Colvin v. Rich

3 Port. 175
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 3 Port. 175 (Colvin v. Rich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colvin v. Rich, 3 Port. 175 (Ala. 1836).

Opinion

Hopkins, J.

Upon the trial of an issue, between these parties, in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, in an action, brought by Rich, against Col-vin, upon a note, made by the latter, to B. B. Ginn, or bearer, of which the defendant in error was the bearer, it was proved, that Rich was in the pos session of the note, before the service of a garnishment upon the maker, as a debtor of Ginn, the payee. Notice of this fact was given by Rich to Colvin, after the service of the garnishment-, but before his answer, as garnishee, was made; and, in the answer the fact was stated.

Upon the answer, a judgment was rendered against Colvin, for as much of the sum due on the note, as was equal to the demand against Ginn, in favor of his creditor, who had sued out the garnishment.

Upon this testimony the Circuit Court refused to instruct the jury, that the judgment rendered against the maker of the note was to the amount of it, a bar to this action; but, did instruct, that if he knew upon the trial of the case, of the garnishment, that the note was the property of Rich, he ought to have “ resisted” the judgment.

The question for this Court to decide is, did the [177]*177judgment against the garnishee rendered upon his answer, which staled that the note belonged to Rich, diminish his liability to the bearer upon the note and operate as an acquitance from it to the amount of the judgment? That the payee’s transfer of the note by delivery left no interest in him, and entitled the bearer to the entire and exclusive property in the note, are propositions clear and demonstrable. After the transfer, the bearer had a right to an action in his own name against the maker. In such an action the maker can make any defence, to which he acquired a right, after the transfer; and must be allowed, also, the benefit of all payments, discounts, and sets-off, to which he was entitled against the payee, before he had notice of the transfer. If a judgment should be obtained against him, by the procedure of garnishment, in favor of a creditor of the payee, before he received notice of the transfer, the judgment would give him a right to a defence against the bearer, and to the same extent to which he would be entitled to it against the payee, if the note had never been transferred.

The effect of the judgment would be a payment pro tanto, of the note — and, being made before notice of the transfer, the statute law of the State would entitle the maker to the benefit of it, against the bearer.

But, should the maker of a note or bond, with the knowledge, before he made his answer upon a garnishment, that it had been transferred, acknowledge, in his answer, that he owed the debt to the payee or obligee, he would be as clearly and justly [178]*178liable to pay the whole amount, to the assignee, as he would, after a voluntary payment, with such knowledge, to the payee or obligee himself.

The object of an attachment and a garnishment against a debtor of the defendant in attachment, is to obtain a tranfer, by a judgment, of the right of the defendant to what his debtor owes him; and such would be the effect of a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in such a case. But, if the right of the defendant had been transferred before the attachment issued, there would be nothing for the plaintiff in the attachment to acquire — certainly nothing which he ought to acquire, and, if the garnishee had notice of the transfer, before be makes his answer, the demand, by the attachment and garnishment of the debt, no more impairs his obligation to pay it to the assignee, than an application made by the payee, for payment, to the debtor, with such notice, would.

We do not think the judgment against the garnishee has any effect upon the right of the bearer of the note in this case. If the note had been transferred, after the judgment against, the garnishee, the bearer would be bound by the judgment, because the right to the note was in the payee, who was a party to the cause, in which the judgment was rendered, that transferred to a creditor, a part of his interest.

In one of the cases, cited by the' counsel for the plaintiff in error, it was decided, upon a bill filed by an executor, to compel the legatees to refund epough of the property, which he had distributed among them, to enable him to satisfy a decree, which had [179]*179been made against him, as executor; that, in the absence of all proof of fraud, on the part of the executor, the-decree was evidence of the justness of the demand.

An executor succeeds to all the rights of his testator, in personal property, winch may be sold while in his hands, to satisfy any judgment rendered against him, in his character of executor; and such a judgment is conclusive jiroof, upon his bill against the legatees, that the amount of it was a debt due from the testator, unless fraud or collusion be shown, on the part of the executor, in permitting it to be rendered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Port. 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colvin-v-rich-ala-1836.