140 N.Y.S. 143 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1913
This action was brought to recover the sum of three hundred dollars paid by the respondent to the appellants on or about February 15, 1907, as consideration for the assignment of a judgment, upon the ground that the appellants warranted at the time of the assignment that the judgment was still wholly unpaid and still wholly unsatisfied, and that the full amount was. still due and owing upon the same, and that the same was a good and valid judgment; but that, in fact, the judgment had been, prior to that time, paid.
The judgment, which was for $619.73, was recovered by the appellants against Herman W. Hoefer, in the Oity Court of the city of Hew York, on Hovember 9, 1903, upon a charge of fraud.
The judgment roll in that action was not offered in evidence upon this trial but it appears from the testimony that the appellants sold certain goods, wares and merchandise to Hoefer, Menkin & Boeck Company, .a corporation, relying upon statements and representations made to them by the said Hoefer, as to its solvency and responsibility. Within a few days after the goods were delivered the corporation made a voluntary assignment. The action was then brought which resulted in the judgment. Subsequently the receiver, appointed in supplementary proceedings upon said judgment, brought an action against Hoefer, his wife, Elizabeth Hoefer, and his mother-in-law, Maria Hackman, to set aside certain conveyances of real estate which it was alleged Hoefer had made to Maria Hackman to defraud his creditors. Mrs. Hackman paid to the receiver $500 and the action was discontinued as to her. Hoefer was adjudged a bankrupt, whether in voluntary or involuntary proceedings does not appear, nor does it appear whether the proceedings were instituted prior or subsequent to the assignment of the judgment. On February 26, 1907, within eleven days after the assignment of the judgment the respondent filed his claim with the referee. Thereafter proceedings were instituted by the trustee in bankruptcy before the referee and an order resulted dated May 11, 1908, disallowing the respondent’s claim for the sum of $619.73 and expunging it from the trustee’s and receiver’s records upon the ground
The five hundred dollars was paid by Mrs. Hackman. Of this amount only about $250 was actually applicable to the judgment, as that was all that was turned over by the receiver, the remainder having been paid out in the expenses attendant upon the suit by the receiver. This would leave over $300 remaining due upon the judgment without interest. The attorney for the judgment creditor testified that in December, 1906, Mrs. Hackman personally opened negotiations with him for the purchase of the judgment; that he told her: “ You can have that judgment with whatever addition to the five hundred dollars will make up the amount with interest to date.” They wanted it for less “ and I said: ‘ There is no use now I will not communicate with Messrs. Hewitt Brothers on the subject at all until you get ready to pay
Whether the payment of the dividend of $118.42 from the insolvent corporation of Hoefer, Menkin & Boeclc Company was credited on the amount in suit prior to the recovery of this judgment, does not clearly appear from the evidence. The attorney for the judgment creditor testified that to the best of his recollection it was. The payment was made more than four months prior to the recovery of the judgment.
The burden was on the plaintiff in this action to show that the payment was properly applicable in reduction of the judgment. The payment of the dividend of forty-two dollars and sixty-three cents was subsequently to the recovery of the judgment. Whether that payment is chargeable against the appellants we express no opinion. The effect of the use of the phrase “without recourse” in an assignment of a chose in action has never been considered, so far as we have been able to ascertain, by the courts of this state. The decisions of the courts in other states in the few instances that this phrase so used has been considered are conflicting. See Crawford v. McDonald, 12 Va. 189, 192; Houston v.
Therefore the judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered with costs to abide the event.
'Seabury and Lehman, J. J., concur.
Judgment reversed' and new trial ordered with costs to abide event.