exchanged his farm for a stock of goods in Kansas, which latter was conveyed to his wife.
Neither the interpleader nor the attaching creditors have set forth ail the evidence in their respective abstracts. The interpleader has contented himself, after setting forth in liceo verla the mortgages, the petition and levy of the sheriff in the attachment, and what the evidence conduced to prove, — in other words, his conclusion as to its effect. This, of course, is wholly insufficient under the numerous decisions that have been made by us.
The attaching creditor asked no instructions. The interpleader asked and the court refused to declare the *326law to be “if it found from the evidence that on and prior to the thirteenth day of September, 1883, one Eli Dixon and George Lipscomb were each the owner of an individual one-half of a stock of goods in the city of Maysville, Missouri, and that on or about said day Wm. L. Meek, one of the defendants in the case of Tootle, Hosea & Co. v. Wm. L. Meek and Green B. Atterbury, purchased of said Dixon his undivided one-half of said stock of goods, for the sum of about $4,500, and executed and delivered to said Dixon his (Meek;s) notes for a part of the purchase price thereof, and said notes were afterwards, for a valuable consideration, sold and indorsed to plaintiff (Ewart), and that the note in proof, calling upon its face for $2,538.83, with ten-per-cent, interest, bearing the date of October 23, 1886, and executed by said Meek et al., to this plaintiff, is a renewal of said notes executed by said Meek to said Dixon for the purchase price of said undivided one-half of said stock of goods purchased of said Dixon, as aforesaid;' that afterwards, on the eleventh day of January, 1888, the said Meek, for the purpose of securing said note last aforesaid, executed and delivered to this plaintiff, the mortgage in proof upon his said undivided one-half of said stock of goods, and that this plaintiff took possession of said undivided one-half of said stock of goods under said mortgage, and that afterwards, on the thirteenth day of January, 1888, these defendants commenced a suit by attachment against the said Meek & Atterbury in the DeKalb county circuit court, and caused the sheriff of said county to levy the writ of attachment issued in the case last aforesaid, upon the goods, wares and merchandise mentioned in plaintiff’s interplea, and that said goods, wares and merchandise were a part of said undivided one-half of said stock of goods mortgaged by said Meek to this plaintiff, then, at the time of the said levy *327of said writ of attachment, the said Meek had no attachable interest in said undivided one-half of said stock of goods, and tbe finding of the court must be for the plaintiff in this case.” The court may have refused this instruction for the reason that the evidence was insufficient to authorize the finding of some of the facts embraced within its hypotheses. As the evidence is not all before us we cannot revise its findings in that respect.
But, even if the facts should have been found according to the assumption of the instruction, the conclusion of law which the court was asked to deduce was a palpable non sequitm. If Meek purchased of Dixon, of the old firm of Dixon & Lipscomb, his interest thereon and gave his note therefor which was afterwards assigned to interpleader, this would not make the latter a creditor of the firm of Meek & Atterbury — he was but the individual creditor of Meek. The contention in this case is between the attachment creditors of the firm of Meek & Atterbury and the interpleader who is an individual creditor of Meek.
By the mortgage of an undivided one-half of the partnership property of Meek to interpleader to secure his own debt without the consent of Atterbury, the latter would take no interest therein except what might have remained over to Meek after the payment of the partnership debts as his share. While one partner'can dispose of the property by a Iona fide sale, he cannot appropriate it without the consent of his copartner to the payment of his individual debts either with or without the knowledge of the creditor that such property is partnership property. In the distribution of partnership assets, partnership creditors have a preference over individual creditors. McDonald v. Cash & Hainds, 45 Mo. App. 66; Phelps v. McNeely, 66 Mo. 554; Flanagan v. Alexander, 50 Mo. 50; Ackley v. Staehlin, *32856 Mo. 561. The law does not invest a partner in his quality as agent of the copartnership with the implied authority to dispose of the partnership property to pay his individual debt. Such disposition will pass no title as against the creditors of the partnership. The partnership in such ease could assert its claim to property in the hands of such individual creditor. Flanagan v. Alexander, supra. It, still being the property of the partnership, would be liable to seizure under process of attachment by its creditors. The element of partnership consent is ignored by the instruction, for which, if for nothing else, it must be condemned as bad.
The evidence as to the insolvency of the partnership is not, as already stated, set forth in the abstract further than that interpleader introduced evidence tending to show the amount of the invoice of the stock of goods, and about the amount of the debts. It is not shown that this was all the evidence adduced in relation to the question of the insolvency of the partnership. We cannot say in view even of the evidence presented by the record before us. that the partnership was not only able to pay its debts, but was in such condition of its means that payment could be enforced by process of law. Certainly it is not to be questioned that, if the conveyances of the entire partnership assets to inter-pleader and Low are upheld, then there can be nothing left for the partnership creditors.
In view of the meager abstract of the evidence, we must indulge every presumption in favor of the correctness of the finding of the trial court. Pembroke v. Railroad, 30 Mo. App. 62; Hausmann v. Hope, 20 Mo. App. 193; Churchman v. Kansas City, 49 Mo. App. 366.
It follows that the judgment will be affirmed.
All concur.