117 N.Y. 320 | NY | 1889
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Our first inquiry respects the character and extent of the right which Fairbanks acquired under his contract. We have already held that its terms operated as an equitable assignment to him of one-third or one-sixth of whatever money or property should be collected out of or received from Zabriskie in discharge of the latter's debt. (
Underwood's claim against Zabriskie grew out of stock transactions. Fairbanks was a lawyer, — and not only that, but one exceptionally versed in the peculiar rules and customs of the stock exchange, and the law governing that class of transactions. He had already rendered services to Underwood for which the latter was in his debt, with probably slight ability to pay unless out of uncertain claims against others. Standing in this relation the parties contracted. Fairbanks agreed to prosecute, and, as far as he was able, collect the specified claims of which that against Zabriskie was one. To that extent his agreement was for the rendition of future services. He also agreed to extinguish, and by his contract did extinguish, the debt due him for past services, taking in exchange the covenants of the new agreement. There was, therefore, ample consideration for the promises of Underwood which followed. These were, that for the services rendered and to be rendered by Fairbanks the latter should receive a fixed share of the money, property, or securities which should be obtained from the debtors named. The claims themselves against such debtors were not attempted to be assigned. The *329
title to them remained in Underwood as the legal owner. Suits against the debtors were to be and were brought in the name of Underwood, and he alone, by the stipulations of the agreement, was authorized to dictate on what terms settlements should be made, and when and against whom actions should be brought. He, thus, never transferred to Fairbanks the legal title to the claim against Zabriskie, and what he did do was in its ultimate effect one of two things, as it seems to me, necessarily and inevitably. The contract was either a simple agreement for compensation to be enforced against Underwood, or it was an equitable assignment of a definite share of the proceeds of the claim against Zabriskie. Obviously it is something more than and quite different from a mere agreement for compensation measured by results. That would have given to Fairbanks only a personal claim against Underwood, and scarcely served to induce on his part further services and expenses upon a credit already precarious; and not compensation in general, but a specific share in a specific fund or specific property was the exact and material point of the contract upon which the rights of both parties hinged. Underwood, having liberty to take in settlement from his debtors property or securities, was not to be called upon for a share of their value in cash, or liable generally for a due reward, but was free to throw Fairbanks upon his contract claim for a share of the precise thing received as his sole right and only remedy. On the other hand, the latter was not to depend upon the solvency or promise of Underwood for his pay, but was made secure by a stipulated right to have, as owner, a defined share of the fund or proceeds expected to result from his labor and skill. There could be no legal assignment of a fund not in existence or proceeds not realized, but equity treats them as if existing or realized, and the contract for their receipt by Fairbanks as an equitable assignment of the stipulated share to him, and, as a consequence, makes him the equitable assignee of so much of the debt or demand as is *330
represented by his share of the proceeds. I think we have never failed to hold this doctrine on a similiar state of facts. We discussed the subject somewhat in Williams v. Ingersoll
(
But it does not follow that we are yet absolved from a recollection of the reservations to Underwood which accompanied his equitable assignment to Fairbanks, or a further consideration of their effect; for the former followed that transfer by an assignment of his claim against Zabriskie to Sargent as collateral security for a debt due to him. There is no real foundation for the distinction now asserted between the facts on the previous trial and those in the present record as it respects the character of that assignment. The distinction was kindly meant as a route of retreat from an indefensible position, but we must decline to avail ourselves of it. It may be that we then supposed that the written assignment was absolute in form but delivered and taking effect as a collateral security, while now it appears that the collateral character of *332 the transfer was expressed in the writing itself. The form is of no consequence. Whether the collateral character of the assignment was evidenced by the writing or by the parol delivery is immaterial; for the fact itself was fully recognized in our previous opinion. Again and again, and with even further reiteration, the transfer was described as collateral, and none of us were for a moment misled in that respect; and so we cannot travel the bridge carefully constructed to encourage a retreat, but should consider the question whether we were right or wrong, which is raised anew by the decision of the General Term.
What, then, were the rights which Sargent acquired by the assignment of the Zabriskie debt, first, as against Underwood, and second, as against Fairbanks. The counsel on both sides appear to agree that as between assignor and assignee the transfer must be deemed to have been in the nature of a pledge. They unite in saying that a reference to the law governing that class of bailments will accurately describe the relations and rights of the parties, and, so agreeing, we ought to be content. Waiving then, for the present, any question of rights acquired by Sargent as a bona fide purchaser, let us determine and measure those which he acquired under the assignment treated as a pledge. The pledgee obtains a special property in the thing pledged, while the pledgor remains general owner. If the property consists of a thing in action the pledgee may sue upon it and collect it or receive voluntary payment of it from the debtor. The pledgee may require such payment and the debtor cannot resist his title. To the extent of his debt the pledgee may appropriate the proceeds to his own use, and holds the balance, if any, in trust for the pledgor. But the pledgee cannot compromise the debt without the assent of the pledgor. (Garlick v. James, 12 Johns. 146; Bowman v. Wood,
The latter was equitable assignee of one-third of the Zabriskie debt, and to that extent was the equitable owner. Putting aside still all questions relating to a bona fide purchase, it follows that Underwood could only pledge what he had, and could not incumber the interest of Fairbanks. We so decided on the previous appeal, citing Bush v. Lathrop, as that case has been limited. Sargent, therefore, became pledgee, or had the rights of a pledgee, only to the extent of Underwood's title, and obtained no right by pure force of the assignment to the interest already owned by Fairbanks. It is true that sometimes where one clothes another with an apparent ownership or power of disposition he will not be allowed to assert his right as against an innocent purchaser dealing upon the faith of such apparent ownership, and the opinion of the General Term applies that doctrine to Fairbanks because, when becoming assignee, he "had placed in Underwood power to act." We need only say as to that suggestion that the counsel for the respondent admits that the doctrine is inapplicable to the facts, although he seeks to enlist in his service the fundamental equity on which it is founded. So that I think we correctly held that Sargent, by his collateral assignment or pledge, acquired no right in to, or against the ownership of Fairbanks.
But, nevertheless, upon what afterwards occurred, the respondent confronts us with a very able argument which seeks to turn the flank of the position thus far maintained. It is founded upon the settlement which was made with Zabriskie, and which appears to have been negotiated by and between three persons, viz.: Underwood, acting for himself, Monell, representing Sargent, and Gray, as agent for Zabriskie. The terms of the arrangement, stated in their legal order, were that Sargent should surrender his assignment to enable Underwood to effectually release Zabriskie; that the latter should thereupon pay Underwood $20,000 in bonds in full of his debt and be wholly discharged; that Underwood should then *334
pay Sargent the same bonds in full of his debt, and should be finally released. If I state these facts somewhat differently from the view presented in our previous decision, it is not because there were not strong circumstances sustaining that view. The whole arrangement was planned and negotiated by Sargent and Zabriskie, represented, respectively, by Monell and Gray, Underwood simply giving his assent. The bonds, it is found, did not go through his hands personally, and he never even knew that they were substituted for money, but they passed directly from Zabriskie through Gray to Sargent. And yet the truth is that, upon the theory of a pledge now but not then conceded, it required both Underwood and Sargent to act together and concurrently in order to effect the result. It is said that Sargent did not make the settlement, for he was only pledgee and could not; but, with equal force, it may be urged that Underwood did not, for he was only general owner and could not. The palpable truth is that both acted, and the compromise was the product of their joint action. And so, without any worry over the question as to which of them made the settlement, I am willing to put the facts into what is claimed to be their logical and legal order, and yield to the respondent the benefit of saying that Sargent enabled Underwood to settle and Underwood settled. Upon that assumption it is apparent that Sargent must be put in one of two positions. We are compelled to say that he received the bonds from Underwood by force of the assignment which he held and which he surrendered only upon that condition, which is the truth; or that, having abandoned his hold on the Zabriskie debt, he took them simply from Underwood in discharge of the latter's liability. The last alternative may be dismissed because it is contrary to the facts. Sargent never abandoned his hold on the debt. His fingers, once closed upon it, were never unlocked. His surrender of the assignment was on condition of the receipt of its fruits, and they took its place as the thing pledged (Farwell v. I. T. Nat. Bk.,
And here, it seems to me, we get out into the open air where vision becomes clearer, and are enabled to see the incorrectness of the argument founded upon the assumed attitude of Sargent as abona fide purchaser without notice. The counsel's brief declares: "If Underwood never had assigned the Zabriskie claim to Sargent but had received the $20,000 directly from Zabriskie, and had then paid it over to Sargent in consideration of a release by the latter of his debt, there could not have been a pretense that the plaintiff had any just claim upon it. The equitable owner of moneys cannot follow them into the hands of a purchaser for value without notice." It is not needful to discuss that proposition, for we now see that it is not an equitable owner of moneys
who pursues, but a legal owner of property following what is his in the hands of one who got no title and could get none, however innocent his action or expensive his contract (Ballard v.Burgett,
Nor is the result changed if we disregard the order in which the law arrays the component events of the one completed transaction, and treat them according to the fact as occurring *338 at one and the same instant of time. In that view there is no priority of legal title in Fairbanks over Sargent; neither is there any in Sargent over Fairbanks, and the legal titles vesting equally and at the same instant the prior equity of Fairbanks is not defeated.
Hitherto I have treated the equities of the parties on their merits as equal, but without overlooking the contention which I promised to recollect, that those of Sargent were superior in their quality because Fairbanks left in Underwood the power to bring or not to bring suits, and the sole right to compromise. We are invited to make ownership the synonym of dominium, control, and to measure the respective rights by that standard. Very well, let us do so. Nothing need be said about the first reservation since Sargent took his assignment after suit had been commenced against Zabriskie, and when Fairbanks was actively prosecuting it and had become the master of its movement, and Sargent knew both facts; and now, as to the right to compromise, Fairbanks had only an equitable right to the extent of his share; Sargent had only an equitable right to the extent of his debt; one had an equitable property in the Zabriskie claim; the other had a special property in it which was also equitable; Fairbanks left Underwood apparent owner; Sargent left him general owner with the same outside mask; if Fairbanks had no right to compromise, neither had Sargent; if the former left that power in Underwood, so, also, did the latter. The sole difference is that Sargent could resist a compromise below the amount of his debt, and Fairbanks could not prevent one at all. But that difference is quite balanced by the fact that one equity was supported by new services rendered on the faith of its existence, while the consideration of the other was a precedent debt. Sargent, if his equity failed, could be restored to his original position; he would have lost nothing, but only failed to gain something, and would not be bound by a release fraudulently obtained, or mistakenly given; while Fairbanks could not get back his services and labor wasted and expended in vain. The bonds in dispute were the product almost wholly of the persevering skill of Fairbanks. *339 The attorney of Underwood in New Jersey describes, as a witness, how utterly he was dependent upon the plaintiff's knowledge and ability. He persevered, until he literally made Zabriskie's life miserable, and drove to his aid the friends who advanced the means of compromise. While Fairbanks was training his guns upon Zabriskie, furnishing the powder and bearing the smoke of the battle, and faithfully earning his stipulated share of results, Sargent was looking to the possible victory from a station out of the smoke and noise as a means of collecting a debt of Underwood, the amount and details of which he did not know. If it is true that Fairbanks notified no one of his rights, at least no occasion seemed to require that notification; while on the other hand Sargent's counsel called upon Fairbanks urging him to push Zabriskie, and never revealed that his client held an assignment of the claim, and meant to have the benefit of the latter's services and leave him to an insolvent for his pay. The equity of Fairbanks was strengthened by his effort to create the fund; that of Sargent was founded on the collection of a desperate debt. That he may not be able to use the product of Fairbanks' labor and skill to repair his own misfortunes in stocks does not, in the least, disturb our sense of justice; so that on a careful comparision of equities, I think, we deal liberally with Sargent when we treat them merely as equal on their merits and in their inherent qualities.
We are thus required to affirm the correctness of our previous decision in all its material and essential elements. If we have departed from some of its details it is because the later argument has led us over a new and different road, and fuller reflection has in some minor matters shifted the balance of judgment; but on the whole case we stand where we did, and satisfied that the plaintiff should succeed.
The question of damages, we think, was correctly decided by the Special Term, and it follows that the judgment of the General Term should be reversed and that of the Special Term affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except GRAY, J., not sitting.
Judgment accordingly. *340