175 Ga. 719 | Ga. | 1932
This was a suit in equity to enjoin the enforcement of a judgment existing against the plaintiff and claimed by another as assignee, and to subject the same to a set-off in virtue of three other judgments existing against the plaintiff in the judgment first referred to and held by the plaintiff as assignee. The case is here upon exceptions to a judgment in favor of the plaintiff. E. W. Romberger obtained a judgment against G-. Lloyd Preacher, in the municipal court of Atlanta, on March 31, 1930, for $1299. This judgment was transferred to I. M. Sheffield on June 30, 1930, and on the same date Preacher was given notice of this assignment and furnished with a copy thereof. The assignment was bona fide and was based upon a consideration of $400. Preacher, however, was prosecuting an appeal at the time of this' assignment, and carried the case by certiorari to the superior court, where, on February 10, 1931, a final judgment was rendered in favor of E. W. Romberger and against G-. Lloyd Preacher as principal, and National Surety Company, “the security on the bond in certiorari,” for the same amount of principal, and for additional sums as interest and costs. This is the judgment against which the right to offset was claimed by the plaintiff. On May 6, 1931, G-. Lloyd Preacher purchased three judgments which were existing in favor of different parties and against E. W. Romberger, representing an aggregate sum of about $600, each of which antedated the final judgment of Romberger against Preacher as described above. After purchasing these three judgments, Preacher paid to J. I. Lowry as sheriff the differ'enee between the amount of these judgments and that of Romberger against himself, and then brought this suit for the purpose of offsetting the balance and to enjoin the enforcement of the Romberger judgment. The parties defendant to this suit were J. I. Lowry, sheriff, E. W. Romberger, and I. M. Sheffield, assignee.
The court granted a restraining order and a rule nisi.. At the hearing, the above facts being established without dispute by the evidence, the judge rendered a judgment'allowing the set-off; whereupon Sheffield excepted.
The judgments purchased by the plaintiff and now sought to be used as a set-off were in existence when the judgment was rendered against the plaintiff in favor of Eomberger. They were also in existence at the time the latter judgment was assigned to Sheffield. They were not judgments in favor of this plaintiff, however, and neither did the plaintiff acquire them until after the assignment to Sheffield. While the claim of Sheffield as assignee of the Eomberger judgment was subject to such equities and defenses as may have existed in favor of Preacher against Eomberger at the time of the assignment, it was not subject to rights which did not then exist in Preacher’s favor, and of which he did not become possessed until some later time, as bjr the purchase of the judgments which he is now attempting to assert by way of set-off. Having no right of set-off at the time Sheffield purchased the judgment against him, he could not subsequently acquire this right so as to defeat the claim of Sheffield. Any other rule would tend to destroy the salability of judgments, which by the law are expressly made assignable upon certain conditions. Civil Code (1910), §§ 4274, 4342, 5670, 5969; Bemis v. Simpson, 2 Ga. Dec. 224; Colquitt v. Bonner, 2 Ga.
The mere naked right of Preacher to purchase judgments against Eomberger in case of his ability to procure the same was not an
One reason urged against the right of set-off was that the judgment of Eomberger against Preacher was subject to a lien for the fees of the attorneys for the plaintiff therein. This contention must fail, under the decisions in Langston v. Roby, 68 Ga. 406, and Odom v. Attaway, 173 Ga. 883 (162 S. E. 279). But there are other and broader principles upon which it must be held that the set-off was not allowable. As to the application of these principles, the present case is distinguished by its facts from Odom v. Attaway, supra. In that case, while the judgment of Mrs. Attaway against Odom was recovered after the assignment of the judgment of Odom against Mrs. Attaway, the cause of action upon which the judgment of Mrs. Attaway was predicated existed at the time of the assignment of the other judgment, so that the assignee of the Odom
The plaintiff was not entitled to injunction nor to set-off, and the court erred in rendering judgment in his favor upon these issues. Judgment reversed.