116 Ky. 364 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion or the court by
Reversing.
Henry L’. Stone and Watson A. Suddutb, two members of tbe Louisville bar, formed a partnership in the year 1889 for the practice of their profession under the firm name
The grounds of the judgment, as stated by the learned circuit judge, seems to be as follows: (1) The bank has possession and ownership of the money in controversy, having appropriated it by the direction of Sudduth, and with the consent of the construction company; and will not, therefore, be required to give way to the previous assignments made to the trust company, which were not assignments of the entire fund,' but only of so much of it as was necessary to pay the notes. (2) It was known that the bank would not pay the checks when they were drawn, and no action can be maintained upon them by the trust company.
It was held in Weinstock v. Bellwood, 75 Ky., 139, that an entire claim can not be severed without the consent of the debtor, and that an action can not be maintained at lawT by the assignee of a part of a debt against the debtor, unless the assignment had been consented to by him. The general rule on this subject is thus stated in 4 Cyc., p. 27: “Partial assignments of such choses in action as are assignable, can be made so as to entitle the assignee to the rights of a co-owner against the assignor. In England, and under some of the decisions of the American courts, an1 order given by a creditor to his debtor to pay a third p,arty
The $32,131.69 having been deposited in the bank to the-credit of B. H. Young, president, W. A. Sudduth, and H. L. Stone, and to be checked out only on checks signed by the three, Sudduth had no authority, without the consent of:
The rights of the trust company are not affected by reason of the fact that the bank first gave notice to the debtor of its assignments. The rule in England is that, as between successive assignees of the same chose, each being a bonafide purchaser for value, the one who first gives notice to the debtor will be entitled to preference, although his assignment is later in date. Some courts in this country have adopted the same rule, but the weight of authority in America is to the effect that among successive assignments-the- order of time controls. 2 Pomeroy’s Equity, section 695; 4 Cyc., pp. 32, 77. The rule of caveat emptor applies, to sales of choses in action as in other sales of personal property, and, if the seller has sold the thing to one person, and therefore has no title to pass to a second, the latter takes nothing by his purchase. The assignee’s right of action is without prejudice to any discount, set-off, or defense the debtor has before notice of the assignment. Kentucky Statutes, 1899, section 474; Civil Code, section 19.. The purpose of the notice is to protect the debtor in such defenses innocently acquired. It adds nothing to the as
It was held in Lester v. Given, 71 Ky., 357, that the holder of an unaccepted check on a bank might maintain an action thereon. This case has frequently been followed since, and we regard the rule as settled. Merchants’ National Bank v. Robinson, 97 Ky., 552, 17 R., 368, 31 S. W., 136, 28 L. R. A., 760; Weiand’s Adm’r v. State National Bank, 112 Ky., 310, 23 R., 1517, 65 S. W., 617, 66 S. W., 26, and cases cited. The fact that the bank in this case claimed not to have the money on hand when the checks were drawn is not sufficient to take it out of the rule, for the checks completed the transaction, and were the proper means for bringing to a decision -the question in dispute.
Sudduth died insolvent. He was also considerably overdrawn with the firm of Stone & Sudduth. Whether there will be anything coming to him on the settlement of the firm or what will be the rights of the bank in this event, can not be determined in this ■suit, for neither Stone nor
It is insisted for the bank that the trust company should be required to exhaust the fund arising from the Mann fee before resorting to the bank fund, under the rule that a creditor having a lien on two funds, on one of which another creditor has a junior lien, will he required to exhaust first the fund not incumbered by the junior lien. But that rule has no application, as the bank is not a creditor of Stone’s, and as the creditor of Sudduth it can not impose terms on the trust company as the creditor of Stone. What may be the right of the hank to Sudduth’s part of the Mann fee can not be determined here, as the necessary parties are not before the court.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded, with directions to enter a judgment in favor of appellant.