The Metropolitan Trust Company of California, as trustee, and the National Thrift Corporation of America, as trustor, entered into a written trust agreement under which the Trust Company was to hold in trust a fund as security for the bonds, contracts, certificates, and annuity agreements which the Thrift Company was selling as investments. The agreement required the Thrift Company to maintain in the trust fund an amount equal to not less than 110 per cent of the total aggregate principal of the outstanding bonds and the cancellation value of the contracts and certifications, less the total amount of subsisting loans. It further required the trustee to identify and authenticate all bonds, contracts, certificates and annuity agreements issued by the Thrift Company, provided that the latter was under no default known to the trustee with respect to the maintenance of the trust fund.
In 1927 Ward Esplín purchased from the Thrift Company a $1,000 participation certificate, secured by the trust, and
At the opening of the trial it was stipulated that prior to the consideration of any other issue evidence should be taken to determine whether any right to sue upon the cause of action ever vested in plaintiff. After receiving evidence on that issue, the trial court found that Esplín had not assigned the certificate to plaintiff for a valuable consideration and that plaintiff was not the owner thereof. It also found that the cause of action sued upon by plaintiff was never assigned or transferred to it by Esplín. The present appeal was taken from the judgment entered by the trial court pursuant to these findings.
The issues are: (1) Did the instrument of July 8, 1933, constitute a valid assignment of the participation certificate by Esplín to plaintiff, vesting the legal ownership in plaintiff ?
The written instrument of July 8, 1933, provided as follows :
“WHEREAS, the undersigned having purchased of the National Reserve Company of America one of its investment certificates, hereafter referred to as certificate, and
“WHEREAS, the undersigned is the owner of NATIONAL THRIFT CERTIFICATE #136B CLASS B SERIES F having an estimated value of $835.10, and hereinafter referred to as property, and
“WHEREAS, the undersigned is desirous of having the cash value of said property applied, at the earliest possible moment, as a cash interest-bearing credit on said certificate.
■ “NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration that National Reserve Company agrees to give an immediate conditional credit (not a credit on my certificate) of 100 per cent of the above estimated value, and of the company’s further agreement to convert said credit to a cash interest-bearing credit on the certificate immediate^ as received by it in the form of cash or its equivalent in acceptable first mortgages, and that it further agrees to immediately pass to the cashable interest-bearing credit on said certificate all such amounts received by it from or out of said property; the undersigned hereby assigns and transfers, for the purposes hereinabove stated and for none other, all his right, title and interest of, in and to the hereinabove described property, and hereby constitutes, appoints and empowers any duly qualified officer of said National Reserve Company in his name, place and stead, and as his attorney in fact, for said purposes.
“PROVIDED, that, at any time upon the determinatiqn and conclusion that it is or will be unable to collect further proceeds out of said property, said National Reserve Company may, or upon the written request at any time of the undersigned shall, re-assign and transfer to the undersigned, said property depleted by the amount of the aforesaid receipts arising out of said property and credited as aforesaid to said certificate, whereupon this agreement shall become automatically terminated and cancelled.
“Executed and acknowledged by Ward H. Esplín . . . July 8, 1933.”
The contention that the assignment is void for lack of consideration likewise cannot be sustained. Since the instrument provides that plaintiff is to credit all proceeds received by it to the purchase price of an investment certificate sold by it to Esplin, the assignment is in essence one for collection. It is well established that an assignment of a chose in action for collection vests the legal title in the assignee whether or not any consideration is paid therefor. In such case the assignee may maintain a suit thereon in his own name, even though the assignor retains an equitable interest in the thing assigned.
(Greig
v.
Riordan,
There remains the question whether the cause of action for breach of the trust indenture passed to plaintiff with the assignment of the certificate. There is no limitation, express or implied, in the instrument to support the trial court’s conclusion that the assignment was designed solely to authorize the collection by plaintiff of such dividends as it might receive on the certificate through a liquidation of the existing trust collateral. Plaintiff is empowered to apply to the purchase price of its investment certificate on behalf of the assignor “all such amounts received by it from or out of said [assigned] property”. The words of the granting
Defendants contend that the provision in the assignment which allows plaintiff to re-assign the certificate upon determining that it is unable to collect further proceeds and enables Esplín to demand a re-assignment of the certificate at will indicates that the cause of action was not intended to pass under the assignment. Esplín, however, has made no such demand for re-assignment, and the provision limits only the possible duration of the assignment and not the extent of the rights transferred thereby.
The statement in the assignment that it was made “for the purposes hereinabove stated, and for none other’’ constitutes not a limitation upon the rights assigned, but simply a requirement that the moneys collected be applied to the purchase price of the investment certificate as provided in the first paragraphs of the assignment. The clause limits not what plaintiff may collect, but plaintiff’s subsequent disposition of what is collected.
In determining what rights or interests pass under an assignment, the intention of the parties as manifested in the instrument is controlling. (See cases cited in 5 C. J. 949.) An unqualified assignment of a contract or chose in action, however, with no indication of the intent of the par
Unless an assignment specifically or impliedly designates them, accrued causes Of action arising out of an assigned contract, whether
ex contractu
or
ex delicto,
do not pass under the assignment as incidental to the contract if they can be asserted by the assignor independently of his continued ownership of the contract and are not essential to a continued enforcement of the contract.
(Regan Vapor-Engine Co.
v.
Pacific Gas-Engine Co.,
If, however, an accrued cause of action cannot be asserted apart from the contract out of which it arises or is essential to a complete and adequate enforcement of the contract, it passes with an assignment of the contract as an incident thereof. Thus, the assignment of a contract passes from assignor to assignee an accrued cause of action for rescission
(Latimer
v.
Capay Valley Land Co.,
The trust indenture, upon which the present action is based, specifically provides that ownership of a certificate secured by the agreement is a condition precedent to the main-
The judgment is reversed.
Carter, J., Curtis, J., and Shenk, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a rehearing was denied May 22, 1941.
