Court Opinion

ID: 7934051
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:07:37.075285+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:33:28.176026
License: Public Domain

Campbell, J.
Plaintiff purchased in good faith, but *667after maturity, a note of John Greenop & Co., payable to the order of Eobert A. Lavery, and indorsed by Lavery. Lavery was a member of the firm of John Greenop & Co., and made the note, with Greenop’s consent, for money lent by Lavery to the firm. The note was dated January 21, 1883, payable in six months. It was transferred to plaintiff in 1884 while the firm was still in business, and about a year before it ceased doing business. There was no evidence of the state of accounts, or that Lavery was in any way a debtor to the firm when the transfer was made, or that there were any equities existing against him which did not exist when the note was made.
The court below held that plaintiff could not recover. The reason assigned was that the note could not be transferred after maturity, so as to enable the indorsee to sue upon it, if suit could not have been brought by the assignor, and that Lavery could have brought no suit on it. The decision also seems to have been based partially on the idea that a partner can have no dealings with his firm which are not subject to the final accounting, and that the equities of such an accounting attach to such claims as he may hold against the firm.
I do not think this doctrine is tenable. It certainly has not been directed in this Court. The only case that is seriously claimed as bearing in that direction is Davis v. Merrill, 51 Mich. 480 (16 N. W. Rep. 864). That case has no resemblance to this. One member of the firm, named Eastwood, received from the firm in October, 1874, a note due in one month after date. In 1875 the firm was dissolved, and the affairs were put into the hands of George W. Merrill, one of the partners, to wind up. Merrill’s credit in the firm accounts was larger than Eastwood’s, and Eastwood had been credited on the books with the amount of the note, which had never been presented or demanded during the period after dissolution. *668In May, 1881, Eastwood, who had lost the note by accidental fire in January of the same year, assigned to the plaintiff in general terms whatever claims he had against the firm, with no reference to the note as such. It is plain enough that there could have been no recovery in such a case. Even had the note been described, the statute does not authorize the assignee of a negotiable note, who is not an indorsee, to sue in his own name on it. But, furthermore, there was no attempt to transfer the note as such. The assignment was one which transferred nothing but Eastwood’s claims generally against the company, and must therefore be. subject to the partnership settlement. There was no firm in existence for nearly six years before the assignment.
In the present case the note was transferred by regular indorsement a considerable time before the firm went out of business. It was due already as an independent claim against the firm for money lent, and not for money invested in the business. • It was not by its terms, or by the nature of the transaction, to be postponed until the future dissolution of the concern, and there is no accounting in advance of dissolution, unless by agreement.
While there is a difficulty in a suit at law in the name of a party against himself, yet, if this is the only difficulty, it goes only to the form of the remedy, and not to its existence. There never was any legal or equitable reason why a partner should not have specific dealings with his firm as well as any other person; and unless those dealings, from their nature, are intended to go into the general accounting, and wait for their adjustment till dissolution, they give a right to have a remedy according to their exigency, and can be dealt with like any other claims. The only reason why they must, under the old practice, be prosecuted at equity instead of at law, rose from the necessity at law of having plaintiffs *669capable of suing tbe defendants. In such a case the failure of a remedy at law justified a resort to equity. But equity could grant relief in such cases, and under our present rules there can be no' difficulty at law. Where partners have seen fit to deal with each other without reference to the final accounting, the transaction is not subject to the necessity or delay of such an accounting.
This note was by its terms negotiable. It is elementary doctrine that negotiability does not cease when paper matures. It is only subject to such equities as exist against the paper at the date when it- is negotiated. And the equities- which affect the indorsee are only such as attach directly to the note itself, and do not include collateral matters. This is Yery old doctrine, and is laid down without qualification. Lord Tenterden and his associates, speaking through Mr. Justice Bayley in Burrough v. Moss, 10 Barn. & C. 558, refer to the subject in this way:
“This was an action on a promissory note, made by the defendant, payable to one Fearn, and by him indorsed to the plaintiff after it became due. For the defendant it was insisted that he had a right to set off against the plaintiff’s claim a debt due to him from Fearn, who held the note at the time when it became due. On the other hand, it was contended that this right of set-off, which rested' on the statute of set-off, did not apply. The impression on my mind was that the defendant was entitled to the set-off, but, on discussion of the matter with my Lord Tenterden and my learned brothers, I -agree with them in thinking that the indorsee of an overdue bill or note is liable to such equities only as attach on the bill or note itself, and not to claims arising out of collateral matters. The consequence is that the rule for reducing the damages in this case must be discharged.” See Chit. Bills, 220; Story, Bills, § 220; Leavitt v. Putnam, 3 N. Y. 494; Baxter v. Little, 6 Metc. 7; and cases in note to page 275 of Big. Cas. B. & N. 437; 3 Kent. Comm. 91, and notes.
It was not shown, and cannot be claimed on this rec*670ord, that there was any unfairness or want of consideration, or payment, or any other matter bearing on the note in this case, when it was transferred, and in such case it can make no difference when it was transferred. It continued to be a valid note, and capable of transfer by indorsement. That a partner himself may have a remedy of some kind, where the transaction is such as to be separated from the general partnership accounting, does not seem to be questioned. Mr. Collyer refers to several illustrations, in book 2, chap. 3, Partn. (2d ed.) Judge Story, in his work on Partnership, § 222 et seq., indicates very clearly the right of a partner to relief in the case of contracts as a creditor or otherwise with his firm; and the fact, which is referred to in all the books, that an accounting can only be had at the close of the business, indicates as clearly as anything can that either a partner can make no separate contract with his firm at all, or else there must be some means of enforcing it. A contract Avhich cannot be enforced is nugatory. Partnerships are often made for long terms of years. Members become managers on salaries' which are payable at regular intervals, and they frequently furnish articles for which they are entitled to pay. No one doubts their rights to pay themselves out of moneys in their charge; but all do not have this opportunity, and to hold that a person must, if his copartners will not advance him what is due, wait the whole term of business for payment, is not reasonable or maintainable.
A very thorough discussion of the various questions is found in the early case of Smith v. Lusher, 5 Cow. 688, where the judges of the supreme court, and the chancellor and other members of the court for the correction of errors, dealt with the subject in a very exhaustive way, with entire unanimity. The cases of Nevins v. Townsend, 6 Conn. 5, and Gray v. Bank, 3 Mass. 364, are also some*671what pertinent. I have found no authority which sanctions the doctrine that plaintiff was precluded by the fact that the note was past due from taking the title by indorsement, and none that allows a note to be affected by collateral equities. When this note was indorsed there could be no accounting, because the firm continued its ordinary business. The debt was for a loan, and not for investments in the capital. It was distinct from the mutual relations among the partners, and stood as a separate contract.
I think there was nothing to bar recovery, and that the judgment to the contrary should be reversed.
Champlin, Morse, and Long, JJ., concurred with Campbell, J.