58 Mass. 254 | Mass. | 1849
The plaintiff proceeds on the ground that his debtor placed funds in the defendant’s hands, with an agreement between the defendant and the debtor, that the defendant should pay the plaintiff the amount of his claim on the debtor. This, if proved, constitutes a good cause of action against the defendant; the agreement being by simple contract. Arnold v. Lyman, 17 Mass. 400.
We are of opinion that this instruction was right. What is the plaintiff’s claim ? It is the whole of his debt. But as he has no priority, and as the defendant has not collected enough to pay all the creditors, it would be not only unjust, but also contrary to the intention of the parties, that the plaintiff should receive his whole claim, and leave $1-25 only in the defendant’s hands, for the other creditors. Each of those creditors might as well have brought this action, as the plaintiff.
If the sum in the hands of the defendant, after he shall have finished the collection, is less than the demands which it was intended to discharge, the four creditors may probably be entitled to payment pro rata. But this need not be decided now.
It was argued for the plaintiff, that it might be presumed, from lapse of time, that the defendant had collected all the demands that were put into his hands. But the proof is only that he has collected one of them; and the exceptions do not show what time elapsed between the putting of the demands into the defendant’s hands and the commencement of this