12 N.Y.S. 744 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
The judgment can be upheld only in part. The contractors were insolvent, and could not build the house except upon the credit of their agreement with the defendant. Before they became entitled to anything under the agreement they assigned whatever moneys should become due to them upon it to the plaintiffs, as collateral security not only for the lumber plaintiffs might put into defendant’s house, but for all other indebtedness the insolvent contractors, either as a firm or individually, did or should owe them. The plaintiffs, having given notice to defendant of the assignment, claim that the defendant could not apply the money which he was to pay the contractors for building the house in payment of the bills which the contractors had incurred for the labor and materials put into the house, although the contractors consented; and, because he did so pay, he must pay so much of the amount over again to them as may be necessary to pay the old debts due them from the contractors. The referee sustained this claim. The assignment to the plaintiffs was of “all moneys now due or hereafter to become due upon the annexed contract with Edward Snyder.” By the annexed contract the contractors agreed to build a house, furnishing all labor and materials, for $4,393, which the defendant agreed to pay. That contract was based upon •the contemporaneous understanding that the contractors had neither credit nor means to carry it out, and the oral agreement that the defendant would •advance the money as needed to pay for the work and materials put into the building. The written contract was executory, and the parties to it had the right to execute it according to their contemporaneous oral understanding •and agreement. The plaintiffs, as assignees, stood in no better condition than their assignors, and they could not prevent the parties to it from carrying it out according to such understanding and oral agreement. They had no standing to urge that the oral understanding and agreement were merged in the written instrument. Nothing could become due to the contractors under the agreement except upon the execution of it, and the execution of it was in no way under plaintiffs’ control. The plaintiffs did not become parties to the building contract; they could not enforce its performance, or recover damages for its non-performance. The assignment to the plaintiffs of moneys “hereafter to become due” did not operate at once as an assignment of such moneys. It was merely an equitable assignment, operating upon the indebtedness as it arose from time to time. Faulkner v. Swart, 8 N. Y. Supp. 239. Equity will not enforce it to the denial of the right of the parties to the building contract to pay to whom due the price of the labor and materials put into the building. To permit such payment equity will limit the contractor’s interest to his profits. Rodbourn v. Wine Co.. 67 N. Y. 217.