Fairbanks v. . Sargent

9 N.E. 870, 104 N.Y. 108, 5 N.Y. St. Rep. 531, 59 Sickels 108, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 572
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 18, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 9 N.E. 870 (Fairbanks v. . Sargent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fairbanks v. . Sargent, 9 N.E. 870, 104 N.Y. 108, 5 N.Y. St. Rep. 531, 59 Sickels 108, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 572 (N.Y. 1887).

Opinion

Ruger, Ch. J.

The principal question presented by this appeal, when reduced to its simplest form, is whether a part owner of a chose in action, having authority to collect it, is entitled to retain the whole proceeds of such collection as a tona fide purchaser, if received by him in negotiable securities from the debtor.

Were it not that the courts below have answered affirmatively, we would have hardly supposed a contrary conclusion susceptible of reasonable doubt.

Other questions, incidentally involved, also appear from the facts, which, as found by the court, are substantially as follows: In January, 1869, Underwood owned a claim, resting in open account, against Zabriskie, arising out of stock transactions between them, upon which he claimed a balance due him exceeding $100,000. Zabriskie disputed his liability thereon and Underwood, not being able to obtain payment, entered into a contract in writing with the plaintiff, an attorney residing in the city of New York, by which it was agreed between them, that the said Fairbanks, for his services in endeavoring to collect certain claims owned by Underwood, among which was that against Zabriskie, “ is to have one-sixth of whatever amount of money, securities, or property shall be received on account of such claims as shall be settled without suit, and one-third of whatever amount of money, securities or property shall be collected, or in any way be realized or received (whether on settlement or without settlement), on account of such of said claims as shall be put in suit, either in this or any other State or country,” said Underwood “ is to decide upon the terms and mode of settlement as to each and every of said claims, whether such settlement be before or after suit brought;” also to determine whether or not suits should be brought, and if brought out *114 side of the State, to determine who should be the attorney therein.

In January thereafter Fairbanks, by Underwood’s direction, caused suit to be brought to recover the claim against Zabriskie in a court of competent jurisdiction in the State of Hew Jersey, that being the State where Zabriskie resided, and the action was steadily prosecuted by Fairbanks until it was settled as hereafter stated.

In 1871 Underwood being indebted to Henry W. Sargent, the defendant’s testator, by an assignment in writing, absolute in form, transferred his claim against Zabriskie to Sargent as collateral security. On or about June 18, 1872, Underwood, at the urgent request of Sargent, and without the knowledge of the plaintiff, agreed to a settlement of the claim against Zabriskie by authorizing Sargent to accept from him forty bonds, being part of a series of 200, for $500 each, having nine coupons for the payment of half yearly installments of interest payable to bearer, attached to each, and purporting to. be made by one Sarah E. Haight, as executrix of the estate of Eichard K. Haight, her deceased husband. By these bonds Sarah E. Haight agreed, as executrix, at a specified time to pay the same and also to pay semi-annual interest thereon according to the terms of said coupons, and also represented thereby that she had secured such payments by a trust mortgage executed by her as executrix, upon certain real estate situated in the city of Hew York and represented to be property, belonging to the estate of Eichard K. Haight.

In pursuance of this agreement Underwood wrote and delivered to one Gray, the agent of Zabriskie, a written order addressed to the attorneys in Hew Jersey who had charge of the action against Zabriskie, stating that the action had been settled, and directing them to discontinue it upon payment by Zabriskie of their costs and charges and those of the referee. Underwood also, at or about the same time, executed and delivered a release of all claims against Zabriskie, to Gray to be delivered to Zabriskie, upon payment of the sum agreed upon for such settlement..

*115 About June eighteenth Sargent, through his agent Monell, also delivered to Gray a duly executed release from Sargent to Underwood, of all claims and demands which Sargent had against Underwood, and also executed reassignments of the securities received by him from Underwood as collateral, with instructions to Gray to deliver them to Underwood after he should have received and forwarded to Sargent, the bonds received in settlement.

It also appears from the evidence that Zabriskie had notice of the assignment of the claim to Sargent, previous to the settlement, and authorized the delivery of the bonds to Sargent upon receiving a discharge from his liabilities to Underwood.

It must, under the findings of the trial court, also be assumed that neither Sargent nor Monell, at the time of such settlement, had any knowledge of the interest in the proceeds thereof, which was claimed by the plaintiff.

Under these circumstances, Fairbanks brings this action against Sargent to recover one-third of the bonds so received, or the value thereof, upon the ground that the agreement between him and Underwood constituted an equitable assignment of one-third of the property received on such settlement.

The first question in the case is as to the nature and extent of the right taken by Sargent in the Zabriskie claim by virtue of the assignment thereof to him by Underwood, and the rights growing out of the subsequent transactions between the parties.

Inasmuch as the Zabriskie claim was evidenced by no written acknowledgment from the debtor and was disputed by him, and was, from its nature, incapable of physical possession or manual delivery, no assignee from Underwood would acquire any superior right over any other assignee, by virtue of any possession or apparent ownership of the claim by his assignor. (Muller v. Pondir, 55 N. Y. 332.)

One assignee of such a claim from the owner must necessarily acquire the same interest in it that any other assignee does, and that is, in the absence of other controlling equities, an interest subject to the rule that he who is prior in point of *116 time is prior in right. Such a claim is at common, law nonassignable, and its assignee, takes by virtue of an assignment thereof, an equitable interest only, which must be governed by equitable rules for its protection and enforcement. (Moore v. Met. Bk., 55 N. Y. 41; Ford v. White, 16 Beavan, 120; Phillip v. Phillip, 4 De. G. F. & J. 208.)

It is undoubtedly the general rule that the assignee of a chose in action takes it subject to all the equities existing against it in the hands of his qssignor, -and can acquire no greater right or interest therein than belonged to his transferror.

It was said by Judge Denio, in Bush v. Lathrop (22 N. Y. 535), that “ the purchaser of a chose in action takes the interest purchased subject to all the defenses, legal and equitable, of the debtor who issued the security. * * '* In the transmission of property of any kind from one person to another, the former owner can, in reason, only transfer what he himself has to part with, and the other can only take what is thus transferred to him.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.E. 870, 104 N.Y. 108, 5 N.Y. St. Rep. 531, 59 Sickels 108, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairbanks-v-sargent-ny-1887.