In 1889, Belle Young, the widow of Henry 0. Young, brought suit in the circuit court of Greene county against the defendant herein, the object of which was to have her dower assigned in the north half of lot 24, block 6, in the city of Springfield. She alleged that her husband and Thrasher had bought the lot together, each paying one half of the purchase money, and that the title had been taken in Thrasher’s name to defeat her inchoate dower right therein. On the trial, to wit, April 7, 1890, the issues were found for her, and, it being ascertained that the lot was not susceptible of division, a judgment was rendered in her favor for $240 damages, and the annual value of her dower therein was fixed by the jury at $200, payable in advance. Thrasher appealed the case to the supreme court, where the judgment was affirmed in all things except that the annuities were ordered to be paid at the end, instead of the beginning, of each year. The cause was remanded, with directions to the circuit court to so modify the judgment, which was done on the third of May, 1893. On the twentieth day of May, 1893, a special execution was issued on this judgment against the property (Revised Statutes., 1889, sec. 4556) in the name of Belle Young, and it was delivered to the sheriff of Greene county. During the pendency of the suit in the supreme court, Thrasher bought and had assigned to him several judgments against Mrs. Young, upon which he also had executions issued on the third day of June, 1893, and which were likewise delivered
The defense is that the alleged assignment of one half of the judgment was void for the reason that a creditor can not without the consent of his debtor make a valid assignment of a part of a claim or judgment, and for the further reason that it was based on a champertous agreement between the plaintiffs, who are lawyers, and Mrs. Young touching the prosecution of the suit for dower. Concerning the second alleged assignment it was averred that it was without consideration and not made in good faith, but for the purpose of creating in plaintiffs a secret trust for the use
The plea of res adjudicata rests on these facts: When the sheriff made his return on the execution showing that it had been satisfied in the manner stated, the plaintiffs herein filed a motion in the name of Mrs. Young to set aside the return. The grounds of the motion were the same as are now urged, that is, that the plaintiffs were the owners of the judgment by assignment and that the right of set-off did not exist. The motion was overruled, but the order does not state upon what ground. One of the plaintiffs testified that the motion was not disposed of on its merits but for want of necessary parties, the court holding that the alleged error could only be corrected by independent action on the part of the plaintiffs who claimed to have suffered the wrong. The decree herein recites affirmatively that this was the basis of the former ruling of the court. As the order overruling the motion did not recite the specific ground upon which the action of the court was based, it was competent to show by paról that fact (Hickerson v. City of Mexico,
The first agreement between the plaintiffs and Mrs. Young is as follows: “This agreement, made and
“Witness our hands and seals this twenty-fifth of August, 1889.
“Belle Young-, [seal]
“S. A. and S. C. Haseltine.” [seal]
The assignment of March 19, 1892, is as follows: “Know all men by these presents, that I, Belle Scher-merhorn (formerly Belle Young), widow of Henry C. Young, deceased, of Springfield, Missouri, for and in consideration of $200, to me in hand paid by S. A. Haseltine, of Springfield, Missouri, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, do and by these presents have sold, assigned, transferred and conveyed, unto the said S. A. Haseltine all of my dower, interest, damages and assignment of yearly rents in and to the north half of lot 24, in block 6, of the original town of Springfield,
“Witness my hand and seal the nineteenth day of March, 1892.
“Belle Sohebmebhobn. [seal]
“State oe Missoubi, 1
“County of Qreene. J
“On this nineteenth day of March, 1892, before me personally appeared Belle Schermerhorn (formerly Belle Young, widow of H. C. Young, deceased), to me known to be the same person described in, and who executed the foregoing instrument, and acknowledged that she executed the same as her free act and deed. Witness my hand and seal, at Springfield, Missouri, at the place and date above written. My term expires December 3, 1894.
“Felix R. Pobtee,
“Notary Public.”
On the twenty-third day of June, 1893, the following assignment on the margin of the record of the judgment was made, to wit: “For value received I hereby assign all my right, title and interest, of, in and to, the within judgment to S. A. and S. C. Haseltine, June 21, 1893.
(Signed) “Belle Young, now
“Belle Sohebmebhobn.
“Attest: W. W. Donham, Clerk.”
The foregoing are the evidences of plaintiffs’ title to the judgment. The defendant attacks the first agreement as champertous, and the assignment is chai-
But, if it be conceded that the defendant may challenge the validity of the first contract, and, if it be also conceded for argument that Mrs. Young retains some interest in the judgment, the insuperable objection remains that the right of set-off did not exist under any circumstances, that is, it could not have been insisted on by the defendant had there been no transfer of the judgment by Mrs. Young. The right of set-off is purely statutory, and the underlying principle of our statute on the subject is that only mutual debts may be set-off. Section 8160 of the Revised Statutes, 1889, provides that, “if any two or more persons are mutually indebted in any manner whatsoever, and one of them commence an action against the other,one debt may be set-off against the other, although such debts are of a different nature.” Section 8169 provides that “executions between the same parties may be set-off one against another, if required by either party, in the manner prescribed in the following sections.” By section 8171 such set-offs are prohibited: “First, when the creditor in one of the executions is not in the same capacity and trust as the
This position we do not conceive to be opposed to the decision of the supreme court in the case of City of Kansas to the use of Coates v. Ridenour,
The weight of the evidence, however, establishes that the plaintiffs were absolute and bona fide purchasers of the judgment, and that, too, before the defendant purchased his judgments against Mrs. Young, and.the affirmance of the judgment herein might very well rest on that ground alone. The first agreement may'be put out of the ease, and there remains the subsequent unconditional assignment of the entire judgment, which the evidence shows was made for the consideration of $500. We, therefore, conclude that the judgment was for the right party, and must be affirmed. Judge Bombaueb, concurs.
