76 P. 1075 | Or. | 1904
after stating the facts in the foregoing terms, delivered the opinion of the court.
The questions for our consideration arise upon the demurrer. The first ground of demurrer as -to each cause of action is that the complaint does not state facts; the second ground, as to the first cause, is that the plaintiffs’ right of action is equitable; the third, that plaintiffs have attempted to unite an equitable cause of suit in favor of the insurance company with another equitable cause in favor of the warehouse company; and the fourth, that two causes of action — one in favor of each plaintiff — are improperly united. The second ground of demurrer to the second cause of action is that such cause has been improperly united with the causes of action contained in
It is insisted that plaintiffs' have mistaken the forum, and that they should have proceeded upon the equitable side of the court, and not at law. This is the sum and substance of the whole controversy, and we will discuss it singly, without confusing it, if possible, with the other seemingly inconsistent grounds assigned by the demurrer. The contention is that the claim or demand arising from the destruction of the wheat through the negligence of the defendant was one wholly in favor of the warehouse company and against the defendant, purely legal in character, single and indivisible, and was insusceptible of assignment at law, except in its entirety; that it was assignable in part or by piecemeal alone in equity; that the alleged assignment was not of a joint or undivided interest, .but of a separable or distinct part or portion of the claim or demand; and that its legal effect was so to split up the cause of action that neither company could enforce its right acquired or remaining, either singly or collectively, in a court of law, but could only have redress in a court of equity. It may be premised that it is the distinction between forms of action at law that is abolished by our Code, not that which formerly existed between actions of law and suits in equity. Although administered by the same court or tribunal, the latter distinction still remains, and the cause is only cognizable in law or in equity as the especial facts will warrant: Beacannon v.
Assignments of choses in action or legal demands were anciently unknown to the common law. Latterly, however, they have been treated as merely equitable, but as conferring the right to use the name of the assignor, and thereby to authorize a recovery by an action at law. This relates to the entire demand. But our Code has changed the rule, and the procedure is more direct, requiring all actions to be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest; thus treating the assignment as legal, and as con
Now, arguing from these principles and premises, defendant contends that the insurance company, by its subrogation assignment, has but an equitable interest in the demand of the warehouse company against the defendant for the damages, enforceable alone in equity, and that there remains but an equitable interest in the warehouse company, enforceable alike only in equity, and that, though the insurance company and the warehouse company have joined as plaintiffs, the proceeding is still equitable, and not one cognizable in a court of law. - It should be remarked in this connection that the alleged assignment confers no greater right than was conferred by operation of the subrogation to which the insurance company was entitled after having paid the amount of its insurance. Plaintiffs’ coun-. sel, upon the other hand, contend that, having united their interest by-joining as plaintiffs in a common cause, the proceeding is at law, and not in equity, and was rightfully maintained. This points the exact difference between the parties. If a part, being assigned, should be re-assigned to the original owner, or the owner should assign the balance of his demand to the assignee of a part, the remedy for the enforcement of the whole would undoubtedly be in a court of law, and the objection that the cause had been split could not obtain, as the action would be single, and not-contrary to the obligation of the debtor. The equities carved out of the legal entity would thus disappear, and become again merged in the holder of the entire demand, and he would be relegated to a court of law. The argument of counsel for plaintiffs is that the same result would, in effect, follow if the parties all joined as plaintiffs to en
“The liability of the railroad company is, in legal effect,” says Mr. Chief Justice Shaw, in a case similar to the present, “first and principal, and that of the insurer secondary, not in order of time, but in order of ultimate liability”: Hart v. Western R. Corp. 13 Metc. (Mass.) 99, 105 (46 Am. Dec. 719). To the same purpose, see also, Hall v. Railroad Co. 80 U.S. (13 Wall.) 367; St. Louis, I. M. &. S. Ry. Co. v. Commercial Ins. Co. 139 U. S. 223 (11 Sup. Ct. 554); Norwich Union Ins. Soc. v. Standard Oil Co. 59 Fed. 984 (8 C. C. A. 433). The subrogation is not the equivalent of an assignment. It is the putting of one party in the place of another— the party who pays the debt in the place of the creditor— allowing the former to enter into the rights of the latter: Bouvier’s Law Dict.; Marine Ins. Co. v. St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. (C. C.) 41 Fed. 643. If the insurance equals or
It is insisted, however, that what was said in those cases upon the subject was not necessary to a determination of the controversy involved, and therefore that they are not authoritative as precedents. In the State Insurance Company Case, the precise question was whethér the company, having paid under its policy of insurance, being but a part of the loss sustained, could prosecute an action singly against the railroad company for the amount paid by it to the assured, and it was held that it could not. The very same contention, however, was maintained by counsel for the railroad company at the hearing there as is urged here, and in response thereto the court, speaking through Mr. Justice Lord, said: “There is but one wrongful act complained of, causing one loss and creating but one liability. It is a single wrongful act, giving rise to but one liability upon a claim which is indivisible. It is immaterial whether the insurer acquires his right or interest by subrogation or assignment. When the property de
Aeeirmed.