For the purpose of coming at once to the question of law which was discussed on the argument, I shall assume that the defendant purchased the bond and mortgage of Smith and Newton in good faith, paying them the amount purporting to be due on these securities, without notice of any fact tending to impeach the title which they professed to have. The question is, whether the right which passed by the assignment was subject to the equity of Noble’s representatives to redeem the mortgage by paying the amount for which it had been pledged to Preston. That the right to redeem as’against Preston was perfect, is not questioned. Smith and Newton stood
*538
precisely in Preston’s place, because it was not shown that they paid anything for the assignment which they obtained. But they had an apparent title; and if the defendant purchased of them under the circumstances which I have assumed, he is capable of raising this question, though the title of his assignors, Smith and Newton, may have been fraudulent as against the plaintiff. All the cases agree that the purchaser of a chose in action takes the interest purchased, subject to all the defences, legal and equitable, of the debtor who issued the security. It is unnecessary to refer to authorities for this general principle, or to point out the exceptions to it which have been created by the custom of merchants or by positive statutes. It is enough that the present case is not claimed to fall within any of those exceptions. But the rule, if limited in the manner I have stated it, does not aid the plaintiff; for it is not the equity of the debtor in these securities which is in question, but of the plaintiff’s intestate against Preston, his immediate assignee; and the question is, whether the defendant is to be deemed to have purchased subject to this equity, or whether his assignment confers upon him a better title than his assignors, who ' were confessedly liable to it, had. The defendant claims thatll this is a latent equity, available only between the parties to it, 1 and that it did not accompany the security when it passed into the hands of a subsequent owner. The rule, as generally stated, is, that the purchaser takes only the interest which his assignor had to part with; or, as expressed by Lord Thuklow, “A purchaser of a chose in action must always abide by the case of the person from whom he buys.” “ This (he said) I I take to be the general rule.”
(Davies
v. Austin, 1 Ves., 247.) j If this is a correct statement of the doctrine, the defendant has! no ground to stand on, for he purchased of a party who was clearly hable to the relief sought in this suit. The rule, as thus stated, is the only logical one. In the transmission of property,' of any kind, from one person to another, the former owner can, in reason, only transfer what he himself has to part with, and the other can only take what is thus transferred to him. The cases in which, from motives of policy, to promote the currency'
*539
of certain securities, to prevent fraud, or to aid the vigilant against the careless, the party to whom the transfer is made is allowed to claim a greater interest than was possessed by the other, are exceptional; and it is for a party claiming the protec-1 tion of an exception, to show that it exists in the particular case. I ■ This is what the defendant has attempted in the present instance; and it must be admitted that there are judicial opinions, which are entitled to consideration, which favor that view of the case, though I think the rule is settled the other way. The first trace of the controversy which I have met with is found in
Beebee
v.
The Bank of New York
(
James v. Morey came before the Court of Errors in 1823. It presented no feature to which the principle under examination could have any application; though an opinion was advanced by one of the judges in conformity with those expressed by Chancellor Kent, in the cases which have been mentioned. The bond and mortgage in question in the case was executed by Johnson to Wattles, and assigned by the latter to James, the complainant. Before the assignment, Wattles had purchased the equity of redemption in a part of the mortgaged premises; and the question was, whether the lien of the mortgage was not thereby extinguished on account of the merger. The. defendant purchased the premises of Wattles after the assignment of the mortgage to the complainant, and insisted on the merger to avoid that mortgage. The judgment was for the complainant; it being considered that, under the special circumstances, a merger did not take place; and this was the result of the opinion delivered by Judge Sutherland. In the course of his discussion of the case, however, he affirmed the position that the purchaser of a chose in action takes the security subject only to the equities of the debtor, and not to such as reside in third parties; and quoted largely from the opinions in Murray v. Lylburn and Livingston v. Dean in support of the position. What was thus said by the learned judge seems to have been by way of answer to the position of the defendant, that James ought to have recorded his assignment, for the purpose of affording notice to those who should afterwards propose to deal with Wattles respecting the land. The application which the judge makes of the doctrine of Chancellor Kent, thus affirmed by him, appears, from the conclusion of that part of the opinion, as follows: “ Admitting, therefore, that the equity of the respondent [the defendant Morey], whatever it may be, as it respects the mortgage, had existed at the *543 time of the assignment of the mortgage to the appellant [the complainant James]; instead of being bound to .give notice of the assignment to the respondent, the appellant would have held the mortgage discharged from the respondent’s equity, unless he had personal notice of it.” That is, if Morey had bought the land before Wattles had assigned the mortgage to James, and Wattles had then assigned it to Mm, James could have enforced the mortgage, unless it could have been shown that he had notice of Morey’s prior purchase of the land. This being Morey’s duty in case he had been prior in time, then, as he was in fact subsequent and not prior, it is argued that James, who was actually first to acquire an interest, was not under any obligation to give the record notice to any one who should afterwards deal with Wattles concerning the land. Thus it will be seen that the doctrine was stated simply by way of illustrating another position. The argument was not a happy one; for, if Morey had purchased the land after Wattles, the seller, had united in himself the equity of redemption and the lien, and while the unity continued, it cannot for a moment be doubted that the mortgage would have been utterly extinguished, and that a subsequent assignment of it would have been a mere nullity, independently of any question of notice.
These are the only occasions, so far as I can find, where the distinction contended for by the defendant has received the countenance of any court or judge in tMs State; and it is quite plain that none of the cases were decided on- the strength of that position. In every instance but one in wMch the doctrine has been announced, it was a naked obiter dictum, and in that case the decision of the court was the other way. On the other hand, there are several cases where the point in judgment involved the determination of the question, and in wMch the distinction maintained by Chancellor Kent and Judge Sutherland was either expressly or virtually overruled.
The case of
Stafford
v.
Van Rensselaer
was decided by Chancellor Sanford, and his decree was affirmed in the Court of Errors. (Hopkins’ R., 569;
The next case on this subject
(Covell
v.
The Tradesmen's Bank,
The case of
Muir
v.
Schenck
(
In
Poillon
v.
Martin
(
If the intimation of Judge Cowen, that the prior equity, in order to be entitled to protection, must amount to an express assignment, be followed, the present case would be within the spirit of the rule. If we consider Preston an absolute assignee of the securities, his agreement with Moble to assign or give them up to him, on being paid $268.20, is an express contract equivalent to an assignment upon condition. The difference between such a contract and an express assignment, of which the subsequent assignee had no notice, is merely nominal.
It is unnecessary to maintain that Moble, or his representatives, had a legal title to the securities. If such a right existed, it resided in Cole, the original obligee of the bond, who is the only party who, by the rules of the common law, could maintain an action upon it. All the subsequent assignees must be considered as holding merely equitable interests; and, as between parties so circumstanced, priority of time, as has been shown, confers a preferable right. The Code, indeed, requires all actions to be prosecuted in the name of the real party in *548 interest; but this rule does not change, in any respect, the actual rights of the assignees between themselves. This was always the method of procedure in courts of equity. The Code has adopted the Chancery rule as to the formal parties on the record, without intending to affect the rights of parties in other respects.
It is only as to unsettled questions that courts can, with propriety, take into consideration motives of policy. Where a rule has been firmly established, it is for the legislature to change it if it is thought to be promotive of injustice. The courts have no such power. A distinction, of the nature suggested by Chancellor Kent, no doubt exists between the rights of the debtor in this class of cases and those of third persons who have dealt with the original creditor -or his assignee. One proposing to purchase the security can easily ascertain whether the person who gave it pretends to any defence. If he disclaim having any, and a purchase is made on the faith of such disclaimer, the assignee will be entirely safe against any which shall be afterwards asserted. But a purchaser has no clue by which he can protect himself against the equities of third persons. He may inquire of all the parties in the chain of title, but their admissions will not affect a party in possession of an equitable right derived from them. The purchase must be made, if at all, in reliance upon the good faith of the seller, and, where there have been several assignments, of those from whom he derived title. This quality certainly forms an impediment to the free negotiation and circulation of that class of choses in action. Whether sound policy requires that it should be removed, and the circulation of such securities promoted, is a question upon which men may differ. At one period in the history of the law, it was thought highly impolitic to encourage their negotiation, and courts of law would not protect the equitable rights of the assignees. But courts of equity took the case into their hands, and recognized these rights as far as it was possible; and their principles were after-wards followed by the other courts. Still, full negotiable qualities have not been attributed to them. The purchaser, as *549 a general rule, takes only such title as the seller had, and no other. If they are to be further assimilated to commercial paper the legislature must so provide.
It is necessary to add that I do not consider that the assignee stands in the place of the assignor, in every respect, in all cases. The suggestion, made in the earliest of the cases in this State, that the assignor, if a
Iona fide
purchaser without notice, was not prejudiced by the notice of his assignor, was well founded, and has since been repeatedly recognized.
(Jackson
v. Henry,
These considerations lead to the conclusion that the judgment of the special term was properly set aside. Regularly, a new trial should have been awarded; but the counsel for the defendant, on the argument before us, was understood not to desire a reversal of the judgment of the general term, unless we should agree with him in the position which has been discussed. If the other judges concur in the conclusion to which I have arrived, our judgment will be a simple affirmance of that of the general term which has been appealed from.
If that should not be the opinion of the court, it will remain to consider whether the defendant should be regarded as a bona fide purchaser without notice. The judge before whom the case was tried has not found, one way or the other, on that question. He says only that there was no more evidence of bad faith in the defendant than in Smith and Newton, and that there was no proof to impeach their good faith, except the statement of the consideration of the assignment from Noble to Preston. In other words, he refers to the evidence, without *550 stating any conclusion of fact. The assignment to Preston was in the chain of title, which the defendant must necessarily have looked into, to ascertain the authority of Smith and Newton to sell to him. It there appeared that a debt of $1,400, well secured by a mortgage of real estate, had been sold for less than one-fifth of that sum. That was enough, in my opinion, to put an ordinarily careful person upon inquiry; but it does not appear that any was made. The consideration stated was, of course, enough to support the transfer; and if, upon making reasonable inquiry in proper quarters, he had been led to believe that the purchase by Preston was, notwithstanding, absolute, I think he would have been entitled to the character of a bona fide purchaser of the bond and mortgage. The defendant was himself a witness in his own behalf, and might have said, if the truth was so, that he purchased without notice of any condition in the assignment to Preston, and in the belief that there was no flaw in his title to the securities, and that his own purchase was absolute, and without any understanding with Smith and Newton that the money should, in any event, be returned. Since the law allows him to swear in his own behalf, I think he ought to have denied notice, whether inquired of by the plaintiff or not. If my conclusion on the first question discussed is not adopted, I shall be in favor of a new trial, in order that the bona fides of the defendant’s purchase may be inquired into and determined as a question of fact.
Seldeit, Davies, and Clebke, Js., dissented.
Judgment affirmed.
