14 Vt. 450 | Vt. | 1842
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In actions for torts the general rule is that such actions must be brought in the names of the persons whose legal rights have been affected, and who were legally interested in the property when the injury to it was committed. This rule is founded in good sense, and it might well be inquired, why should the suit be brought in the name of a person who is not to enjoy the benefit of it, and who has sustained no damage for which a reparation is demanded ? The declaration shows that the plaintiff was the assignee of the judgment against Bell; that he, as such assignee, took the execution and put it into the hands of the constable for collection, and that the default of the officer accrued while he was the owner of the judgment. It is true that it is an ancient rule of the common law that a chose in action cannot be assigned or granted over to another. The wisdom of this rule has been frequently questioned, and it has been so explained and modified that it remains, at the present day, at most only an objection, in any case, to the form of action. Courts of equity, who have always been disposed to look at the substance, rather than the shadoio, never adopted it, but always acted in direct contradiction to it. In process of time, courts of law began to look with more complacency upon assignments of choses in action, and to speak of them as being good between the parties, and give them effect, and held the assignment a sufficient consideration for an express promise. It may now be regarded as settled law that courts
I know of no rule of the common law which, in a case like the present, requires the action to be brought in the name of the judgment creditor, and I can see no use or convenience in it. In Clowes v. Hawley, 12 Johns. R. 484, the assignee of a bond was permitted to maintain trover in his own name against the obligor, who had got it into his possession and converted it, and the court say, ‘ it is no objec- £ tion to the action that the assignee might, in the name of £ the obligee, have sued the bond.’ The case proceeds upon the ground that, by the assignment, the plaintiff had acquired an interest, which courts of law will protect. In the case of Harrington v. Ward, 9 Mass. R. 251, which has been much relied upon by the defendant’s counsel, the plaintiff and two others had signed a note as surety with J. N. to W., who sued all the signers, and the defendant’s deputy attached the property of J. N. the principal. When judgment had been obtained, the execution was put into the hands of another deputy of the defendant, who demanded the property of the first deputy, who refused to deliver it, and the collection of a moiety of the execution was enforced against the plaintiff, and it was for the neglect of the officer, in not turning out the property attached, that the action was brought.
It has been settled in this state that towns, under the statute, are liable for the neglect of their constables in the first instance, and that .a suit against the constable is not necessary.
The judgment of the county court is reversed, and judgment that the plaintiff’s declaration is sufficient.