14 Ala. 65 | Ala. | 1848
In Trotter v. Crockett, 2 Porter’s Rep. 401, it was said, that where a bill or note has been transferred as a conditional payment or collateral security, its return is not necessary to entitle the creditor to institute an action on the original demand. That although a double satisfaction cannot be had, yet the creditor may take and hold several securities for the same debt, and ought not to be compelled to yield up either, until the debt is paid. But if he transfers a note thus held, so that in legal presumption he has derived a benefit from it, then, unless he regains it and have it ready to deliver to the defendant, his recovery will be limited or defeated according as the paper transferred may be for a less or greater amount than the debt intended to be secured. To sustain these conclusions, the court cite 1 Cranch’s Rep. 181; 1 Wash. C. C. Rep. 156; 2 Wheat. Rep. 390; 1 Port. Rep. 260. In Harris v. Johnston, 3 Cranch’s Rep. 311, Chief Justice Marshall employs this language: “ On the second exception, the material point to be decided is, whether an action can be maintained on an original contract for goods sold and delivered, by a person who has received a note as a conditional payment, and has passed away that note. Upon principle, it would appear that such an action could not be maintained. The indorsement of the note passes the property in it to another, and is evidence that it was sold for a valuable consideration. If, after such indorsement, the seller of the goods could maintain an action on the original contract, he would receive double satisfaction.” To the same effect is Kearslake v. Morgan, 5 T. Rep. 513 ; Patapsco Ins. Co. v. Smith, 6 H. & Johns. Rep. 166; Coursey v. Baker, 7
If it were competent in a case like the present, to show that the creditor transferred the note at less than its nominal amount, in the absence of all proof upon the point, it cannot be presumed from the fact that the makers of it were insolvent at the time of the trial, that he disposed of it at a depreciation ; but the reverse must be taken as true.
Where one debt is transferred as collateral security for another, the creditor becomes an agent for the collection, and the amount collected after deducting costs and other charges, should be credited on the debt intended to be secured, (Chew v. Chinn, ut supra;) and if he transfers the security, he of course appropriates^ to his own use, and to the extent of its nominal amount, the sum received for it, or its value, the debt will be extinguished. We will not stop to consider which of these rules furnishes the criterion for adjusting the credit to which the debtor under such circumstances will be entitled, as the facts of the case before us, do not require such an examination. If, as it was decided in Harris v. Johnston, and several of the cases cited, that the assignment of a note received as a conditional payment, implies that the creditor has received for it, a valuable consideration, and will bar an action for the recovery of the original debt, we can conceive of no difference in principle between such a case and the present, where the ■ note was received as collateral security. In either case, if the creditor, instead of collecting the security and applying the proceeds, transfers it, he must be understood to have elected that mode of obtaining payment,
This view is in harmony with the ruling of the county court, and its judgment is consequently affirmed.