141 Mass. 502 | Mass. | 1886
The injury of which the plaintiff complains consists in the transfer by way of mortgage of the property of Noyes to Dorman. If Dorman had merely indorsed the note of Noyes to the defendant, and afterwards paid it, taking no property from Noyes as security, the other creditors of Noyes would have sustained no injury, and the plaintiff would have had no right of action against either Dorman or the defendant. It is the withdrawal of property of Noyes from the assets of his estate which alone gives the right of action against either. The plaintiff contends that for this act an action would lie against Dorman, if he had reasonable cause to believe the debtor insolvent; and, even if Dorman had no such reasonable cause, that an action would lie against the defendant, if, at the time of this arrangement for his benefit, he had such reasonable cause of belief. Let this be assumed to be so. Upon this assumption, if the assignee, when entering upon his duties, had found that Borman held and claimed title under a mortgage given under the circumstances stated in the agreed facts, three courses would have been open to him : 1. To take possession of the property if he could, and sell it, in disregard of the mortgage. 2. To bring an action against Dorman. 3. To bring an action against the defendant as the person preferred or to be benefited by the transaction. In either case, his ground of claim and cause of action would be the withdrawal of the property from the estate of Noyes.
The first course was the one adopted. The.property itself was taken and sold with other property of the debtor, not 'by the assignee in person, but by the messenger, and the proceeds of the sale were paid over to the assignee. By receiving
The agreed facts do not show whether Dorman had or had not reasonable cause to believe Noyes insolvent. This was never ascertained. It was probably in controversy. Dorman must have contended that he did not have such reasonable cause of belief. The assignee must have contended the contrary. Neither party yielded to the other in full, but a compromise was entered into implying that each conceded something. The legal effect of this compromise must be exactly the same as if, instead of the messenger’s taking and selling the property in disregard of the mortgage, the assignee had asserted a claim or brought an action against Dorman, and a compromise of such claim or action had been made. But the effect of a compromise in the latter case would be to discharge the claim of the assignee. Money paid, which is to be in full for an unliquidated or a disputed claim, is taken in discharge of it, and constitutes a full defence against any further assertion of the claim. What has been received is in law deemed to be a satisfaction of the claim. Donohue v. Woodbury, 6 Cush. 148. Tuttle v. Tuttle, 12 Met. 551. Barlow v. Ocean Ins. Co. 4 Met. 270. Being satisfied, an action upon the same claim cannot be maintained, either against the original defendant, or against anybody else. The principle is analogous to that which prevails in the case of several joint trespassers or tortfeasors. A release to one, or satisfaction from one, discharges all. Stone v. Dickinson, 5 Allen, 29. Goss v. Ellison, 136 Mass. 503. Lovejoy v. Murray, 3 Wall. 1. A case more closely similar, perhaps, is Brown v. Cambridge, 3
Judgment affirmed.