20 Cal. 509 | Cal. | 1862
The defendant Grey, being indebted to one Corwin in the sum of eleven hundred and fifty dollars, executed to him a mortgage upon certain property in the city of San Francisco to secure its payment. The mortgage was executed on the eighteenth of April, 1859, and on the thirteenth of August, 1859, Corwin assigned the debt and mortgage to the plaintiff; and on the twenty-fifth of the same month the assignment was recorded in the office of the County Recorder. The suit is brought to recover the debt and to foreclose the mortgage, and Grey sets up certain judgments against Corwin as counter-claims, these judgments having been assigned to him on the twentieth of April, 1860. No actual notice had then been given of the assignment to the plaintiff, and the question is whether the judgments can be relied upon as counter-claims.
The fourth section of the Practice Act provides that “ in the case of an assignment of a thing in action, the action by the assignee shall be without prejudice to any setioff or other defense, existing at the time of or before notice of the assignment.” This section merely adopts the rule which has always prevailed in equity
The result is that Grey was entitled to the benefit of the judgments, as counter-claims; and the judgment of the Court below is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.