This action appears to have been brought on for hearing before a judge at special term upon a complaint alleging a partnership between plaintiff and defendant Japha, under the style of “PI. Plonsky & Co.,” from September 27th, 1876, without prescribed term, but no dissolution is alleged except that plaintiff, becoming insolvent, made a general. assignment of all his property and effects to the defendant, Louis Meyers, for the benefit of his creditors, who, it was alleged, had duly qualified as such, and that Meyers, though requested, had refused to institute an action for the winding up of the affairs of the firm of H. Plonsky & Co.; •and plaintiff prays a decree for dissolution, an account, and for payment of any surplus of assets belonging to the firm, the payment to Meyers of the proportion belonging to plaintiff, and for a judgment against Japha for any amount Rue from him to plaintiff on copartnership account. An injunction and a receiver were also prayed for. Japha seems to have appeared, but Meyers, so far as appears, had not been served with process nor had appeared in the action. On the hearing a stipulation was presented by plaintiff, signedby Japha, purporting to be an agreement between plaintiff and Japha and his attorney, agreeing to the dissolution ; that Louis Meyers be appointed receiver of the property of the firm; that an injunction issue as prayed for against Japha; that the plaintiff and Japha appear before Thomas Boese, as referee, for the purpose of such accounting; that the receiver, under the
Under these circumstances, the court took exception to such a peremptory disposition of trust funds and rights of creditors, and in the absence of any proper testimony satisfactorily showing to the court that the defendant Meyers had been served with summons or had appeared or was represented, or that he had in fact refused to intervene in his own-behalf as plaintiff, and bring an action for the administration of the copartnership affairs, the plaintiff had no standing in court, and it was properly in the discretion of the judge to-dismiss the complaint. The order appealed from should be affirmed.
Chables P. Daly, Ch. J., and Labbemobe, J., concurred.
Order and judgment affirmed.