Plaintiffs are wholesale merchants and sold to defendants, a firm of retail merchants, a bill of groceries. Afterwards, the plaintiffs brought an action on the account and sued out an attachment in aid. Interpleader filed his interplea, making claim of title to the property. A trial of the interplea resulted in his favor.
It appears that the defendants were a partnership composed of Charles and Marion Morris. That the latter was arrested and confined in jail in Kansas on a criminal charge and that interpleader deposited with the proper authority in Kansas $500 as bail for his appearance to answer the *44charge. That Marion defaulted and the money was forfeited. Before depositing the money, it seems that it was supposed interpleader could furnish a bond in regular form for his appearance, but on it being learned that he could not, he deposited the money. But before the money was deposited, Charles executed a note for $500, secured by chattel mortgage on the firm stock in the nature of indemnity to interpleader by reason of his signing the bond (the mortgage reading' as though he had already signed it). When the money was deposited Marion was released. The mortgage was not recorded for several months and was finally filed for record the day preceding the attachment. There was evidence tending to show this was by design' to save the firm’s credit and other evidence tending to show that it was accidental and by mistake. Plaintiffs sold the goods between the time of making and the filing of the mortgage and would not have sold them had they known there was a mortgage. On the day before the attachment was levied and after the money was forfeited by the non-appearance of Marion, Charles Morris sold and delivered the stock to interpleader in payment of his loss of the bail money and he was in possession at the time of the levy.
Plaintiffs claim that interpleader should not have prevailed in the trial court for the reason that the mortgage was withheld from record in fraud of creditors and to protect the credit of the partnership and relies on the cases of Williams v. Kirk, 68 Mo. App. 457; Dry Goods Co. v. Brown, 73 Mo. App. 245. On the other hand, interpleader disavows the mortgage and claims that recognizing it was invalid, he bought the stock outright for a good faith debt (the bail money) prior to the attachment. There was ample evidence to sustain the verdict in this respect and we therefore would not disturb' it but for error committed in instructions and on the rulings on evidence.
*45The court instructed the jury for interpleader that notwithstanding the invalidity of the mortgage as a base for his claim, yet if Oharles Morris with the consent of Marion sold and delivered to him the stock for the consideration of the bail money furnished by him, it was a valid sale. We think this would have been a proper instruction, if justified1 by the evidence. Eor even conceding the mortgage to have been fraudulent yet, before the rights of third parties intervene, the fraud may be repented of and a sale made for a bona fide prior debt. Peters Shoe Co. v. Arnold, 82 Mo. App. 1. The case of Lowrence v. Barker, 82 Mo. App. 125 is not in point. In that case the parties made their claim under the fraudfilent mortgage, while in this case the parties explicitly disavowed the mortgage and made an absolute sale.
But Charles Morris had no authority to sell the partnership property without the consent of Marion. One partner alone can not sell the partnership property in payment of the other partner’s debt, yet he may do so with the consent of all the partners. Goddard-Peck Grocery Co. v. McCune, 122 Mo. 426; McDonald & Co. v. Cash & Hainds, 57 Mo. App. 536. Now the only evidence that Marion consented to Oharles selling the partnership property consisted of what witnesses for interpleader (including himself) stated that Oharles told them that Marion had told him. None of these witnesses pretended that Marion himself had said he authorized the sale. This was mere hearsay and the evidence should have been excluded and instructions on that head for interpleader should have been refused.
But it is said that though Marion did not consent, yet since he is not objecting, attaching creditors have no right in the matter. It is true that the right of a creditor to subject partnership property to the payment of debts is a derivative *46right coming through the partners, and that this derivative right -can only be asserted by laying hold of the property generally, upon death and dissolution of partnership, assignment, bankruptcy or insolvency. Tenant Walker & Co. v. McKean, 46 Mo. App. 486; McDonald & Co. v. Cash & Hainds, 57 Mo. App. 536. But we are of the opinion that the partnership creditor, in a proper case, may lay hold of the partnership effects by attachment and by that proceeding have them administered for his benefit. Under the authorities cited any sale by one or more of the partners which divests the partnership interest must be free from fraud. If it be fraudulent, it fails to divest the interest of the creditor. So therefore if the latter lays hold of the partnership property by attachment, he places it in custodia legis for administration for his benefit.
That the debt in this case was that of the non-consenting partner does not affect the matter.
In view of the fact that the. case is to be retried we will suggest that if it be shown that interpleader made a cash deposit bail for Marion, as seems to be allowed by the law of Kansas, which was accepted by him by going at liberty thereunder and which he afterwards forfeited causing the loss of the amount to interpleader, the latter has a valid debt against him and plaintiffs’ instruction number six should not have been given. Such case is not like that of a contract of indemnity executed to one to secure him against loss if he will execute bail for the appearance of one accused of crime. Unless it could be shown that it was understood' at the time the deposit was made that the accused would avoid trial by non-appearance and forfeiture.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
All concur.