There is no doubt but that the instrument declared on in the present action is a bond. And it is a familiar and well settled rule of law, that bonds and other contracts under seal are not, in general, negotiable instruments, the legal interest in which may be transferred from one owner to another by mere delivery, so that an action thereon can be maintained by the assignee in his own name. They may be assigned; but after assignment, as well as before, all actions to recover damages upon the failure of the obligor to perform any stipulated engagements must be brought in the name of the first assignor. 1 Parsons on Con. 196, 240. Skinner v. Somes, 14 Mass. 107.
It has, however, been held in some courts that bonds, with coupons, payable to bearer, pass by delivery from hand to hand, and that purchasers of them for good consideration paid may at then- maturity maintain actions upon them for the recovery of their contents. Morris Canal & Banking Co. v.
But the instrument on which the plaintiff declares is anomalous ; it does not come under the description contained in the statute. It is not payable to the bearer, or to any designated person, or to the order of any one. No payee is named in it. Yet in all other respects it is a complete and perfect instrument; and a blank space is left, wherein may be written, without interlineation, erasure or defacement, the name of an obligee.
It is agreed by the parties that this bond, together with many others similar to it, amounting in the whole to about the sum of eleven hundred thousand dollars, were sold, at or near the time they bore date, by the defendants at public auction to numerous purchasers. The defendants realized the money for which they were sold, and applied it, partly in payment of preexisting obligations, and partly in expenditures to carry on and complete the enterprise in which they were then engaged. All these bonds purport upon their face to be secured by a mortgage of the same date made by the defendants of all their railroad property to trustees for that express purpose; which mortgage was in fact duly executed by them. At a subsequent period it was provided by a statute of this commonwealth, under whose authority the defendants hold their charter, that their “ proceedings whereby they conveyed, agreeably to a vote of the stockholders passed on the 29th day of June 1849, their said railroad property in mortgage to John Davis, Robert G. Shaw and Jabez C. Howe, trustees for the bondholders in said mortgage mentioned, to secure the holders of said bonds the payment of the same,” were thereby ratified and confirmed. St. 1850, c. 233.
The proceedings of the defendant corporation, mentioned m the statute, included as well the contracting of the debts and the issuing of their bonds therefor, as the execution of the morí
Judgment for the plaintiff.
This case was decided, and the subsequent cases, except Webster v. Munger, post, 384, and Stone v White, post, 589, were argued and decided at Boston m January 1858, before all the judges but Thomas, J. ,
