75 N.W. 916 | N.D. | 1898
Plaintiff and defendant each claim the ownership, by assignment, of the fees that were due one Herman M. Luther, as administrator of the estate of August Luther late of Cass County, in this state, deceased. The estate proved to be insolvent, and did not pay even the preferred claims in full, but defendant received the pro rata per cent, that the estate paid on account of such fees, and plaintiff brings this action to recover from him, and, by reason of certain facts hereafter stated, seeks to recover the full amount of such claim. There was a trial to a jury, and a verdict for defendant. Judg
Upon the point, however, which we think must rule this case, there is no conflict in the testimony. It is purely a question of law, on undisputed facts. In 1894, Herman M. Luther resigned his position as administrator. Subsequently there were two administrators de bonis non, the second one being one Griffin. The defendant, Hunter, was on Griffin’s bond as such administrator. Griffin was short in his accounts, and the defendant Hunter, fearing that a liability might arise on the bond, sought to purchase the outstanding preferred claims against the estate; and in pursuance of this desire he purchased, or attempted to purchase, the claim of Herman M. Luther for fees as administrator. Having received the dividend on the claim, plaintiff, claiming to be the owner thereof, brings suit against Hunter for money bad and received, but demands judgment for the full amount of the claim, on the theory that defendant’s position as surety on the administrators bond debarred him from purchasing claims against the estate at a discount, and that having done so, and received the pro rata payment thereon, and the estate having been exhausted, he must account to the true owner for the full amount of the claim. There are two sufficient answers to this contention: The action is for money had and received, and is not based upon the bond, directly or indirectly; and, second, defendant’s position as surety on the bond placed him in no fiduciary relation to the
But if the claim was in fact the property of plaintiff, and defendant wrongfully received the money thereon, he can be required to account to plaintiff for the money received. It is conceded that plaintiff holds an assignment from Herman M. Luther, duly executed and delivered, of his entire claim for fees as the administrator of the August Luther estate. This assignment was dated May 30, 1896. If it conveyed anything, it was purely a gift inter vivos, as plaintiff paid nothing therefor. While, of course, a gift of personal property must be accompanied by delivery, in order to be of any validity, yet the authorities are now unanimous in holding that the delivery of the evidence of the debt — which is the real thing — is a delivery of the debt itself, that being the only delivery of which the property in its nature is susceptible. 5 Am. and Eng. Enc. Law, 521a, and cases cited.
It is urged, however, that at the date of said assignment Herman M. Luther had no interest in his fees, as he had previously assigned the claim. On August 7, 1893, there was placed on file in the County Court of Cass County a writing signed by Herman M. Luther, which in terms assigned all his claim for such fees up to that date to one Henry Krogh, who had been the attorney for such administrator, and had a claim for attorney’s fees against the estate amounting to $300. On February 1, 1896, Krogh assigned his claim for attorney’s fees, and also the claim of Herman M. Luther for administrator’s fees, to the defendant, Hunter. If there was any legal delivery of the assignment from Luther to Krogh then defendant has the better title to the claim; otherwise not. As stated, this assignment was placed on file in the County Court on August 7, 1893. It was dated at Great Falls, Montana, August 4, 1893. How it reached the County Court of Cass County no one seems to know. The official who was then and is now the judge of said court testified that the assignment “was filed by Henry Krogh, or received by mail from
Respondent urges that delivery is shown because Krogh, after he learned of the instrument on file, said to one witness that he controlled Luther’s claim for fees, and to another that he owned the claim, and he in fact assumed to transfer it to defendant. All these acts might strongly indicate acceptance on Krogh’s part, but they have no bearing whatever on the question of delivery by Luther. If there be any evidence of such delivery it must be found in the one fact that an instrument, in form an assignment, was forwarded to the County Court. In cases of gift of real estate, a delivery of the deed to the donee has sometimes been presumed from the fact that the donor filed the deed in the office of the register of deeds. But deeds are placed in that office only for the purpose of being recorded, and it is to the records thus made that-the public must go in order to ascertain the condition of the title to any given tract of land. The grantor may not place the deed of record, and yet deny the title óf the grantee. That would be to give the grantee a false credit, and enable him to defraud the public. The grantor, having placed the deed upon the records, cannot recall the same. As he has apparently invested another with the title, he is presumed to have devested himself thereof. But the office of the County Court performs no such service. It keeps no record of transfer of property. It is never consulted for that purpose. At the time this instrument was filed, the Compiled Laws of 1887 were in force. Under the provisions of the Probate Code therein contained, claims against an estate were not filed with the court. They were presented, with proofs of their validity, to the administrator, and if allowed by him, and this allowance confirmed by the court, they were then filed in the court for the sole purpose of showing the liabilities of the estate. But in no event was this so called “assignment” the presentation of any claim against the estate of August Luther, and there was no provision of law requiring that it be
As there was in this case no competent evidence of a delivery of the assignment from Herman M. Luther to- Henry Krogh, there must be a new trial. There is one error assigned upon the ruling of the court in excluding evidence, and as the same question may arise again it is proper to notice it. When Krogh was on the witness stand plaintiff offered to prove by him that when he made the assignment to defendant of his claim for attorney’s fees and the Luther claim for administrator’s fees (both of which were assigned by one instrument, and for the aggregate consideration of $175,) it was specially understood and agreed that the assignment of the administrator’s fees was simply for the purpose of enabling the estate to be cleared up; that it should never be presented as a claim against the estate; and that defendant paid no consideration whatever therefor. This testimony was refused, apparently on the ground that Krogh could not, by parol, contradict the written assignment. But this was a misapplication of a rule which applies only to the parties to a written contract and their privies. Krogh as a party, or in his own interest, could not contradict the writing. But plaintiff was in no manner concluded by it. He was free to contradict it as he might, and Kreogh was a competent witness for the purpose. The evidence should have been received.
Reversed, and new trial ordered.