191 Iowa 937 | Iowa | 1921
“The condition of the above obligation is such that whereas claims and assignments by the said Fred Brown, J. W. Kinert, and International Harvester Company of America to the amount of $363.55 against the said Seabury Company have been filed in the office of the auditor of the county of Harrison, state of Iowa by the said Fred Brown, J. "W. Kinert, and International Harvester Company of America same being the amount of claims and assignments asserted to be due them for work done for the said Seabury Company on the contracts on Boyer Cut-off No. 1, Harrison; Pottawattamie District No. 1.
“Now, therefore, if the said Seabury Company, its heirs and executors, and assigns shall at all times keep harmless the said Fred Brown, J. W. Kinert, and International Harvester Company of America, and the county of Harrison, state of Iowa, their heirs; executors and assigns from and against all obligations under said claims and assignments and from and against all costs, damages, and expenses that shall or may arise therefrom then this obligation to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue. ’ ’
Plaintiff in his petition ignored the partial assignment to the International Harvester Company, and demanded judgment for the full amount of his claim of $331, with interest thereon at 6 per cent from August 15, 1916, the date when his services
The validity of the partial assignment of the account to the Harvester Company is not challenged by the plaintiff in the evidence, and we may, therefore, assume that the allegations of the separate answer pleading same are true. Section 3047 of the Code authorizes the assignment of open accounts, and provides for the prosecution of actions thereon in the name of the as-signee. Code Section 3459 requires every action to be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest. This assignment, however, transferred to the assignee all of the interest of plaintiff in said account to the extent designated, so that, at the time this action was commenced, it was owned in part by plaintiff and in part by his assignee. The rule is fully settled by the courts of this country that a single cause of action may not be split so as to permit the bringing of successive actions without the consent of the debtor. State v. Layton, 25 Iowa 193; James v. City of Newton, 142 Mass. 366 (8 N. E. 122); Thiel v. Week Lbr. Co., 137 Wis. 272 (118 N. W. 802); McMurray v. Marsh, 12 Colo. App. 95 (54 Pac. 852); National U. F. Ins. Co. v. Denver & R. G. R. Co., 44 Utah 26 (137 Pac. 653); Bowen v. Haskell, 53 Minn. 480 (55 N. W. 629); Rivers v. Wright & Co., 117 Ga. 81 (43 S. E. 499).
The right of plaintiff to recover upon the account which was in part assigned to the Harvester Company was directly put in issue by defendant’s answer. Instead of consenting that separate actions might be brought by plaintiff and his assignee to recover the amount claimed by each, defendants affirmatively set up the assignment, and asked that plaintiff’s assignee be made a party to the action. Plaintiff ignored this plea by
Thus far, we have given no consideration to the authorities cited and relied upon by counsel for appellant, of which Searles v. Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co., 148 Iowa 65, is typical. These cases are not in point. In the Searles case, the action was upon a policy of life insurance, in the name of the administrator of the estate of the insured. One of the defenses urged was that the policjr had been legally assigned by the insured; that action was pending thereon in a foreign jurisdiction; and that the assignee was not a party. We held that plaintiff was not required to make the assignee a party, and that the question of the validity of the assignment might be, and was, litigated, the plaintiff claiming that the insured did not have mental capacity to make alleged assignment, and that it was, therefore, void. No question of splitting an action was involved in any of the cases cited.
It is our conclusion, therefore, that the judgment of the court below should be, and it is, — Affirmed.