16 Iowa 194 | Iowa | 1864
The nature of this controversy, and the result of its determination below, is presented in the statement of the case; in the retrial thereof here, our first inquiry will be as to plaintiff’s indebtedness to Cook & Sargent, including the Mervin judgment. The whole amount, after purging the claim of its usury, was by the court below’fixed at $25,056.43. The correctness of this finding is not seriously controverted, except that it is claimed by the defendants that the Mervin judgment is an indebtedness do John 0. Sargent, instead of the firm of Cook & Sargent. The usury which infected the indebtedness as alleged in the petition, is confessed, and after re-examining the account, and going over the figures and calculations in connection with the evidence bearing upon the same, we have been unable to detect any material error in the amount thus ascertained and fixed upon; as to the Mervin judgment and the equities relating thereto, we will hereafter speak. Whether this amount has been paid by Burtis is a question of more difficulty. Cook & Sargent have received from him, and as. a payment on said debt the avails of six thousand acres of land, but out of this circumstance grow two or three seriously controverted points:
First. Whether they took this land of the plaintiff at a specified price per acre as purchasers under him ?
Second. If not, then in disposing of the land by sale as the authorized agents of the plaintiff, what did they obtain for the same ?
And lastly, if they conveyed the land in payment of their own debts, and received an advance price for the same, because of their reputed insolvency, Gan the plaintiff insist upon the benefit of such advanced price on settlement ?
The question, however, still ^remains, what did Sargent, the agent and trustee, in disposing of these lands, get for the same? It is conceded that he sold them to the Washington Bank of Boston, in part payment of a debt due from Cook & Sargent to that institution.
In the present attitude of the records and pleadings in the case, and in view of the express terms of the contract creating the trust, to the effect “ that all lands sold by sqid Sargent should be accounted for to said Burtis at the price for which they are, or may be sold,” we suppose whatever credit Cook & Sargent obtained from said bank, on their indebtedness, in consideration of a sale of those lands to it, the same credit should be allowed on Burtis’ indebtedness to them. This would only be effectuating the terms of the contract in force between the parties at the time the lands were sold to the bank. But just what this amount or credit should be, is not rendered clear, explicit, or even satisfactory by the evidence. We can only arrive at it approximately by calculation, founded upon certain figures and data furnished by the witnesses. For instance, it appears from the facts disclosed, that Cook & Sargent’s indebtedness to the bank aforesaid, was $93,975, that they proposed, through Sargent, the acting agent, to sell in liquidation of this debt, 12,483 acres of land, at a certain price per acre therein specified, which, in the aggregate, would amount to that sum. ' Among these were the Burtis lands, which, with 40 acres subsequently added, amounted in round numbers, to 6,000 acres, and were offered by Sargent at $34,891.
Assuming, 'therefore, the debt and credit to be &s thus found, it follows that Burtis’ liabilities to Cook & Sargent are all. extinguished, including the Mervin judgment, unless the latter is protected from the equities of Burtis, in favor of John O. Sargent, who claims to be the owner thereof by assignment, for value, and without notice of
By the express provisions of the statute, § 1796 of the Revision of 1860, all instruments in writing, for the payment of money or property, without words of negotiability, are assignable; and it further provides, that the assignee shall take them “ subject to any defense or set-off, legal or equitable, which the maker or debtor had against any assignor thereof, before notice of his assignment.” Now, no question is made of the non-assignability of judgments, they are like the above instruments, choses in action, and as they do not contain words of negotiability, it follows that the same rules must govern their transfer.as those of unnegotiable paper. This provision of the Code, coupled with the law of set-offs, which is made very broad under the statutes of this State, show the legislative intent, that if a judgment debtor or maker of one of these instruments has a set-off or equity, that equity should not be to him a barren right, or an exile to our courts of justice. Indeed, we have recently had occasion to recognize and settle this principle in the ease of Hurst v. Sheets & Trussell, 14 Iowa, 822, which was a bill in equity to compel a set-off of mutual judgments after one of them had been assigned, and we again repeat the remark then suggested as having been made by
■ This doctrine of equities and set-offs is abundantly supported by authorities, a few of which are here referred to. Green v. Hatch, 12 Mass. R., 195; Bank of Niagara v. McCracken, 18 Johns. R., 498; Ford v. Stewart, 19 Johns., 342; McJilton v. Love, 13 Ill., 486 : Covel v. Tradesman's Bank, 1 Paige Ch., 130; Webster v. Wair, 1 Paige Ch., 319; Utica Insurance Co. v. Power, 10 Paige, 365; Gay v. Gay, 10 Paige, 367; Merrill v. Souther, 6 Dana (Ky.), 305; Ainslee v. Boynton, 2 Barb., 258; Bush v. Lathrop, 22 N. Y. (8 Smith), 535; Chamberlain v. Day, 3 Cow., 353; 6 B. Monr., 119. Some of these are exceedingly pertinent to the case at bar. Take the following cases, McJilton v. Love, 13 Ill., supra, where it was held that a judgment could not be transferred so as to vest the legal interest in the assignee. It is a mere chose in action, and the beneficial interest only passes by the assignment, the assignee takes it, subject to all the defenses that existed against it, in the hands of the party from whom he received it. In Merrill v. Souther, 6 Dana, 305, it was held, that, when cross-demands exist, and one of the parties is insolvent, the. other has an equitable right of set-off which cannot be divested by an assignment of the demand against him. 'A court of equity has jurisdiction to decree a set-off, when either of the parties are insolvent or non-resident, notwithstanding the demands are in the form of judgments.
The' supposed distinction between latent equities, as they are sometimes termed, and those existing between the original parties to the instrument was very well examined and discussed by Judge Denio, in the case of Bush, Adm., v. Lathrop, 22 Barb., 535. The facts were these: Noble, the plaintiff’s intestate, was the owner of a mortgage of
In this state of case, tbe legal conclusion of tbe Court was, that tbe plaintiff bad a redeemable title to tbe mortgage, and could demand a reassignment of tbe same. This decision not only recognizes and ascertains tbe general doctrine, that tbe assignee of a chose in action takes it subject to all equities existing at tbe time in favor of tbe debtor against tbe assignee, but goes further, and bolds that tbe equities existing between an assignor and an assignee of an unnegotiable instrument, attend tbe title transferred to a subsequent assignee for value, and without notice. It fully indorses Lord Thurlow’s rule, that a purchaser of such a security must always abide by tbe case of tbe person from whom be buys.
It also very satisfactorily answers one of tbe defendants’ objections to tbe plaintiff’s equity in this case, to tbe effect
Our remarks upon this case have already become too much extended to notice by name, or in detail, the various authorities relied upon by the defense. We do not think, however, that they shake the rule or principle under discussion, as laid down in the later decisions to which we have referred.
The case of Davis et al. v. Milburn, 3 Iowa, 170; 8 Mass., 454; 2 Johns. Ch., 442 ; 5 Mason, 214; 2 Sumn., 411, and others, are cited to sustain the defendants’ view of this case; but they most all turned, and were decided upon other questions. It is true some of them contained dicta proving the defendant’s side of the case, but these ought not to prevail over adjudications, made directly upon the question in dispute.
Upon the whole, our conclusion is, that the judgment below should be
Affirmed.