12 Md. 170 | Md. | 1858
delivered the opinion of this court.
This suit was instituted on the 30th day of August 1856, to recover the amount of a single bill dated the 10th day of May 1853, whereby the appellant promised to pay, on or before the 10th day of May 1855, to Dr. Lewis Lamborn, two hundred dollars, with interest from date. On the back of said single bill was the following assignment:
“For value received, I assign and transfer the within single bill to Joshua Smith. L. Lamborn.”
The declaration is, in debt, in the usual form, Lamborn being named therein as plaintiff. The use was entered at the institution of the suit, The defendant pleaded payment, and issue was joined.
The bill of exceptions states “that it was admitted (at the trial) that the signature of L. Lamborn, on the back of said single bill, under the assignment thereon written, which assignment over the name of said Lamborn, on the back of said single bill, was filled up by the plaintiff, Smith, at the trial of fhe cause, is the signature of said Lewis Lamborn, the payee
“Received, May the 8th, 1854, of W. E. Shriner, payment in full of notes given to me by W. E. Shriner, dated the 10th day of May 1853, as follows: One of two hundred, due May 10th, 1855; one of two hundred, due May 10th, 1856; one hundred and fifty, due May 10th, 1858; and one of fifty dollars, due conditionally May 10th, 1858. These notes now in the hands of Joshua Smith, and which I promise to take up and return to W. E. Shriner, on or before the first of July next. L. Lamborn.
“Which evidence was offered to the jury by the defendant’s counsel, to sustain the plea of payment; to the offering of which evidence, for such purpose, the plaintiff, Smith, by his counsel, objected, which objection the court sustained, and the defendant excepted. ”
The right of the plaintiff to fill up the blank with a full assignment, is established by the decision of the Court of Appeals, in Chesley vs. Taylor, 3 Gill, 251.
The single question presented for the consideration of this court is, whether the evidence offered was admissible, under the pleadings in the cause, for the purpose of proving payment?
In the determination of this question, it must not be forgotten that we are dealing with a case at law. So far as the pleadings disclose, \h&plaintiff is Lewis Lamborn. The plea in bar alleges in terms “payment to the said plaintiff,” and on this plea issue is joined.- The proof offered tended to show a payment to the plaintiff, and ought to have been admitted by
There is no doubt of the soundness of many of the positions assumed by the appellee’s counsel, in the argument of this cause. That a court of law will recognize the rights of equitable assignees of chases in action, and protect the rights of cestuis que trust, has been repeatedly asserted; but as the Court of Appeals say, in 3 G. & J., 393, “It is done in the exercise of a quasi equitable jurisdiction,, where an appeal is made to the justice and discretion of the court, by way of motion, the matter whereof cannot be insisted on as a legal right, or presented in the form of a plea.”
The same doctrine is'reasserted in 5 G. & J., 145, and 7 Md. Rep., 250. These cases have been cited and relied upon by the appellee’s counsel; but the error into W’hich he has fallen, is in claiming the application of the principle to a case where no proceedings have been taken on the record to invoke the equitable interposition of the court on behalf of the cestui que use, and where the state of the pleadings is such as to confine the attention of the court and limit its powers, as a court of law, to the adjudication of the rights of the legal parties on the record. To sanction the authority claimed in this case, for the court to overlook the issue presented on the record, and to reject evidence strictly pertinent to that issue — because to admit the evidence may impair the equitable rights of the cestui que use — would be to break through the established limits which separate the jurisdiction of courts of law from that of courts of equity. See Bauerman vs. Radenius, 7 Term Rep., 663. Craib & Wife, vs. D’ Aeth, Ibid., 670, (note.)
The rights of the equitable plaintiff, or person beneficially
It is clear that if the assignment was bona fide, and passed to Smith the right to the single bill sued on, no payment by the obligor to the obligee, after 'notice of such assignment, would operate to discharge the debt. But in such case the proper course for the plaintiff, instead of taking issue on the plea, would be either to move the court to set aside the plea, or to reply specially the assignment and notice. Either of those modes of proceeding will put in issue the right of the party claiming to be beneficially entitled, and afford to the defendant an opportunity of trying the question of the bona fide character of the assignment. In the case of Legh vs. Legh, 1 Bos. & Pull., 446, which was a case similar to this, the court, on motion, set aside the plea. Or, as we have said, the plaintiff may reply specially, setting out the assignment and notice. This is the more usual course, and many precedents may be found for such a proceeding. Among them we refer to Andrews vs. Beecker, 1 Johns. Cases, 411, and the authorities there cited in note (a.) See, also, Briggs vs. Dorr, 19 Johns., 95. Littlefield vs. Story, 3 Johns., 425. Such a replication puts in issue the facts upon which the rights of the assignee depend, and enables the court to recognize and protect them.
Judgment reversed and procedendo ordered.