Court Opinion

ID: 6584730
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:41:35.224134+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:25.465261
License: Public Domain

Tyler, J.
The plaintiff, as assignee of the insolvent estate of S. F. Prince & Co., filed a claim in the court of insolvency against the insolvent estate of D. L. Kent & Co. The claim was disallowed and the plaintiff appealed to the county court where he filed a declaration in the common counts in assumpsit and the defendant filed two pleas thereto, the first alleging that the claimant was a co-partnership composed of Samuel F. Prince, John F. Prince and Charles B. Kent, and that the defendant was a co-partnership composed of the same Samuel F. Prince and John F. Prince; that during the time when the alleged causes of action accrued both firms were engaged in the business of quarrying, manufacturing and selling marble at Dorset in this State and had mutual dealings; jhat advancements and loans of money and advancements, loans and sales of *230marble were, during that time, made between the two firms so composed in respect to members, and that the alleged causes of action accrued solely by reason of such loans, sales and advances, and claimed that the demands, for the reasons alleged, were not provable. The second plea differs from the first only in that it alleges that E. L. Hawley was also a member of the claimant firm.
The plaintiff demurred to both pleas and the case comes here upon the judgment of the court below overruling the demurrer and adjudging the pleas sufficient.
The only question presented is, wfhether the assignee of one insolvent firm composed of the three or four persons named in the pleas can prove a claim against another insolvent firm which is composed of two of the members of the claimant firm. It must be understood by the pleas that the claimant firm was engaged in a business separate and distinct from that of the defendant.
The claim that is sought to be proved is a debt due to the firm of S. F. Prince & Co. from the firm of D. L. Kent & Co., and therefore is not affected by the rule that a partnership firm cannot prove a claim against the individual estate of an insolvent partner, nor by the rule that a member of a firm cannot prove a claim against the firm of which he is a member. The case presents no question as to the liability of the property of individual members of the defendant firm for the payment of the claim, nor of the right of individual members of the claimant firm to share in the assets of the defendant. Whatever dividend may be received for the claimant firm will not be for the benefit of its individual members nor for their creditors, but for the benefit of the creditors of the claimant firm.
Section 2164, Y. S., provides that the net proceeds of the property of the insolvent partnership shall be appropriated to the payment of the creditors of such partnership, and that the net proceeds óf the separate estate of each partner shall be appropriated to _ the payment of his separate *231creditors, which is for the reason that credit was presumably given by partnership and private creditors, respectively, by reason of their reliance upon partnership and private assets, which, by the credit given, they have respectively increased. This statute is founded upon the equitable rule given by Lord Hardwiclee in Twiss v. Massey, 1 Atk. 67, that joint creditors, as they gave credit to the joint estate, have first their demand on the joint estate; and separate creditors, as they gave credit to the separate estate, have first their demand on the separate estate.
The firm of S. F. Prince & Co. being a creditor of the defendant, and all dividends recovered being for the claimant’s creditors, the claim is provable. This holding is in accord anee with Somerset Potters Works v. Minot, 10 Cush. 592, and the other Massachusetts cases cited by counsel, decided under a statute like our own, also with the elementary works upon partnership, cited.

Judgment reversed; demurrer sustained; pleas adjudged insufficient and cause remanded.