93 N.Y.S. 434 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
It is no longer open to question in this State that the assignee of part of a claim may maintain an action to recover the portion which has been assigned to him. (Risley v. Phenix Bank of City of New York, 83 N. Y. 318; Lauer v. Dunn, 52 Hun, 191; affd., 115 N. Y. 405; Chambers v. Lancaster, 3 App. Div. 215; affd., 160 N. Y. 342.) The cases cited were all actions at law. In Chambers v. Lancaster (supra) the record (which is on the files of this court, as the case went up from this, department, and of the State Law Library at Albany [N. Y. Ct. App. Cas. & Br. Counsel, Vol. 2296, No. 2]) shows that it was deemed by all parties and by the trial court to be an action at law,-there being an express recital therein to the effect that a jury trial was duly waived; although in the Court of Appeals there are expressions in the opinion indicating that it was there regarded as a suit in equity.- Thus Chief Judge Pabkeb says : “ Since the decision of this court in Risley v. Phenix Bank of New York (83 N.Y. 318) the right of an assignee to
. The question presented by this , appeal is-whether an assignee of -one-tenth of an entire claim for money alleged to be due on a contract, in a suit against the debtor to recover the tenth assigned to him, can properly make the assignee of another tenth of the claim and the assignor who retains eight-tenths codefendants with the debtor, ó although in the complaint' the plaintiff does not state or attempt to - - state any cause of action against either of such codefendants, but! merely alleges as follows-: “ That prior to the commencement of this action the defendant Butterly assigned to. the defendant Augustine án undivided one-tenth interest in the said claim and cause of- action, and that he is still the owner thereof, and that the said Butterly is still the owner of an undivided eight-tenths thereof, and that said parties decline to join with this plaintiff as coplaintiffs.”
lío doubt the debtor might compel the bringing-in of the assignor, if his presence were necessary to protect the debtor’s rights. While 1 ,a debtor in such a case cannot bar a recovery “ Upon the objection .that, a transfer of a part of an entire debt might subject him to several actions to enforce. the payment of a single obligation,” he may nevertheless “ demand the bringing in of all interested parties, if the protection of Ins rights should require it.” (Barker, P. J., in Lauer v. Dunn, 52 Hun, 191, above cited.) And if the plaintiff alleged that his assignment of part of the claim was disputed by the assignor'or by the assignee--of another part, he might well make them codefendants with the debtor and invoke the - judgment of the court on its equity side to settle and adjudicate their several claims. But when the debtor 'does not demand the -presence of these -parties, but is content to "litigate- the plaintiff’s claim just as he, presents it, and the plaintiff states no cause of action against these codefendants, is riot the debtor entitled to have the-allegation
I think this question must be answered in the affirmative. The learned judge who heard the motion below appears to have denied it because it sought to strike out not only the paragraph I have quoted, but also to strike out the names of the codefendants as parties; and this he thought he had no power to do. But the ■ appellant does not now insist upon that relief. I think the motion should be granted so far as to strike out paragraph 126 of the complaint and the paragraphs numbered 2 and 3 in the prayer for judgment, with leave, however, to the plaintiff, if so advised, to serve an amended complaint setting out a cause of action against the defendants Butterly and Augustine, if she has any such cause of action enforcible herein.
IIirschberg, P. J., Woodward, Jenks and Miller, JJ., concurred.
/ ■ Order reversed, without costs, and motion granted in part in accordance with the opinion of Bartlett, J. .