Rohrer v. Turrill

4 Minn. 407 | Minn. | 1860

Elandkau, J.

By the Court. The Plaintiff - as assignee of a banking firm, sued the Defendant on an ordinary promissory note, which came into the hands of the Plaintiff as part of the assets of the concern. The Defendant, for answer, sets out, first, that the assignment under which the Plaintiff holds the note was fraudulent, and intended to prefer by collusion, certain creditors, etc. Second; that said preferred creditors colluded with the Plaintiff and recovered several large judgments in the District Court of the United States, exceeding in amount the sum of the assets of Caldwell & Co., and issued executions thereon, under which, with the knowledge and consent of the Plaintiff, the United States Marshal levied upon and attached the said assets, including the said note in the complaint named, and that under such levy, the Marshal holds the note. The Plaintiff replied, but subsequently moved for judgment upon the pleadings, which motion was granted. The case consequently comes to us as upon demurrer to the answer.

In the first place, the action can only be sustained by the real party in interest, and although.the Defendant admits that he owes the demand to some one, he has a perfect right to insist that no one but the true owner of it shall recover a judgment against him; this is absolutely necessary for the protection of the Defendant from further suit against him by the real owner of the demand, because a plea of former recovery by any one but the true owner, is no bar to a suit by the true owner.

Ve will now examine the relation that the Plaintiff sustains to the note,' taking the answer to be all true. If the Defendant, a debtor, of the estate, can make, the point that the assignment is void for fraud, then that part of the answer would take away the title to the note from the assignee and restore it to the original holders, Caldwell & Co., or more correctly speaking, would leave the title of the note in them, the fraudulent assignment not having the effect of passing it from them. This condition of things would be a defence to the suit by the *410assignee, as it would leave Mm without any interest in the subject matter. We think, however, that so long as the assignment is not molested by creditors, debtors have very little to say about it. It is always good between the assignor and assignee, no matter how much fraud may have entered into it. LeMay vs. Bibeau, 2 Minn. 29. So a payment to the assignee by a debtor of the assignor, is always a good payment, because the assignor cannot question it. The debtor, therefore, cannot make the question of fraud in the assignment, with a view to attack its validity; but the matter of this nature in the answer, may, perhaps, be pertinent, if considered as matter of inducement, pleaded for the purpose of showing why the Marshal made the levy, which is subsequently pleaded.

We will now enquire what effect the balance of the answer has upon the interest of the Plaintiff in this note. It charges that the preferred creditors, with the collusion of Caldwell & Co., and the assignee, recovered judgments in the District Court of the United States, and that the Marshal, under and by virtue of executions, issued upon such judgments, “ levied,” among other things, upon the note in question. The Plaintiff obj ects to the sufficiency of the answer in this respect, in not seting out the particular acts performed by the Marshal in making the levy, in order that the court could decide whether, in law, he made a levy or not, and insists that under our Statute the mere allegation that a levy was made, is' a conclusion and not a fact, and bad.

This is not a new question in this court, but has been ex-’ pressly decided in the case of Tullis vs. Brawley, 3 Minn. 277. The court, in this case, at page 285, use these words, Nor do we, under our statute, consider it necessary that the Sheriff should, in his return, state the particular or several acts done by him in making his levy. It is sufficient if he certifies in general terms that he levied,” and from this all the necessary proceedings will be implied.” The allegation is equally as good in a pleading. The counsel for the Plaintiff cites the case of Symonds vs. Castner et al, 1 Minn. 427, but the reason why this case is not an authority upon this point is given by this court in the opinion of the Chief Justice in the case of Tullis vs. Brawley, above cited.

*411We do not see how the Defendant in this case can set up fraud in the judgments and levy by the Marshal under them, any more than he could plead fraud to the assignment, nor do we see what possible object he could have had in view in so doing; it is no concern of his how much fraud these people indulge in; the only question that he has any interest in is whether the party who makes a demand upon him for payment is properly authorized so to do. Now if we should permit the Defendant to make the point that he seeks so strenuously to do, thatthe judgments and the levy under them are all fraud-lent and void, the result would be that his defence in this respect would fail by his own showing, and the property in the note would remain in the Plaintiff, who could maintain the action upon it; but the Defendant does not occupy a position that will entitle him to make any such question. If the Marshal has process in his hands, valid upon its face, and levies upon notes and takes them into his possession, he can maintain an action on them under our Statute, and collect them, Comp. Stats. 552, Sec. 151, consequently a payment to him by the debtor would be a valid discharge of the debt, and a recovery by him upon the note would be an effectual bar to a second recovery thereon by any one else. See Caldwell vs. Sibley, 3 Minn. 411, 412. If the Marshal had acquired the right of action, the Plaintiff had lost it, because two persons cannot at the same time have the right to sue and recover upon such a cause of action. The Defendant has stated enough in his answer to show that the cause of action upon the note has passed out of the Plaintiff and that is a good defence.. Suppose .the Marshal had also sued the Defendant for the same demand, he could have, had he been so disposed, defended this action, and suffered judgment to pass against him in favor of the Marshal, or he could have made the two Plaintiffs inter-plead under Seotíon 35, page 659,ofthe Compiled Statutes, and decided among themselves who had the right to receive the money on the note.

The answer is good. Judgment reversed, and the case remanded for such proceedings as the court below may deem proper to allow.