Opinion
Argued June 2, 1881
Decided October 4, 1881
Samuel Hand for appellant.
Frederic A. Ward for respondent.
This is an action to foreclose a mortgage, and judgment for a deficiency has been entered against the defendants Franklin Bell and Charles H. Baxter.
The material facts are as follows: In March, 1864, the plaintiff and the defendants Franklin Bell and Charles H. Baxter, were copartners in business under the firm name of C.H. and A.T. Baxter Co., and in that month they purchased, for the purposes of their partnership and with partnership funds, certain real estate. They continued to use the real estate for the purposes of their partnership until January 1, 1865, when William M. Baxter became a member of the firm and thus interested in the real estate with the other members of the firm, although the title to the same continued to stand in the name of such other members as before. After William became a member of the firm the real estate was treated and used as partnership property, and became, and, until January, 1869, continued the property of the new firm, and they expended in the improvement thereof, with partnership funds, about the sum of $44,000. In January, 1869, the plaintiff wished to withdraw from the firm, and then made an agreement with the other members of the firm to withdraw therefrom and sell to them his interest in the partnership property. That agreement was consummated in February, 1869, and the plaintiff executed to his associates in the paper title, Bell and Charles H. Baxter, a quit-claim deed of his interest in the partnership real estate, who took such conveyance for the benefit of themselves and William M. Baxter, and they proposed to continue the same business under the firm name of Baxter, Bell Co., and they paid plaintiff a portion of the consideration of the purchase, and to secure him for the balance, Bell and Charles H. Baxter alone executed to him their bond, and a mortgage upon the partnership real estate, for $35,000. Thereafter the firm of Baxter, Bell Co. continued to carry on the firm business and use therefor the real estate, and they paid the interest on the mortgage in full to the first day of October, 1877, and reduced the principal, by payments out of partnership funds, to the sum of $15,000. This action was commenced to foreclose the mortgage for such balance, and from the judgment against him Bell appealed to the General Term, and from affirmance there to this court.
The defense of Bell was based upon facts yet to be stated. In December, 1877, Baxter, Bell Co. became insolvent and on the 13th day of that month made a general assignment for the benefit of their creditors, and subsequently in the same month they entered into a composition with their creditors. The plaintiff attended the meeting of the creditors at which the composition was effected and signed the composition agreement, setting opposite his name "$5,380 unsecured," saying at the time that his claim was for a deficiency upon a mortgage given to him on his retiring from the firm of C.H. A.T. Baxter Co. by Baxter, Bell Co., to secure him money due and for a debt of $380 due him from the firm, and it was shown that there was no other mortgage than the one in suit. The defendant Bell offered on the trial to put in evidence the composition agreement signed by all the creditors of the firm in which they agreed to accept in notes forty per cent of their respective claims or in cash thirty-five per cent thereof in full discharge thereof, and to prove that the firm had performed the agreement with all their other creditors and had offered to perform with the plaintiff by first tendering him notes as agreed and then tendering him the cash as agreed, and that he had refused to receive either the notes or the cash. He also offered to show that the plaintiff said at the time he signed the composition agreement that he had estimated that the deficiency unsecured on his mortgage would be $5,000, and that he signed the agreement for such deficiency. All of the proof thus offered was rejected by the referee upon the objection of plaintiff's counsel upon the ground that plaintiff's claim upon his mortgage was not against the firm of Baxter, Bell Co., and hence was not discharged by the composition agreement entered into with the firm for the discharge of firm debts.
We are of opinion that the evidence should have been received, and that if admitted it would have constituted a bar to any judgment for a deficiency against defendant Bell.
An agreement to discharge the whole of a debt upon receiving payment of a portion is nudum pactum and not binding. But to this general rule there are some exceptions, one of which is a composition agreement where the creditors agree to take a portion of their debts in satisfaction of the whole. In such a case the agreement of each creditor is said to furnish a consideration for the agreement of every other creditor who becomes a party to the composition agreement. Each creditor enters into a new agreement with the debtor the consideration of which is the forbearance by all the other creditors who become parties to the composition to insist upon their claims in full. In 1 Smith's Leading Cases (Hare Wallace) 600, it is stated to be settled "that where one creditor by undertaking to discharge his debtor induces other creditors to accept a composition and absolve the debtor from further liability, he cannot afterwards enforce his claim, since it would be a fraud upon other creditors." (See also Good v. Cheeseman, 2 B. Ad. 328; Massey v. Johnson, 1 Ex. 241; Norman v. Thompson, 4 id. 755; Chemical National Bank v. Kohner, 85 N.Y. 189. Chitty on Cont. [10th Am. ed.] 864.)
It may be assumed that as between the plaintiff and the firm of Baxter, Bell Co., the debt secured by his bond and mortgage could be enforced only against the two members of the firm who executed those instruments, and yet the assumption will not aid plaintiff's case. Baxter, Bell Co. were engaged in compromising their firm debts, and the debt to the plaintiff was practically just as much a firm debt as any of the other debts of the firm, and it was just as important to them to be personally discharged from that as from any other firm debt. While the firm upon the assumption stated was not under obligations to the plaintiff to pay his debt, the members thereof were under obligations to each other to pay it. As between them it was a firm debt to be paid out of firm assets. Either member of the firm could pay it with partnership funds, and if either of them paid it with his own funds he could compel contribution from the others. Hence the composition would have been imperfect unless plaintiff's debt was included. When, therefore, plaintiff signed the composition agreement, if he signed it in reference to a deficiency upon his mortgage, the same consideration which upheld the other signatures upheld his. The agreement not to enforce his claim for a deficency which would undoubtedly have to be paid, if enforced, out of partnership assets, or by the partners, was a consideration for the agreements by the other creditors not to enforce their claims, and their agreements on the other hand upheld his. Under the circumstances, the parties certainly were competent to treat this as a firm debt, and include it in the composition. If the plaintiff, after becoming a party to the composition, could immediately foreclose his mortgage and enforce a judgment for a deficiency and thus possibly impair the ability of the firm to perform their agreement with the other parties, it would be a fraud on the other parties, and that is stated in the books to be one of the reasons why a party to a composition agreement may not enforce his original claim against the debtor.
The referee, therefore, erred in excluding the evidence as to the composition agreement and Bell's defense, and, the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.