113 Tenn. 446 | Tenn. | 1904
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This controversy is over a fund now in the registry of the court below, where it awaits the determination of this cause. The defendant Donohue, before the bringing of the suit, had gone through the bankrupt court, and had received his discharge. The complainants claim the fund by attachment issued on debts which accrued after, this discharge was granted, while the defendants Stagmier and Fletcher rest their right to the same upon an assignment made to them by Donohue prior to the institution of the bankruptcy proceedings. The record shows that Stagmier and Fletcher were creditors of their codefendant, Donohue, and within four months before he was forced into involuntary bankruptcy they surrendered the account which they had against him, and in its stead took an assignment covering funds which were, at its date, in the hands of the railway company, and such funds as were thereafter to
As has already been stated, the debts of complainants against Donohue were created after the discharge in bankruptcy. The present bill is filed to subject the
We think the insistence of the defendants is sound, and under their assignment, as funds arose from time to time from this contract, the assignees had a right to have them applied to the satisfaction of their claim. While it is true the general rule of common law was that nothing could be mortgaged which was not in existence, or did not belong to the mortgagor at the time the mortgage was executed, yet this rule was founded solely on a technicality. Winslow v. Merchants’ Ins. Co., 4 Metc. (Mass.), 306, 38 Am. Dec., 368; Jones v. Richardson, 10 Metc., 481. The rule of the civil law was otherwise, and this rule has been adopted by the courts of equity in England, and by many, if not by a large majority, of those in America, without limitation.
If this be true — and that it is is abundantly sustained by authority, as well as reason — it necessarily follows that no act of the assignor, or of any creditor of his, made subsequent to this assignment, completed as it was by notice to the railway company, could affect the rights of these assignees.
Bnt it is said these parties at the time of taking this assignment had reasonable grounds for believing that