Court Opinion

ID: 3866316
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:00:09.292891+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:36:12.765091
License: Public Domain

The declaration contained two counts: —
1. It charged that Hubbard, September 21, 1885, sued out a writ against one Brayman, who at that time was a copartner with the plaintiffs in a firm called Brayman  Trafford, served it by attaching the stock in the store of Brayman  Trafford, placed a keeper in the store, and kept him there till December 7, 1885; that at the time of the attachment Brayman had overdrawn his whole interest in the firm property; that the books of the firm showing this were submitted to Hubbard; that the firm was dissolved the day after the attachment by mutual agreement; that Hubbard refused to remove the keeper until December 7, 1885, when he took away from the store some of the stock attached.
2. It charged the matters in the first count, and added that, September 22, 1885, Brayman made and recorded an assignment for the equal benefit of his creditors of all his estate, except so much thereof, other than debts secured by bills of exchange and negotiable promissory notes, as was exempt from attachment by law.
The plaintiffs brought this action against Hubbard, the sheriff, and the keeper, for damages arising from loss of goods, injury to credit, and diminution of profits.
The defendants demurred separately to each count in the declaration.
We think the first count in the declaration is bad. This court decided in Randall v. Johnson, 13 R.I. 338, that the individual interest of a copartner in the firm effects is attachable by seizure of the effects. If the right to attach exists, it carries the usual incidents of attachment, namely, the right of the attaching officer to take and retain possession of *Page 328 
the goods attached, and to that end to remove them for convenience and safety of keeping. Undoubtedly this tends to embarrass, and possibly to break up, the copartnership business; but we do not see how these consequences can be avoided at law, even if they can in equity, without remedial legislation. The removal was none the less valid because it was a removal of a part only of the goods attached. The effect of this was to release the attachment on the goods unremoved, and to retain it to the extent of the individual interest of the partner sued, only on the goods removed. Neither do we think the attachment was invalid because the partner sued had at the time largely overdrawn his account with the firm, as alleged, or because, upon a winding up of the concerns of the firm, there would be nothing coming to him. His legal interest in the firm effects still remained, subject to the equitable lien of the copartners, and this interest was attachable even though the effect would be that, upon sale thereof under the attachment or on execution, the purchaser would get only a right to an account which would profit him nothing. Of course the copartners could not in any wise impair the right of the attaching creditor by agreeing, after the attachment, to a dissolution of the copartnership. Collyer on Copartnership, 3d Amer. ed. § 822 and note.
The second count alleges, in addition to what is alleged in the first, that the partner sued, on the day following the attachment, made a general assignment, recorded the same day, for the benefit of his creditors, under Pub. Stat. R.I. cap. 237, § 12,1 the *Page 329 
effect of which was to dissolve the attachment. This was before the goods attached had been removed. We are of the opinion that the instant the assignment was made and recorded, the right of the attaching creditor or officer to retain or remove them ceased, and consequently that the plaintiffs are entitled to damages for any injuries which they have suffered by the subsequent retention and removal. The defendants contend that the right to sue for any injury resulting from the retention and removal was only in the assignee of the assigning copartner, not in the other copartners. We do not think so. It has been decided, and we think correctly, that the assignee of a partner's interest cannot withdraw his share of the joint effects, but the continuing partner has a right to them for the purpose of paying the debts and winding up the concerns of the firm. Horton'sAppeal, 13 Pa. St. 67.
The declaration is not attacked on any other ground.
Demurrer to first count sustained; demurrer to second countoverruled.
After the above decision the plaintiffs amended the first count of their declaration, and the case came again before the court on demurrer to the amended declaration.
1 As follows: —
"SECT. 12. Whenever the property of any debtor shall be attached or levied upon by any creditor, the debtor may, at any time before such property shall be sold, and the proceeds thereof applied to the payment of the claim or judgment upon which such attachment or levy shall have been made, and within sixty days after such attachment or levy, dissolve such attachment or levy by making and having recorded in the records of the town or city where the assignor resides, or where any of the real estate of such debtor is located, an assignment of all the property and estate of such debtor, except so much thereof, other than debts secured by bills of exchange or negotiable promissory notes, as is or shall be exempted from attachment by statutes of the State and of the United States, to some citizen of this State, for the equal benefit of all his creditors, in proportion to their respective claims, except as is provided in section fourteen of this chapter; and such assignment shall be effectual to convey all the property and estate of such debtor, except as aforesaid, and also all the property and estate heretofore conveyed by such debtor, in fraud of the rights of creditors, or in violation of the provisions of this chapter."
February 12, 1887.