4 Rand. 359 | Va. Ct. App. | 1826
Two points were made by the appellants in this cause: 1st, On the demurrer to the declaration: 2d, On the question of set-off. The writ is to answer W. Nekervis, cashier, endorsee of S. G. Adams, who was endorsee of John
By our Act of Assembly, assignments of all bonds, bills, promissory notes, &c. shall be valid, and the assignee may maintain any action in his own name, which the obligee or payee might have-brought. Who is the assignee of this note ? W. Nekervis, cashier. If the endorsement had been to W. Nekervis, without the addition of cashier, there could be no doubt, I presume, that he would have had the legal right to sue in his own name. Can the addition of cashier, or cashier of the Farmers’ Bank of Virginia, prevent that right from vesting? If so, it must be because it transfers the right to some other person or body; and that other, can only be the Bank. Is this an assignment to the Farmers’ Bank of Virginia? In the argument, it was said, and truly, that corporations were mere legal creations, and could have no name, no existence, no attributes,
It was contended, that the declaration bears on the face of it, that it was brought in right of the Bank, and for their benefit; and that this is a sort of paper, in which, by its charter, the Bank is forbidden to deal; and in which, it can therefore hold neither a legal nor equitable interest. H would be necessary to decide, whether the Bank could, under any circumstances, deal in such paper, if the declaration did really aver that the suit was prosecuted in right of the Bank and for its use; but I cannot understand it to make such averment. The plaintiff styles himself cashier, and says, the action hath accrued, “ to the plaintiff, cashier aforesaidbut surely, this is not stating, that the right, either legal or equitable, is in the Bank. It was
The second point is, did the Judge err in refusing to permit the joint notes of Jenkins and Adams, to be set-off against the note executed to Adams singly ?
I had considered this question settled. Numerous cases might be cited from the English books, from the decisions of our sister States, and from the Federal Court, concurring una voce, in declaring that joint and separate demands, cannot be set-off against each other; and the decisions in our own Court, have been uniform and strong to the same point. Scott v. Trent; Armistead v. Butler; Ritchie and Wales v. Moor. Surely, these cases ought to be considered as leaving this point no longer open to question. The last case cited, was very elaborately argued, and, I have no doubt, carefully examined by the Court. The opening counsel, though contending very ably against the general doctrine, admitted, that “ if one plaintiff sue for a debt due to him individually, the defendant cannot set-off a debt due him from the plaintiff, and another jointly.” This is the very ease before the Court; and Judge Roane, delivering the opinion of the Court, says in the close of his remarks, “This view of the case is decisive of the question, unless in this action against a company, we are
A distinction, was attempted in the argument, between joint debts, and partnership debts. But, as none of the cases acknowledge such distinction; as no authority, or dictum even, was cited in support of it; and as I can see no difference in reason between the two cases; I am for abiding by the decisions; being always unwilling quieta movere.
I think the judgment should be affirmed.