Where a judgment had been obtained in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of Kentucky in a suit brought by a
citizen of Maryland against certain persons in Kentucky, and the
judgment was afterwards perpetually enjoined at the instance of the
defendants, and a bill was filed by a citizen of Kentucky against
the original defendants, who were also citizens of Kentucky, this
bill was properly dismissed by the court for the want of
jurisdiction.
The circumstance that the complainant claimed that this was in
the nature of a bill of review of the decree which was passed in a
suit between citizens of different states, was not sufficient to
devest it of the character of an original bill.
Moreover, the administrator of a deceased partner had no right
to interpose and claim a debt due to the partnership. It was the
right of the surviving partner to settle up the concerns of the
firm.
Page 58 U. S. 469
MR. JUSTICE CATRON delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1822, some of the defendants made two notes, one for
$1,308.44, and one for $1,383.95, to Luke Tiernan and sons, one
payable the 1st of December of that year and the other December 1,
1823.
In 1833, suits were brought by the plaintiff, as attorney of the
payees, in the United States Circuit Court for the Kentucky
District, and judgments were obtained by default.
No executions to enforce the judgments were put into the
marshal's hands till December 15, 1845, and shortly after they were
stayed by injunction, at the suit of some of the defendants against
Charles Tiernan, the surviving partner, on the ground of payment,
and the bar of the statute of Kentucky, for failing to sue out
executions within twelve months after judgment, and on the 6th day
of May, 1847, the injunction was, by decree of the United States
circuit court, made perpetual.
Wickliffe had in the meantime brought suit against Luke Tiernan,
claiming an indebtedness against him to the amount of about three
thousand dollars, but never obtained judgment. He had attached the
debt he alleged to be due by the defendants to Tiernan and Sons,
and when the injunction suit was pending against the surviving
partner, Wickliffe, having obtained letters of administration on
the 13th of November, 1846, petitioned to be made a defendant, but
the court overruled the motion.
On the 6th of December, 1847, he moved for leave to file a bill
of review on the same ground, but the court also refused, and the
present suit was brought to set aside the decree enjoining
execution of the two judgments, on the ground that the decree in
favor of Eve and others was obtained by fraud, through the
connivance of Charles Tiernan, the defendant. The bill alleges,
among other things, that Charles Tiernan was largely indebted to
his father, and had assigned his interest in the judgments to him,
and had become bankrupt. There is no averment in the bill that the
partnership debts of Luke Tiernan and Sons had been paid; nor is
there any averment that the complainant and defendants were
citizens of different states.
Wickliffe attempted to have himself made a defendant to the suit
of John G. Eve and others against Charles Tiernan, on the
assumption that Luke Tiernan was indebted to him, Wickliffe, and he
claimed a right to have part of the amount due to him from Luke
Tiernan satisfied out of the moneys he alleged were due to Luke
Tiernan and Sons from Eve and others. Charles Tiernan, being the
surviving partner of the firm, had the sole right to defend the
suit, as he represented the partnership property; in regard to
which, the administrator of Luke Tiernan had a right to come into a
court of equity by bill, to coerce the
Page 58 U. S. 470
surviving partner to settle, and pay the debts of the firm with
the joint property; and after the creditors of the partnership were
satisfied, then Luke Tiernan's administrator might have come in on
a bill, properly framed, for one-third of the surplus, or as much
more as Luke Tiernan was in advance to the firm. This familiar
doctrine is well stated by Mr. Justice Story in his work on
Partnership, §§ 97, 347.
But the bill before us claims no relief in this form; the
complainant asks that the decree releasing Eve and others may be
set aside as fraudulent, and the balance due on Eve's debt may be
decreed to him, as administrator of Luke Tiernan and in this
capacity he seeks to retain for himself, and subject the property
of the firm to pay the debts of an individual partner. Charles
Tiernan is no party to this proceeding, and as he was not brought
before the court, there could be no jurisdiction taken of the
subject matter, he being legal owner of the chose in action claimed
if the claim had any existence.
The bill was dismissed in the circuit court, because the
complainant and the defendants were citizens of Kentucky, and
therefore the court declared it had no jurisdiction, for want of
proper parties. To obviate this objection, it is insisted here on
the part of the appellant that this is a bill of review of the
proceeding in the cause of John G. Eve and others, against Charles
Tiernan. The appellant having been refused the privilege to file a
bill of review, he then filed this original bill, impeaching the
decree for fraud; and to this bill none but citizens of Kentucky
were parties.
It is manifestly an original bill, within the description given
by Mr. Justice Story's Eq.Plead. § 404, and being so, the
circuit court had no jurisdiction of the parties.
It is ordered that the decree dismissing the bill be
affirmed.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Kentucky, and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof it is
now here ordered, adjudged, and decreed by this Court that the
decree of the said circuit court in this cause be and the same is
hereby affirmed, with costs.