27 Ind. 384 | Ind. | 1866
The appellant was the plaintiff' below. The complaint alleged that the plaintiff in December, 1863, executed his note to the defendant Walls, payable at a hank in Grceneastle; that Walls, without consideration, and to defraud his creditors, assigned and delivered the note to the defendant Eckels, Walls being at the time indebted and insolvent, under a fraudulent and pretended verbal trust; thatWalls was largely indebted to McCord § Bradley for goods, for which he gave them his note for $1,552, due January 5, 1864, which note was duly assigned to the plaintiff and was held by him as a set-off against the note which he had given to Walls; that at the February term, 1864, of the Putnam Common Pleas, the plaintiff' commenced suit against Walls and Eckels, to recover against Walls a judgment for the amount of the note held by him against Wcdls, and to restrain Eckels from transferring the note which he held as aforesaid against the plaintiff and which had not matured, and was not in condition to be set off against the note held by the plaintiff; that he obtained his judgment against Walls for $1,561 88,. but failed to obtain the injunction sought against Eckels. It was fui’ther averred, that the note given by the plaintiff to Walls had matured, remained in the hands of Eckels, and was, in fact, the property of Walls, who is insolvent, and that Eckels, combining with Walls to defraud his creditors, still holds the plaintiff’s note and'refuses to satisfy it, having notice that the plaintiff holds the
Walls demurred to the complaint, alleging for cause the want of sufficient facts. This demurrer was sustained. Eckels answered in four paragraphs, to three of which the plaintiff' demurred, and this demurrer was sustained to the complaint.
The power of a court exercising equity jurisdiction to reach the choses in action of the debtor, and apply them to the satisfaction of a judgment, though maintained by Lord Hardwick®, and uniformly exercised by the chancellors of England until after our independence, (the jurisdiction, in view of the bankrupt laws of that country, having then become rarely necessary for the purposes of justice,) when it was first questioned by a dictum of Lord Eldest, and finally denied on the authority of that dictum, though maintained here with great ability by Chancellor Kent, (4 Johns. Ch. 450,) and by the Court of Errors of New York, (20 Johns. R. 554,) has been repeatedly denied by this court, ■and it has been held that, without legislation conferring it, the courts have no jurisdiction in such cases. A defendant might be worth millions, and yet, if his wealth consisted of hhoses in action, he could successfully defy his creditors. Shaw v. Aveline, 5 Ind. 380; Totten v. McManus, id. 407; Stewart v. English, 6 id. 176; Peoples v. Stanley, id. 410; Butler v. Jaffray, 12 id. 504. The remedy afforded here, for the state of the law thus declared, is found in proceedings supplementary to execution. 2 G.& H. 260, et seq. It may not be clear, however, that a note held by the judgment plaintiff against the defendant can be reached by proceedings under the statute referred to.
But the case before us does not fall within the general ■doctrine announced in Shaw v. Aveline, supra. This is an application to compel a set-off, and thus satisfy both demands. As a foundation for the interposition of the power <of a court of equity to attain the end, the insolvency of Walls, the judgment defendant, for whose beneficial use it
But it is suggested that the complaint itself shows that the matter is res adjudicata. The record of the previous suit is made part of the complaint. In that case, the plaintiff evidently labored under the belief, as he does in this, that the set-off could not be compelled until the' maturity of his outstanding note, and it is now argued in his behalf that the previous suit was brought too soon to obtain the set-off, inasmuch as the note was not then due, and that the most that could have been then accomplished was to prevent a transfer of the note, with a view to compelling a set-off at its maturity. We cannot concur in that proposition. It may be generally true that a party cannot bo compelled to receive payment upon a debt until its maturity. Ordinarily there could be no object in requiring it, and sometimes injustice would be done by doing so. But where satisfaction has, in fact, been made before the debt becomes due, and no injustice can result from settling the fact, courts of equity, for the purposes of justice, have not hesitated to determine it by decree. In compelling an equitable set-off', the court proceeds upon the ground that one demand is, pro tanto, a satisfaction of the other, and that the real indebtedness is merely the balance. All matters of interest can be arranged upon just principles, so as to avoid injury. In Lindsay v.Jackson, supra, the debt of the complainant was not due, and yet the set-off was allowed.
In the former suit, the insolvency of Walls was alleged. There was an issue upon this, which was found for Eckels. We must suppose that the plaintiff, in that case, failed to prove the fact of insolvency. In this case, the plaintiff avers the present insolvency of Walls. This could not have been in issue in the former suit. It is the very basis of the present action, and is not .res adjudicata—it is impossible.
Wc do not consider the answer of Eckels with a view to determine its sufficiency. That question has not been argued by the appellant, nor has it been decided by the court below.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to overrule the demurrer by Walls to the complaint, to set aside the judgment sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrer to Eckels’ answer to the complaint, and to proceed according to this opinion.