Opinion of the court by
CHIEF JUSTICE PAYNTERReversing.
Clifton Tatum, Henry F. Embry, and G-.'W. Emibry were live s-tock commission merchants doing business' in the city of Louisville under the firm name of Tatum, Embry & Co. The firm was the owner of personal property, consisting of money, bonds, accounts, safe, office fixtures, and furniture. One member of the firm resides in the city of, Louisville, but the other members reside outside the city. The city ■assessor assessed the partnership property for taxation, and the city is asserting its right to collect taxes for certain years.. It is insisted by appellees that, as two of the members of the firm do not reside within the corporate limits of the city, the partnership property can not be assessed for city taxation; that, as it is personal'property, *749each member of the firm should pay taxes on what his im terest may be therein at the place of his domicile, and that the domicile for the purposes of taxation is the situs of his interest in the firm property. On the other hand, it is contended by the city that they conducted their business as a firm in the city; that firm assets are within the corporate limits of the city; that the property gets the protection and benefit of the laws of the city, and it should be taxed by the municipality as partnership property in the name of the firm. Partnerships, of course, are composed of individuals. The property belonging to them is the result' of contributions made by the individuals engaging in the venture. It is held and used for a common purpose. It is liable to the payment of partnership demands. It can be sold under an execution against the partners to pay a partnership demand. If a member of the firm is financially involved, his interest in the firm can not be taken for his individual obligations to the prejudice of the firm creditors. The firm property is an aggregate of contributions set apart for certain purposes, protected by law against an invasion by individual members of the firm and their creditors. When a member contributes to produce the whole, he does not retain the thing contributed, but acquires an interest with his associates in the whole. He surrenders the individual control of the amount he contributed to that of the members of the firm. The personal property of the firm has an actual situs in Louisville, where the business was conducted. It has a visible and tangible existence. Two-thirds has been taken from the domicile of the owners, and an actual, permanent situs is fixed in Louisville. The character of the ownership in the property, as well as its situs, has been voluntarily changed. In doing this, the members of the firm living outside of the *750city committed, tlieir property to the protection of the municipal authorities, ■ and at the same time made it liable to the payment of taxes to support the municipality. As has been said, a firm, for the purposes of taxation, is “a distinct entity.” In many States the statutes provide that the property of a firm shall be assessed in the firm name. We do not think it necessary to have a statute of that kind in order that a firm may be required to list and pay taxes on the property in the name of the firm. It can not be that, simply because some of the members of the firm are domiciled outside of the corporate limits of the city, the property belonging to it must be assessed in the individual names of those comprising it according to ■the value of the interest which each has therein. To show that is true, then it must be shown that partnership property should never be assessed in the name of the firm, but the interest of each partner in the firm property in his own name. It seems to us that it would be an anomalous condition that the law would Authorize the municipal authorities to assess the property of a partnership in the firm name when they all lived in the city, and would forbid them from doing so when a member lived in the city and two or more outside of its corporate limits. A municipality has a lien upon property for taxes due it. If a member of a firm has assessed in his name his interest in firm property, and fails to pay his taxes, and it becomes necessary to seize and sell his property to pay them, the collecting officer could not sell the firm property to pay the taxes due by him, but only his interest in the firm property. To thus assess partnership property would occasion many complications, both in assessment of property! and collection of taxes. This court had under consideration, in the case of Meguiar v. Helm, 91 Ky., 29 (12 R. 751) 14 S. W., 952, the question as to the taxation of personal property be*751longing to a partnership. Among other1 things, it said: “It is not a proper mode of assessment to list each partner’s capital or profit, and require each to pay on his individual account. ... If a partnership, the firm, as-such, must pay the taxes.” It is said in Burroughs, Tax’n, p. 225, section 98: “For the purposes of taxation, a firm as a distinct entity, and not the individual members of it, is considered as the owner of its property, and it is to be assessed to the firm. The place of assessment of a firm is that where the business is conducted. Usually the statute so provides. Where the partners ■ reside in different districts, but one of them resides where the business i& conducted, it is assessable at the place of business of the firm.” Cooley, Tax’n (2d Ed.) p. 871, says: “The property of a partnership is generally with much propriety required to be taxed at the place where the partnership business is carried on, and the like provision is made for other oases where one is conducting a business at a place other than that where he resides. It would be proper in such, a case to make the assessment to the person in charge of the business, unless the statute gave other direction.” 1 Desty, Tax’n, section 62, says: “A partnership firm is taxable on its property at the place where the1 business of the firm is conducted, while the members are severally taxable for their interests 'where they reside, unless the statute lays down a different rule. .The firm, and not the individual members of it, is, for the purposes of taxation, considered as owner of its property, and it is to be assessed therefor. Even where the parties reside in different districts, the firm property is taxable ut the place where the business is conducted.” We are of the opinion that the property was properly assessed.
The judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.