Fairbanks v. . Sargent

22 N.E. 1039, 117 N.Y. 320, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 411, 72 Sickels 320, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1437
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 26, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 22 N.E. 1039 (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, 22 N.E. 1039, 117 N.Y. 320, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 411, 72 Sickels 320, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1437 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Finch, J.

Our first inquiry respects the character and extent of the right which Fairbanks acquired under his contract. We have already held that its terms operated as an equitable assignment to him of one-third or one-sixth of whatever money n* property should be collected out of or received from Zabriskie in discharge of the latter’s debt. (104 N. Y. 108.) Ordinarily we should content ourselves with a simple reference to that decision. But its correctness has been so challenged on this appeal and assailed with so much of force and ability as to justify on our part a reconsideration of the question in the light of the later argument. Let us, therefore, give our attention to the terms of the contract.

Underwood’s claim against Zabriskie grew out of stock transactions. Fairbanks was a lawyer,—and not only that, but one exceptionally versed in the peculiar rules and customs of the stock exchange, and the law governing that class of transactions. He had already rendered services to Underwood for which the latter was in his debt, with probably slight ability to pay unless out of uncertain claims against others. Standing in this relation the parties contracted. Fairbanks agreed to prosecute, and, as far as he was able, collect the specified claims of which that against Zabriskie was one. To that extent his agreement was for the rendition of future services. He also agreed to extinguish, and by his contract did extinguish, the debt due him for past services, taking in exchange the covenants of the new agreement. There was, therefore, ample consideration for the promises of Underwood which followed. These were, that for the services rendered and to be rendered by Fairbanks the latter should receive a fixed share of the money, property, or securities which should be obtained from the debtors named. The claims themselves against such debtors were not attempted to be assigned. The *329 title to them remained in Underwood as the legal owner. Suits against the debtors were to be and were brought in the name of Underwood, and he alone, by the stipulations of the agreement, was authorized to dictate on what terms settlements should be made, and when and against whom actions should be brought. He, thus, never transferred to Fairbanks the legal title to the claim ‘ against Zabriskie, and what he did do was in its ultimate effect one of two things, as it seems to me, necessarily and inevitably. The contract was either a simple agreement for compensation to be enforced against Underwood, or it was an equitable assignment of a definite share of the proceeds of the claim against Zabriskie. Obviously it is something more "than and quite different from a mere agreement for compensation measured by results. That would have given to Fairbanks only a personal claim against Underwood, and scarcely served to induce on his part further services and expenses upon a credit already precarious ; and not compensation in general, but a specific share in a specific fund or specific property was the exact and material point of the contract upon which the rights of both parties hinged. Underwood, having liberty to take in settlement from his debtors property or securities, was not to be called upon for a share of their value in cash, or liable generally for a due reward, but was free to throw Fairbanks upon his contract claim for a share of the precise thing received as his sole right and only remedy. On the other hand, the latter was not to depend upon the solvency or promise of Underwood for his pay, but was made secure by a stipulated right to have, as owner, a defined share of the fund or proceeds expected to result from his labor and skill. There could be no legal assignment of a fund not in existence or proceeds not realized, but equity treats them as if existing or realized, and the • contract for their receipt by Fairbanks as an equitable assignment of the stipulated share to him, and, as a consequence, makes him the equitable assignee of so much of the debt or demand as is *330 represented by his share of the proceeds. I think we have never failed to hold this doctrine on a similiar state of facts. We discussed the subject somewhat in Williams v. Ingersoll (89 N. Y. 508), and there said: “ It is a rule in equity that anything which shows an intention to assign on the one side, and from which an assent to receive may be inferred on the-other, will operate as an assignment if sustained by a sufficient consideration.” In Thurber v. Chambers (66 N. Y. 49) we inferred an equitable assignment upon facts vastly weaker than those in the present case, and the cases in the federal court of Wylie v. Coxe (15 How. U. S. 415) and Trist v. Child (21 Wall. 441) are to the same purport. The test is an inquiry whether the debtor would be justified in paying the debt orílle portion contracted about, to the person claiming to beassignee. It is not at all doubtful that Zabriskie, after his. liability had been settled at the amount of the bonds which he-delivered, and leaving out of view the transaction with. Sargent, would have been perfectly protected in paying over one-third of them to Fairbanks. Up to this point the General Term do not differ with us. On the first hearing they explicitly took this ground, and on the- last they intimate no change of opinion. They concede the attitude of the plaintiff as an equitable assignee of one-third of the Zabriskie debt. It was-reserved for the learned counsel of the respondent to attack that doctrine on the argument here. The pith of his contention is that Fairbanks had none of the powers and rights which make an assignee, and so was none at all; and this because the agreement reserved to Underwood the right to-determine when suits should be brought and what compromise should be made. But these reserved rights may have lessened the value of the thing assigned without neutralizing or destroying the assignment itself. They related to the process of collection, and not to the right assigned, except as possibly lessened by that process. If no collection had been needed, if Zabriskie had come with the money in his hand to pay the-whole debt, and had been apprised of the coptract with Fairbanks, he could have paid over, and it would *331 have been his legal duty to have paid over to the latter, his share of the debt as the equitable owner and assignee of that share. That under the arrangement made he was at liberty to pay less, and that Fairbanks could not object to his paying less, does not prevent Fairbanks from being the equitable assignee of his share of the debt as settled. The learned counsel for the respondent criticises the language of the agreement, in comparision with that used in the Williams case. In that, he says, the assignee was given a lien upon the fund in express terms. It seems to me that in the present case the language is stronger instead of weaker. Fairbanks was armed with more than a mere lien by its words. He was “ to ham * * * one-third of whatever amount of money, securities or property shall be collected or in any way realized or received.” That is, he was to have, to possess, to own as. his the stipulated proportion of the precise thing received, that proportion to be ascertained and measured by its amount or value.

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.E. 1039, 117 N.Y. 320, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 411, 72 Sickels 320, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairbanks-v-sargent-ny-1889.