183 S.E. 52 | W. Va. | 1935
This is a suit in chancery. The plaintiff claims that he advanced to the defendant Bank the interest on certain notes held by it; that he was not responsible on the notes; that the defendant agreed to repay him the advances out of the first money it received on the notes from the makers or from a sale of their property; and that it did receive an ample sum to repay him from such sale, but refused to do so. Upon conflicting evidence, the circuit court found for plaintiff. The defendant appealed, contending, primarily, that equity has no jurisdiction.
The plaintiff takes the position that his alleged agreement with the Bank constituted an equitable assignment of the fund received by it from the sale. The ordinary form of an equitable assignment is an order drawn by the debtor in favor of the creditor on a fund in the hands of a third person. But that is not the form presented here. The assignment alleged by plaintiff is one to the creditor himself (plaintiff) by the debtor (defendant) of a fund to come later into the *590
debtor's own possession. There is some difference of authority on a situation like this, occasioned mainly by the fluctuation thereon of the federal courts. (For demonstration of this statement, see the several holdings in Christmas v. Russel, 14 Wall. 69,
There is no allegation or proof touching the attitude of the makers of the notes, on plaintiff's payment. There was no agreement between him and the Bank that it would assign any part of the debt to him. Consequently, he does not bring *591
himself within any of the equitable hypotheses stated inNeely v. Jones,
The decree of the circuit court is reversed and the plaintiff's bill is dismissed; but without prejudice to the prosecution of his action in assumpsit, which this record shows he has instituted and is now pending against the Bank upon the claim advanced herein.
Decree reversed; bill dismissed without prejudice.