54 Kan. 751 | Kan. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action brought by John M. Brehm against the Kansas Midland Railway Company and the Kansas Construction and Improvement Company to recover damages alleged to have been suffered by nine other parties through the negligent escape of fire from the locomotives of the defendants below, which, it is averred, burnt up and destroyed hay and other property belonging to those parties. These claims for damages were assigned to Brehm. Two of them appear to have been- assigned to and purchased by him outright for a specific consideration, and the remainder of
“ Now, I have and do hereby transfer, assign and set over to John M. Brehm all my said claim against said company or against whomsoever it may be because of said damages, hereby fully authorizing and empowering said Brehm to settle or sue on said claim, and recover damages therefor as fully as I have power to do at this time; and said Brehm is to and hereby agrees to pay to me for my said claim an amount equal to whatever he may recover and receive thereon, to be due and payable only after the same comes into the hands of said Brehm, less all costs, expenses, attorney’s fees, and 1 per cent, in addition thereto, in consideration hereof, and of his agreeing to take said claims on the terms herein.”
In the assignment, it is stated that on December 6, 1887, the Kansas Construction Company, by its negligence, set and permitted fire to escape from the right-of-way of the Midland Railway Company, thereby burning and destroying property of a certain description and of a stated value. The answer of the railway company was, first, a denial; and, next, that the plaintiff was not the real party in interest and had no capacity to sue; and, third, that the contracts and agreements between him and the parties alleged to have been injured were champertous and contrary to public policy, and that by such agreement the plaintiff had undertaken to prosecute the alleged claims in his own name, and at his own expense, for a part of the proceeds in case of a recovery. The Kansas Construction Company was not served, and did not appear or answer in the case, and no judgment was rendered against it. Brehm recovered upon seven of the claims against the railway company, the total amount of the recovery being $635.
It is first contended that Brehm cannot maintain an action upon any of these claims, for the reason that the same do not arise out of contract, and are not assignable. It is said that the parties attempted to assign to Brehm a naked clause of action for a tort, pure and simple. They do not assign to him any property or property right, but simply a cause of action
“So, an assignment of a bare right to file a bill in equity for a fraud committed upon the assignor will be held void, as contrary to public policy, and as savoring of the character of maintenance, of which we shall presently speak. So, a mere right of action for a tort is not, for the like reason, assignable. Indeed, it has been laid down as a general rule that, where an equitable interest is assigned in order to give the assignee a loans standi injudioio in a court of equity, the party assigning such right must have some substantial possession, and some capability of personal enjoyment, and not a mere naked right to overset a local instrument or to maintain a suit.”
The general doctrine, both at law and in equity, is, that a right of action for a pure tort is not the subject of assignment. This rule has been changed to some extent by statute, and the provisions with reference to what ehoses in action will survive or abate by the death of either or both of the parties have been held to modify this rule, so that everything which survives and can be transmitted to the executor or administrator of the assignor, in case of death, is assignable. (Smith v. Railroad Co., 28