Farrell v. Passaic Water Co.

88 A. 627, 82 N.J. Eq. 97, 12 Buchanan 97, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 34
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedSeptember 19, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 88 A. 627 (Farrell v. Passaic Water Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farrell v. Passaic Water Co., 88 A. 627, 82 N.J. Eq. 97, 12 Buchanan 97, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 34 (N.J. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Stevens,. V. C.

This is a. bill filed by the administratrix of Catherine Farrell against the Passaic Water Company and the executors of James Atkinson. It is alleged that Mr. Atkinson was engaged to be married to Miss Farrell, and that about the year 1905, and while so engaged, he handed her a coupon bond of the Passaic Water Company for $1,000, intending to make her a gift of it. The bond was, at the. time, of the alleged gift, and still is, registered, as to principal, in the name of Atkinson. The principal sum is payable in July, 1937. Miss Farrell drew the interest coupons during her life and died in 1909. Atkinson died in 1902. Since the death of Miss Farrell, the bond has been in the possession of either her next of kin or her administratrix. On its face it provides that it is paj’able to the bearer or registered holder thereof and that it

[99]*99“may at any time be registered in the name of the owner on the books of the company; * * * after which this bond shall be transferable only upon the books of the company, until it shall, at the request of the holder, be registered as payable to bearer, which shall restore transferability by delivery.”

The bill prays that the bond may be declared to be a part of the estate of Catherine Farrell, and that the company may be decreed to register it in the name of her administratrix.

The defence is, first, that no gift is proven, and second, that if an intention to give has been shown, such gift was imperfect without registry and a court of equity will not lend its aid to perfect it.

Nothing is better settled than that there is no equity to perfect an imperfect gift. Says Sir George Jessel, M. R., in Richards v. Delbridge, L. R. 18 Eq. 11: “The principle is a very simple one. A man may transfer his property without valuable consideration in one of two ways: he may either do such acts as amount in law to a conveyance or assignment of the property and thus completely divest himself of the legal ownership in which case the person who by those acts acquires the property takes it beneficially or on trust, as the case may be; or the legal owner of the property may by one or other of the modes recognized as amounting to a valid declaration of trust constitute hiinself a trustee and without an actual transfer of the legal title may so deal with the property as to deprive himself of its beneficial ownership and declare that he will hold it from that time forward in trust for the other person.”

There is nothing in this case to indicate that Atkinson declared that he held the bond in controversy as trustee for Miss Farrell. What he did was, not to set it aside among his own papers and to declare in any way that from that time forth, he held it for her benefit, but to give her the possession of it, and, as far as appears, concern himself no further about it. If, says the master of the rolls, in the case cited, the gift is intended to take effect by transfer, the court will not hold the intended transfer to operate as a declaration of trust, for then every imperfect instrument would be1 made effectual by being converted into a perfect trust.

[100]*100If, then, the complainant has a valid title, it must he because-Atkinson completely divested himself of all title.

I think considerable confusion has resulted from the use, in some of the later cases, of the term “equitable” in connection with the title of the assignee to a chose in action. If by “equitable” is meant such a title as only a court of equity can give effect to, the assumption is manifestly erroneous If a right is recognized, and protected by a court of law (of course, I am speaking of those jurisdictions in which the courts of law and equity are still constitutionally distinct), and if such a court has come to be the proper tribunal in which to enforce it, it is a misuse of terms to call the right equitable in contradistinction to legal.

The history of the law on this subject is somewhat curious. In the time of Coke, the property in the paper on which an obligation was written and in the wax with which it was sealed could be divorced from the property in the debt which the paper manifested. He says (Fol. 232b § 377) :

“it is implied that if a man hath an obligation, though he cannot grant the thing in action, yet he may give or grant the deed, viz., the parchment and wax, to another who may cancel and use the same at his pleasure.”

This distinction constituted the basis of decision by the Lords-Justices in Rummem v. Hare, 1 Ex. D. 169, as late as 1876.

Property in the debt evidenced by the paper stood on a different footing. As the advantages arising from commerce began to be felt, the custom of merchants whereby a foreign bill of exchange was assignable by the payee to a third person so as to vest in him the legal as well as the equitable title, was recognized and supported by the English law courts as early as the fourteenth century, and a like custom rendering an inland bill transferable was established in the seventeenth century, /Chit. Bills *10. Promissory notes were put upon the footing oflnland bills by the statute of 7 Anne. Other choses in action Ibng stood upon a different footing. Lord Coke (1211(0) says that it is one of the maxims of the common law that no right of action can be transferred,

[101]*101“because under color thereof pretended titles might be granted to great men. whereby right might be trodden down and the weak oppressed, which the common law forbiddeth.”

.But the necessities of trade and commerce were too strong for this maxim, and courts of equity at an early period began to recognize the interest of the assignee. During this period the title of the assignee was equitable, and equitable only. Then the law courts began, indirectly at first, to recognize his right. In Winch v. Keeley, 1 T. R. 619 (A. D. 1787), they did so for the first time explicitly. There a suit was brought in the name of the assignor for the use of the assignee. The defence was that the assignor had become bankrupt and that his title had passed to his assignee in bankruptcy. It was held that the title had not passed and that the suit would lie. Having recognized and protected the assignee’s right, it became, at least to jsome extent, a mere question of procedure whether the suit should be brought in the one name or the other. This was the view of Mr. Justice Buller in Master v. Miller, 4 T. R. 341 (A. D. 1791). He says: “It must be admitted that though the courts of law have gone the length of taking notice of dioses in action and acting upon them, yet in many cases they have adhered to the formal objection that the action shall be brought in the name of the assignor and not in the name of the assignee. I see no use or convenience in preserving that shadow when the substance is gone, and that it is merely a shadow is apparent from the later cases in which the courts have taken care that it shall never work injustice.” Still, in England, the action continued for many years to bo brought in the name of the assignor. But it became mere form, for, said Chief-Justice Hornblower, in Allen v. Pancoast, 20 N. J. Law (Spenc.) 68:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hill v. Warner, Berman & Spitz, PA
484 A.2d 344 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1984)
Scherer v. Hyland
380 A.2d 704 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1976)
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Woolf
42 A.2d 866 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1945)
Parker v. Beasley
54 P.2d 687 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1936)
Garford Motor Truck Co. v. Buckson
143 A. 410 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 A. 627, 82 N.J. Eq. 97, 12 Buchanan 97, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrell-v-passaic-water-co-njch-1913.