98 Misc. 650 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1917
Lead Opinion
The stipulation discloses that plaintiff was employed by defendant for one year from January 1, 1916, at a weekly compensation of $100; that he was at all times ready and willing but that he began to work on January seventeenth and continued to February fifth — three weeks — for which he received $300; and that on or about the latter date he was discharged. On February fourteenth he made an assignment to one J ones of ‘ ‘ All that certain claim and demand which I have against the Mirror Films, Inc., for damages for the breach of its agreement of hiring with me, this assignment covering all damages which have accrued to me or may accrue up to March 6th, 1916, reserving to myself all damages which may accrue after said date.” A few days later Jones brought suit against the defendant for the sum of $600, indorsing the summons “ Breach of contract and assignment.” That suit resulted in judgment for the plaintiff on March fourteenth in the sum of $600, “ that is (according to the stipulation of facts) plaintiff was permitted to recover for the nine weeks from January 1, 1916, to March 6, 1916, at the rate of $100 per week, less the $300, which Carvill had received * * * It is conceded that Francis Arthur Jones, as assignee of Henry Carvill, plaintiff herein, sued and received judgment on the assignment of said Carvill’s alleged damages for the defendant’s alleged breach of contract, up to March 6th, 1916.” On June 9, 1916, plaintiff began this action, the summons being indorsed ‘1 breach of contract,” and asking for $1,000. The stipulation of facts closes with the statement: “ The sole question to be decided is a question of law as to whether the plaintiff in this action is barred from recovering as claimed by the defendant by reason of the recovery of damages by plaintiff’s assignee aforementioned.”
In my opinion, the plaintiff in this action is not so
It is true that but one cause of action accrues for breach on the' part of an employer of so much of a contract of employment as remains unexecuted (Perry v.
It is quite natural, therefore, that laymen should fail to appreciate or express with technical precision the distinction between the cause of action itself and the damages which might be recovered thereunder. It is certain, however, that plaintiff could not have intended to assign all his right in the premises against the defendant. The express reservation forbids any such construction. It seems to me to be equally clear that he intended to give to Jones something of value. As we must endeavor, therefore, to give effect to the clear intention of the parties to the extent which the mode of expression adopted by them permits, I find that by this instrument plaintiff assigned to Jones such proportion of his cause of action against defendant as was represented by the period named out of the whole unexpired term of the agreement of employment.
As between assignor and assignee causes of action have been divided in many different ways. See, for example, Field v. City of New York, 6 N. Y. 179; Risley v. Phœnix Bank, 83 id. 318, 329; O’Dougherty v. Remington Paper Co., 81 id. 496; Chambers v. Lancaster, 160 id. 342; Mills v. Garrison, 3 Keyes, 40; Firestone v. Ætna Indemnity Co., 67 Misc. Rep. 443; and a- case singularly similar in this respect
In the Miller case the court saidIt is only in those cases where the class of proof is the same, as to all the causes of action existing, that the rule that a recovery for one installment upon a contract is a bar to all that were due at the time of the commencement of the action, applies. Stowell v. Chamberlain, 60 N. Y. 272. It was said in the case cited that the question is whether the same evidence will maintain both actions. In the case at bar in order to establish his cause of action the plaintiff was required to put in evidence a different assignment. Thus a difference in proof was necessary and no principle has been called to our attention, nor any case cited, which holds that where a party obtains title by different instruments to his causes of action he is bound to unite them all in one suit. ’ ’ This reasoning would seem to be applicable to the present case.
“ The rule that an entire claim cannot be,divided and so made the subject of several actions, and that a judgment for a part is a bar to another suit for the remainder, is one for the protection of the debtor and may be waived by him. Such a rule cannot- be perverted into an instrument of fraud or injustice. (Mills v. Garrison, 3 Keyes, 40.)” Gilbert, J., in Millard v.
The situation seems to me to be quite analogous to that of cases in which there is originally but a single contract and a single covenant or stipulation; yet a division of the stipulation is held to have resulted by mutual consent inferred from the conduct of the respective parties in the carrying out of the contract. See Avery v. Willson, 81 N. Y. 341; Brady v. Cassidy, 145 id. 171.
It is urged that by this interpretation of the course of the. parties in the previous litigation defendant has been deprived of his right to interpose, as a complete or partial defense, or in diminution of damages, the earnings which plaintiff may have made or which he would have made had he availed of possible opportunities during the term for which Jones has recovered. I find, however, no such difficulty to exist. Defendant, as I have pointed out, could have enforced his right to
Finally my attention has been directed to the case of King v. King, 37 Misc. Rep. 63; affd., 73 App. Div. 547; appeal dismissed, 172 N. Y. 604. This was a suit by the assignee of one-fifth of a debt and note, the action being brought at law. The learned trial judge, in a short opinion, upon the motion of defendant, directed a verdict in his favor. He says:
“ Only one action, i. e., for the debt in its entirety, can be maintained against him. Authorities for this need not be cited, unless to gratify the overgrown habit of citation.
11 The point that there is a defect of parties plaintiff, which should have been raised by demurrer or answer, and cannot be now raised for not having been so raised (Code Civ. Pro. § 498), is not good. The plaintiff sues for only her alleged one-fifth part. If such an action is maintainable there is no defect of plaintiffs; she is the one to maintain it. If she were suing on the whole note there would be a defect of parties plaintiff. ’ ’
In the opinion of the Appellate Division, although the judgment was affirmed, it is said of the proposition that “ only one action can be maintained for the debt in its entirety, ” ‘ ‘ this is sustained by clear authority so far as an action at law is concernedReference is also made to a previous decision in the same case in 59 Appellate Division, 128, for the authorities (which
To sum up my conclusions, I may say that I think that the assignment shows plainly on its face that plaintiff assigned to Jones only a part of plaintiff’s whole cause of action, and that to hold otherwise would do plain violence to the manifest intent of the parties; that when Jones sued the defendant in the Municipal Court the defendant could have protected his rights and his own convenience in the premises by interposing a demurrer (or the equivalent objection in the answer if the defect did not appear on the face of the complaint) ; that there was a defect of parties; that having failed to take that course it must be held to have elected to try in two suits what would otherwise have been a single issue triable in but one action. Any other conclusion, it seems to me, would be contrary to the manifest intent of the parties and accord to defendant an advantage which it elected to surrender by its silence
In my opinion, therefore, the recovery in the Jones suit was no bar to the prosecution of the instant claim.
Judgment reversed, with $30 costs, and judgment directed for plaintiff in the full amount claimed, namely, $1,000, together with the appropriate costs in the court below.
Shears, J., not sitting.
Concurrence Opinion
I am of the opinion that the assignee under the instrument purporting to be an assignment of part of the assignor’s cause of action had no right of action at law against the defendant thereon, though ‘6 permitted •’ ’ to recover judgment to the extent of the assignment. The recovery of the former judgment against the defendant herein by the assignee is not, therefore, res adjudícala as against plaintiff’s cause of action. King v. King, 37 Misc. Rep. 63; affd., 73 App. Div. 547.
The judgment must, therefore, be reverséd and a new trial ordered,.with costs’ to the appellant to abide the event.
Judgment reversed and ne-w trial ordered, with costs to abide event.