3 Ill. App. 442 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1878
Jules Gravelot was indebted to Edwin Moore for pasturing cattle, in the sum of $32, which became due Oct. 1st, 1876. On the 23d of March, 1877, Thomas Tates recovered a judgment against Moore for $458.50. January the 14th, 1878, Wm. C. Coney obtained a judgment before a justice of the peace in Iroquois county against Moore for $175.50. Upon this judgment on the same day an execution was sworn out, which was on the 28th of that month returned, no property found. An affidavit was then made for the issuing of a garnishee process, against Gravelot, in favor of Moore, for the use of Coney, and served on Gravelot the 31st of January, 1878. Gravelot appeared on the 5th of February, 1878, before the justice, and upon a trial there had, a judgment was rendered against him for $32, from which he appealed to the Circuit Court.
■ January the 14th, 1878, upon a settlement between Tates and Moore, the latter gave the former an order on Gravelot, as follows:
“Jan’y 14th, 1878.
“Jules Gravelot, pay to Thos. Tates thirty-two dollars and fifty cents, for herding cattle, and this shall be your receipt.
“ Edwin Moose.”
On the trial of the cause in the court below, the following June, Tates, by way of interpleader, set up a claim by virtue of the order against Gravelot, for $82.50. Previous to that time, Coney knew nothing of Tates’ claim, though Gravelot, before the garnishee proceeding, was informed by Tates that he expected to get an order from Moore on him for the amount due Moore, but received no notice of the procurement of the order until after the service of the garnishee summons, when it was presented to him and he refused to accept it for that reason. The- Circuit Court rendered a judgment in favor of Tates for $32, and ordered Coney to pay the costs of suit. It is now insisted by the attorney for Tates, that the order drawn by Moore in his favor on Gravelot operated as an assignment to him of the debt due Moore, and therefore Gravelot could not be garnished by Moore’s creditors.
This position is countenanced by some authorities, which are mostly based upon the supposition that an order or draft, drawn on a particular fund, and so drawn as to include the whole fund in the hands of the drawee, operates as an assignment of the debt. Here it will be observed that the order was for $32.50 only. This sum had been due from Gravelot upwards of a year, and Moore was entitled to interest from the time it was agreed to be paid. Hence the order did not call for the entire fund, and in such case the doctrine is well settled that it is not an assignment of the debt until after the drawee has assented to it by an acceptance.
Moreover, it may be well doubted, whether from the order itself it sufficiently appears to be drawn on a particular fund, even if drawn for the entire amount due. Kelly v. Mayor of Brooklyn, 4 Hill, 263; Kimball v. Donald, 20 Mo. 579.
Again, it will be found that many of the cases referred to hold the doctrine that a draft, even upon a special fund, operates as an assignment only from the time of acceptance by the drawee. Thus in Mandeville v. Welch, 5 Wheat. 277, referred to, “ it is said that a bill of exchange is in theory an assignment to the payee of a debt due the drawer.” This is undoubtedly true where the bill has been accepted, whether it be drawn on a general or specific fund, and whether the bill be in its nature negotiable or not; for in such case the acceptor, by his assent, binds and appropriates the funds for the use of the payee, and to this effect are the authorities cited at bar. Yates v. Groves, 1 Yes. Jun. 280; Gibson v. Minet, per Byre, C. J. 1 H. Bl. 596-603; Tattock v. Harris, 3 T. R. 174.
In cases also where an order is drawn for the whole of a particular fund, it amounts to an equitable assignment of that fund, and after notice to the drawee it binds the fund in his hand. But where the order is drawn, either on a general or a particular fund for a part only, it does not amount to an assignment of that part, or give a lien against the drawee unless he consents to the appropriation by an acceptance of the draft.
The case of Morris, Adm’r et al. v. Cheney, 51 Ill. 451, was a proceeding in chancery, and the court recognized the doctrine of equitable assignment, even without the assent of the debtor, but also held “ that such assignee in order to perfect his title against the debtor, must give immediate and prompt notice of the assignment to him. Still if he does not give such notice, it does not destroy his right but exposes it to be overreached by a subsequent assignment to another.” So in this case, Yates having given no notice to the debtor after he had obtained the order from Moore (though there had been some loose talk in his presence that Yates expected to procure an order, this did not amount to a notice that one had been actually obtained), he was therefore overreached by the garnishee proceeding of Coney against Gravelot.
If the order was as counsel seem to admit, a negotiable instrument, then it would follow that it did not operate as an assign-, ment of the debt due from Gravelot to Moore. In Cowperthwait v. Sheffield, 1 Sandf. 416, Vanderpool, J., said: “If these bills had been in the form of orders for the entire proceeds of the shipment, they might, after notice to the drawee, have operated as an assignment of such proceeds. But they would not have possessed all the characteristics of bills of exchange. If in such form they could he negotiated, they would on their face convey information to every holder of the fund on which they were drawn. In Cutts v. Parks, 12 Mass. 209, the drawee consented to the assignment hy acceptance, and it so appears in Morton v. Naylor, 1 Hill, 583; and in Robbins v. Bacon, 3 Grecnl. 346, referred to, the order had been presented to the drawee before the service of the trustee process.
That the order in this ease operated at law as an assignment of the debt due from Gravelot to Moore under the circumstances, we are not prepared to hold.
Parsons, in his treatise on Notes andBills, vol. 1,331, remarks: “ that there may be some dicta to the effect that a bill of exchange is an assignment, but no case that we are aware of with the exception of one, has held this doctrine in an unqualified way, and that case must be considered as overruled. The doctrine is well settled that before acceptance, a negotiable bill for a part of the fund is no assignment, but becomes one on the drawee signifying his assent by accepting the bill.”
It may be remarked that this was a proceeding at law, and it is only legal rights that are the subject of inquiry. May v. Baker, 15 Ill. 89.
Courts of law will doubtless protect the equitable owner of choses in action whenever they can do so without interfering with the rights of innocent parties, and the cases referred to by appellee do not push the doctrine any farther than this.
Will it be questioned that if Gravelot had paid Moore the amount due him, or had accepted a subsequent order drawn by Moore before notice of the prior order to Tates, that the payment in the one case, and his liability in the other, would have been perfectly effectual?
That Coney’s rights as attaching creditor of Moore should be protected to the same extent as a ionafide purchaser of a subsequent order after acceptance without notice of the prior one, is settled by the cases of Manning v. McClure et al., 36 Ill. 490; Butler v. Haughwaut et al. 42 Ill. 18.
The idea suggested, that it was the duty of Coney to have brought Tates, by notice or otherwise, before the justice upon the trial of the garnishee proceeding, thereby affording him an opportunity to assert his claim, is the very opposite of what ought to have been done, so far as Tates is concerned. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.