77 A. 401 | N.H. | 1910
The liability of the Orient Insurance Company, trustee, to the defendant Woodward existed only through the order given by the Burbank Company and accepted by the Insurance Company. The consideration of the order was the indebtedness of the Burbank Company upon the $6,000 note upon which the proceeds of the order were to be applied. The order therefore was a provision made by the signers of the note for its payment. Their stock is stated to be worthless and it could be found that they are insolvent. Prior to the giving of the order, Woodward had pledged the $6,000 note to the claimant Bartlett. He, as the creditor of an insolvent debtor, may in equity avail himself of any subsisting provision made by his debtor for the payment of the debt. Hunt v. Association,
It is immaterial that the plaintiff when he brought his suit had no knowledge of the transfer of the note to the claimant. It was transferred in good faith for a valuable consideration before the service of the writ. This is all that is necessary to sustain the owner's title. P.S., c. 245, ss. 22, 23. "The subject for inquiry in all cases is, to whom did the property actually belong, regardless of the question whether at the time of service the trustee had notice of the adverse claim." Corning v. Records,
Exception overruled.
All concurred.