11 Del. Ch. 242 | New York Court of Chancery | 1917
The bill is that of one of several ■defendants in a judgment to perpetually enjoin the collection •of it because of set-offs of several .amounts aggregating more 'than the debt stated in the judgment. .
On July 8, 1903, judgment was entered in the Superior ■Court for New Castle County in favor of Emma A. Newlin, assignee of Julia A. P. Adair, against Mary B. Naudain Adair, then Mary B. Naúdain, and others, for the, real debt of $2,000. After the death of the plaintiff in 1904, the judgment was on
The matters Claimed to constitute equitable set-offs to the judgment were these:
(1) In 1906 Harriet I. Newlin, administratrix d. b. n. c. t. a. of James B. Newlin, deceased, held a mortgage, not on the premises of the complainant above mentioned, but on other property, a lot of land at Eighth and Monroe Streets, then owned, not by the complainant, but by her mother, Jane B. Naudain, and having obtained judgment to collect the mortgage issued a levari facias thereon, and in 1906 it. was bid in at the sheriff’s sale for $4,650 by Harry Emmons, one of the defendants,. acting for the said Harriet I. Newlin, administratrix as aforesaid; that Emmons deposited with the sheriff ten per centum of the purchase money; that he afterwards refused to comply with the terms of sale, and the money deposited was repaid to him; that afterwards the same property at Eighth and Monroe Streets was sold by the sheriff for $2,925 under a later writ of levari facias to Harry Emmons. It was claimed that the complainant is entitled to have credited on the judgment against her, being the one to be enjoined, the sum of $465, the amount of the said deposit made by Emmons with the sheriff (viz: ten per cent, of $4/650), and also $1,575, the loss on the re-sale (viz: the difference between $4,650 on the first sale°and $2,925' on the second).
(2) Robert Adair, the husband of the complainant, having rendered professional services, to and advanced moneys for
(3) It is claimed that the sum of $325, which remained in the hands of the sheriff from proceeds of sale of other property of Jane B. Naudain, not above mentioned, viz: No. 904 Poplar Street, in 1905 on another judgment held by a stranger named Hewes, after paying the debt of Hewes, and which sum $325 was applicable to the next lien, viz: the judgment in question in ■ this case.
The prayers of the bill are for a- perpetual injunction from making the sale; that Harry Emmons be required to give credit to the defendants for the said sums of $1,575 and $465; that Harriet I. Newlin, administratrix d. b. n. c. t. a., credit the $2,000 claimed by Robert'Adair from her for fees; and that the judgment be marked satisfied.
A motion having been made by the defendants to strike out certain paragraphs of the bill as being irrelevant and impertinent, the motion was argued. After considering the matter doubts arose in my mind whether any of the matters alleged as set-off were allowable as such, if proven, and I invited argument of the point, it not having been discussed by counsel. The defendants have filed a brief, but the complainant has not.
It will be seen that the equity of the bill is to establish as an equitable set-off against the judgment matters which were not available to the complainant at law, and the question is, whether admitting the statements of the complainants to be true these counter demands are allowable as set-off. The complainant has had no opportunity in a court of law to establish her right to a set-off, for a plea of set-off could not have been pleaded by her in the scire facias action in the Superior Court to revive the judgment. 2 Woolley on Delaware Practice, p. 902, § 1333; Burton v. Willin, 6 Houst. 522, 538, 22 Am. St. Rep. 363.
“Our statutes of set-off allow no deduction of one, in such a case, from the other; and a court of equityfollows the law in refusing it, unless there be some mutual credit between the parties—that is, understanding between them with respect to such deduction—and it seems to make no difference that the party seeking the deduction can show the insolvency of his creditor, and that he shall lose his assigned -debt unless the set-off be allowed.”
Finding there no evidence, or pretense of such understanding of set-off, it Wajs refused in that case.
■ In the case of Burton v. Willin, 6 Houst. 522, 22 Am. St. Rep. 363, also in the Court of Errors and Appeals^ set-off in equity was considered! The complainant, Benjamin Burton, had given a recognizance m the Orphans’ Court conditioned to pay a certain sum among other persons to his brother, David Burton, but this payment was not made. Then David died, leaving a minor child, Virginia. Benjatnin became administrator of his brother’s estate, and expended moneys from it to support the minor in excess of her father’s share of the recognizance. Afterwards she married Truitt and assigned her interest in the recognizance to Willin, the "defendant, who lived in Maryland. Willin then brought scire Jadas suit on the recog
It would seem, then, that there áre conflicting decisions on this point as to mutuality. But it is not so really, for the two courts agree as to equitable set-off, and in the latter case allowed the set-off because the assignee of the recognizance was a non-resident, without property "in this State, while in the former case seemed to hold that insolvency had no beáring on the right to equitable relief.
The first set-off. It is quite obvious that there is no con
The second set-off. This claim as an equitable set-off is not meritorious. • It is evidently a stale demand, and shows on its face that it could not have been set up at law, and should not be treated in equity as a set-off. The services were rendered and advances of money were made not by the complainant, but by a person who assigned to the complainant the claim for such services and advances. There could never have been an understanding between the complainant and the person to whom the services were rendered and the advances made that the "claim therefor should be a set-off against the amount of the judgment. _ There is, therefore, no right to an equitable set-off even if the claim had not’been a stale one. Not only are there
The third set-off. It was admitted by the solicitor for the defendants that this item should properly be allowed as a credit on-the judgment, and it will be so regarded.
From the foregoing it appears that two of the grounds of set-off, if proved to be true, cannot" be allowed as such, and that a demurrer to the bill based thereon would be allowed, and that the third one should be so allowed. In case the record and pleadings are so changed as that I can properly apply these principles, I will do so, with the result that the demurrer would be sustained and the bill would be dismissed, provided the defendant allow as a credit on the judgment the sum of $325, referred to above.
Note. After filing above opinion leave was granted defendants to withdraw answers filed, and thereafter defendants filed a demurrer to a portion of the bill and a plea to the remaining portion of the bill, both of which were sustained. The complainant failed to apply for leave to amend the bill in-accordance with the Rules of Court, and the bill was dismissed.