238 A.D. 379 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1933
This action was brought by plaintiff upon an assigned promissory note made by the defendant, payable to the order of Neon Tube Sign Corporation, for $858, payment thereof to be made in thirty-three monthly installments of $26 each. After a trial in Municipal Court the jury rendered a verdict in favor of defendant, upon which judgment was entered dismissing the complaint. On appeal by plaintiff to the Appellate Term, First Department, that court reversed the judgment entered in favor of the defendant and directed judgment for plaintiff.
The facts are not in- dispute, and the only questions involved upon this appeal are questions of law. On January 26, 1929, Neon Tube Sign Corporation and the defendant entered into a rental agreement whereby the said Neon Tube Sign Corporation agreed to install a Neon tube sign in the premises of the defendant and to lease the same to the defendant for the period of thirty-six months, “ commencing upon the day the sign shall be installed and ready for operation and ending at midnight of the last day of the term 36 months thereafter,” at a rental of “ $26.00 per month in advance for each and every calendar month during the term of this lease, and shall be evidenced by a promissory note.” At the bottom of such rental contract the promissory note in suit appeared. The two instruments were merely separated by perforations in the paper upon which they were drawn, the rental agreement and promissory note consisting of but one sheet of paper, and both were signed by the defendant at the same time and place and constituted a single instrument. Several payments were made by the defendant to Neon Tube Sign Corporation while the latter owned the said instrument and note attached thereto, and after several installments of rent had been paid by defendant, Neon Tube Sign Corporation assigned to a corporation known as Credit Alliance Banking Corporation the said rental agreement and accompanying promissory note, and thereafter the rental installments provided by said agreement were paid by the defendant to Credit Alliance Banking Corporation until December, 1929, when the defendant refused to pay further rental upon the ground that the sign which the Neon Tube Sign Corporation had agreed to install did not operate. Under the terms of the rental agreement of said Neon tube, as stated in subdivision (g), the agreement provided as follows:
“ (g) Lessor agrees to maintain and keep in good repair the said*381 sign. In the event of the failure of the sign to operate through any fault on the part of the Lessor, the Lessor shall cause the same to be repaired and put in satisfactory working order. Upon such failure to operate, the Lessee shall notify the Lessor, in writing, of such fact, and the Lessor shall, if practicable, cause the sign to be put in proper repair within forty-eight hours of the receipt of such notice, and if the same shall be so repaired in such period of time, the Lessee shall be entitled to no diminution of rent or other claim for damages on account thereof. In event the sign shall not be operable, because of the fault of the Lessor, for a greater period than forty-eight hours after the Lessor has received notice of the sign’s disrepair, the Lessee shall receive credit of 1 /720th of the monthly rental for every hour over and above such period until the sign shall again be in proper working condition, but shall be entitled to no other claim for damages. No claims will be allowed unless notice of sign’s disrepair be received by registered mail.”
By virtue of such provisions of the contract between the defendant and Neon Tube Sign Corporation the defendant refused to make-further payments of rental under the contract. The sign did not operate after December, 1929, and no repairs were made to it, either by Neon Tube Sign Corporation or its assignee, Credit Alliance Banking Corporation. After defendant’s refusal to pay any further rentals under the contract, Credit Alliance Banking Corporation, without any consideration whatever and merely for the purpose of bringing the present action, assigned the rental agreement and the promissory note in suit to the plaintiff. The plaintiff then brought the present action on the promissory note, alleging in its complaint that the note in suit was a negotiable promissory installment note which the plaintiff had received in due course.
We are of the opinion that the plaintiff not only was without capacity to bring the present action, but that the note in suit, while on its face a negotiable instrument, was, nevertheless, received by plaintiff and by its assignor with notice that the note was burdened with the provisions of the rental agreement entered into between the defendant and Neon Tube Sign Corporation. While the note in suit had been detached from the contract entered into for the installation and maintenance of the light in question, its assignment to plaintiff’s assignor was accompanied by a concurrent assignment of the contract for the installation of the light. By the mere detaching of the note from the rental agreement, it did not thereby become an independent obligation of the defendant while in the hands of the owner of the rental agreement. Under the terms of the rental agreement, the Neon Tube Sign Corporation retained title to the sign and, as lessor, was not entitled to the rental
The facts in the case above cited are practically the same as in the case at bar. In that case the primary instrument was the bond, and the coupons represented simply the payment of interest thereon. The decision in the case last above cited was followed by this court in Watson v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. R. Co. (169 App. Div. 663). In that case the plaintiff sought to recover on the interest coupon attached to the bond which was due and unpaid at the time of the commencement of the action. Presiding Justice Ingraham, writing for this court in that case, among other things, said: “It is not necessary in this case to determine what right a bona fide holder for value of coupons detached from the bonds would have as against the obligor. So long as the coupons are in the hands of the holders of the bonds, ‘ Their force and effect and character may be determined by reference to the bonds. * * * Until negotiated or used in some way they serve no independent purpose; and while they are in the hands of the holder they remain mere incidents of the bonds, and have no greater or other force or effect than the stipulation for the payment of interest contained in the bonds.’ (Bailey v. County of Buchanan, 115 N. Y. 297.) ”
As in the note in suit, the coupons involved in the cases of Bailey v. County of Buchanan (supra) and Watson v. Chicago, R. I. & P. RB. R. Co. (supra) contained no reference to the bonds from which they had been detached. The courts, however, based their decisions upon the fact that the coupons in each case were in the possession of the holder or holders of the bonds. So, in the case at bar, the assignee of Neon Tube Sign Corporation was the owner and in possession of the rental agreement, and, therefore, the note which it obtained was subject to such agreement. In the case of Bank of America v. Waydell (187 N. Y. 115, 120) the plaintiff claimed to be a holder in due course of a draft indorsed to it in blank by the
There can be no doubt that when the transaction with reference to the installation of the Neon light in the defendant’s place of business was first under consideration the sale contract itself constituted the main and primary agreement. The note in suit was only incidental and secondary to it. The only consideration of the note was the obligation of the conditional vendor under said executory contract. The plaintiff in this action seeks to make the note the primary and principal obligation, and the agreement secondary. If the condition of the note reserving title in the vendor survives, the note cannot be regarded as full payment of the purchase price. Both the plaintiff and its assignor now have possession of both the conditional sale contract and the note in suit, claiming each and all of the rights available under both instruments. However, the plaintiff sues only as the assignee of the note.
In our opinion, the cases cited in the per curiam opinion of the Appellate Term have no application to the situation here presented.
The defendant also raises the point upon this appeal that the plaintiff is not the real party in interest. While technical, we think the appellant’s point is good. Upon the trial, Mortimer H. Goodman, assistant secretary of the Credit Alliance Banking Corporation, testified in behalf of the plaintiff that he had had dealings with the plaintiff and that “ we have assigned claims to them [plaintiff] for the purpose of entering suit on them.” Goodman further testified that the note in suit came into the possession of the Credit Alliance Banking Corporation on March 12, 1929, by purchase thereof from the Neon Tube Sign Corporation, and that the note in suit came into the possession of plaintiff on July 14, 1930. Goodman testified that the Federal Credit Bureau, Inc., is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Credit Alliance Corporation, and the Credit Alliance Banking
“ Q. In other words, they assign it to the Federal Credit Bureau for the purpose of suing, is that correct? A. Correct.
“ Q. And the Federal Credit Bureau never paid the Credit Alliance Corporation for this note, did they? A. No.”
Goodman further testified that at the time of the transfer of the note, the agreement between Neon Tube Sign Corporation and the defendant was assigned to the Credit Alliance Corporation and to the plaintiff as collateral for the note. It appears from the testimony of Goodman that the plaintiff is used solely as a collection agency, and is not the real party in interest, but is suing for and on behalf of Credit Alliance Banking Corporation. Section 210 of the Civil Practice Act provides: “ Every action must be prosecuted in// the name of the real party in interest.”
In Spencer v. Standard C. & M. Corp. (237 N. Y. 479) the Court of Appeals defines the term “real party in interest,” as follows: “ The real party in interest has been defined by this court: ‘ If, as between the assignor and assignee, the transfer is complete, so that the former is divested of all control and right to the cause of action, and the latter is entitled to control it and receive its fruits, the assignee is the real party in interest.’ (Cummings v. Morris, 25 N. Y. 625.) ”
It is, therefore, clear, in this case, that the plaintiff is not the real party in interest. (See, also, Clark v. Dada, 183 App. Div. 253.) The mere fact that a person is constituted as a collecting agent does not authorize him to sue upon and collect in his own name.
We, therefore, conclude that the judgment granted in Municipal Court in favor of the defendant was correct and should be affirmed, and that the Appellate Term erroneously reversed the same. The determination of the Appellate Term should be reversed, with costs, and the judgment entered upon the trial in Municipal Court should be affirmed, with costs to the defendant, appellant, against the plaintiff, respondent.
Finch, P. J., McAvoy, Martin and O'Malley, JJ., concur.
Determination reversed and judgment of the Municipal Court affirmed, with costs to the appellant in this court and in the Appellate Term.