5 Paige Ch. 592 | New York Court of Chancery | 1836
It is now well settled that a person who receives a negotiable promissory note from the payee, out of the usual course of business, or in security for an antecedent debt, and not for a present consideration, such as the payment of money, the delivery of goods, or the relinquishment of an existing security, takes it subject to all the equities which existed against it in the hands of the former holder. And this principle applies with peculiar force to the voluntary assignee of an insolvent debtor, who receives negotiable paper from the assignor, under a general assignment for the benefit of creditors. In the present case, therefore, if the complainant had been the holder and owner of the note of Isaacs at the time this assignment was made, I should have no hesitation in declaring that Smyth took the assignment of the complainant’s two notes, subject to the equitable right of the latter to have the note given to himself set-off against them. Although this note was not due at the time of the assignment, yet, as it would become due long before the complainant’s notes were payable, an equitable right of set-off would have then existed, which it would have been unson
The decree of the vice chancellor must therefore be affirmed, with costs; but without prejudice to the complainant’s right of set-off at law, if the assignment was not in fact made, and accepted by Smyth, before the note endorsed by the complainant was paid and taken up by him as such endorser.