Court Opinion

ID: 7101454
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:16:14.843803+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:25.352080
License: Public Domain

Reed, J.
The written contract which was assigned by W. C. Moore to Clement, Sayre & Co. was executed on the second of January, 1883. The assignment was made February 22, 1883, and the debt intended to be secured by the assignment was contracted in October, 1882. The debt was contracted by the firm of W. C. Moore & Company, a partnership composed of W. C. Moore and Mrs. Parmenter. This firm commenced business as general merchants in April, 1882. The business was carried on in the premises in question. About the first of January, 1882, a parol contract was entered into with the Milwaukee Land Company for the purchase of the lot in question. The town had then just been established, and the lot was entirely unimproved, and one of the conditions of the contract was that the purchaser should erect a store building on it. A conveyance of the lot was to be executed upon the completion of the building and the payment of one dollar. A two-story building was erected on the lot, but was not fully completed when the contract was reduced to writing, in January, 1883. The firm occupied it, however, in April, 1882, and carried on their business in the 'lower room, and the individual members of the firm lived with their families in the rooms in the second story, and the building was occupied in this manner when the debt to Clement, Sayre & Co. was contracted, and when the contract was assigned by Moore to that firm. The building cost about $900, and the evidence shows that the lower story is worth less than $300. The firm of W. O. Moore & Co., as we infer from the evidence, failed about the time of the assignment of the contract to Clement, Sayre & Co., or soon after that, and Mrs. Parmenter and her family removed from the building sometime in the summer of 1883; but Moore *61and his family continued to occupy it. Under our holding in Smith v. Quiggans, 65 Iowa, 637, if the contract with the Milwaukee Land Company was entered into by Moore in his individual capacity, and he acquired thereunder an individual property in the premises, there can be no doubt that they were exempt from judicial sale for the satisfaction of the debt to Clement, Sayre & Co., and consequently that the assignment by Moore of the contract for the security of the debt, without the concurrence of his wife in the contract of assignment, is void under section 1990 of the Code. It is contended by plaintiff, however, that the property was, in fact, assets of the firm of W. 0. Moore & Co., and consequently that defendants could not acquire the homestead right in it as against the creditors of that firm. ~W. C. Moore is named as the grantee in the written contract. The evidence shows, however, that the husband of Mrs. Parmenter, who acted for her in all matters pertaining to the business of the firm, was present when the parol agreement for the purchase of the lot was entered into. He assisted also in the selection of the lot. The greater portion of the cost of the building was paid by Moore. A portion of it, however, was paid by Mrs. Parmenter, and the cost of some of the materials which were used in the construction of the building was paid out of the store, and some of the labor in building it was paid for in the same manner.
Before the parol contract for the purchase of the lot was entered into, both Moore and Parmenter were engaged in farming. They were of limited means, and when this new town was established they resolved to go there and engage in business in the hope of bettering their circumstances. Moore had about. $1,000, and Mrs. Parmenter had something less than that amount. The building cost, as stated above, about $900, and Moore contributed to the purchase of the stock of goods which was purchased quite as much money as his partner. During the time the business was carried on the firm paid no rent for the store-room, nor did Mrs. Parmenter or *62her husband pay anything for the use of the rooms in the second story occupied by them. »
These facts, which are all clearly proven, satisfy us that the purchase of the' lot and the building of the house were part of the joint enterprise in which the partners agreed to engage.
The- conduct of Moore in voluntarily assigning the contract as security for the debt of the firm is strong evidence that he then regarded the property as belonging to the firm. Both Mrs. Parmenter and her husband were present when the assignment was made, and it does not appear that any claim was then made that the property belonged to Moore individually, and we are satisfied that the claim that it was his property is an after-thought. We are satisfied, then that the property belonged to the firm. And we have the question whether one partner can acquire a homestead in real estate belonging to the firm of which he is a member, and hold the same exempt from judicial sale for the satisfaction of the debts of the partnership. We are very clear that a partner cannot acquire such interest in the property of the firm.
In Hewitt v. Rankin, 41 Iowa, 35, it is said that “real estate held by a partnership is to be regarded as the property of the firm, as to the creditors and all persons dealing with it, when necessary for the protection of their rights. The partner is to be regarded in such cases as holding only an interest in the stock or capital of the partnership, which is personal property. If the business of the firm be in operation, or there be liabilities outstanding against it, the partners have not an interest in its lands or other assets that may be regarded as projterty; their interest is in the stock of the firm, whatever, upon final settlement, may be due them.”
Under .the rule, as here announced, it is very clear that the partner can acquire no such interest in the real estate of the firm as defendants here seek to assert.
We think the judgment of the circuit court is right, and it is
Affirmed.