5 A.D. 39 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
The following is the opinion of Vann, J. :
On the 16th day of August, 1893, the defendant Theresa M. Christian assigned to the defendants Thomas Lane and Frank Moore her book accounts and bills receivable “ as collateral security to secure them for any indebtedness due or owing them from me, with full authority to sue and collect the same in my name or otherwise, and when such indebtedness shall be fully paid, then this assignment shall be null and void, and the balance of said accounts shall revert to myself, my heirs and assigns.”
On the. 17th of August, 1893, said Christian assigned to the plaintiffs “ all book accounts and bills receivable owing to me of every name and nature, subject to a prior assignment thereof to Thomas Lane and Frank Moore, made as collateral security for my indebtedness to them; and when the claim of said Lane & Moore is satisfied I authorize the said O. V. Tracy & Co. to sue and collect the said accounts in my name or otherwise, and apply the proceeds thereof upon my indebtedness to said O. V. Tracy & Co., and when the same shall be paid this assignment shall be void.”
The object of this action is to procure a judgment declaring the rights of the plaintiffs to be superior to those of the Hammond Company.
The first question arising for decision is whether the assignment to the plaintiffs was executed and delivered to them prior to the levy of said attachment. This presents a question of fact which I have decided in favor of the plaintiffs, as the weight of evidence in my opinion tends strongly in that direction.
The appellants, however, contend that as the first assignment was valid as between the parties, it was equally binding upon their assigns, and that Mrs. Christian could not by a voluntary act of hers transfer to the plaintiffs a right which she did not possess herself. (Brownell v. Curtis, 10 Paige, 210, 219; Storm v. Davenport, 1 Sandf. Ch. 135, 137; Bynum v. Miller, 86 N. C. 559; 41 Am. Rep. 467.)
If the assignment to Lane & Moore had been absolute, so that the plaintiffs would be compelled to procure it to be set aside as fraudulent in order to establish a prior right to the accounts, the position of the appellants would not be without force under the authorities cited. But the assignment was only as collateral security, not for a debt specified or described, but “for any indebtedness due or owing from ” the assignor to the assignees. The instrument of transfer does not assert, except by implication, that any debt existed, as, in fact, none did exist, for by mistaken conception of right, rather than with actual fraudulent intent, the debt intended to be secured was not that of the assignor, but of her husband. Obviously Mrs. Christian had something to assign, to wit, what remained after the debts owing by her to Lane & Moore were paid. That interest
There must be judgment accordingly, but as Hammond & Co. shook the bush, while the plaintiffs get the bird, with costs payable out of the fund only.