Gochenauer v. Cooper

8 Serg. & Rawle 187
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 20, 1822
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 Serg. & Rawle 187 (Gochenauer v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gochenauer v. Cooper, 8 Serg. & Rawle 187 (Pa. 1822).

Opinion

Tilghman C. J.;

This is a.hard demand on the part of the plaintiffs. The defendants have acted innocently and with good faith, and must be considerable losers, if they fail in their defence. This case seems to have been considered by the District Court, as turning on a question of defalcation; but I do not consider it as such. It is an equitable defence, so intimately connected with the plaintiff’s cause of action, as not to be separable from it. The plaintiffs stand in the place of Christian Hiestand, and have no o her rights than he had. So that, if it can be shown, that he could not have supported an action of this kind, neither can they. Christian Hiestand had a right to call for the interest of 1204 pounds, to be paid to him by the defendants, annually, during his life. But there was nothing to hinder the parties from coming to an agreement, by which Christian, instead of receiving the interest, annually, from the hands of the defendants. should receive something else of equal value. And this might be done, by a single operation, by which, Christian should be put in possession of property, which would insure him the payment of his annuity, during his life.. Now this is just what has been done. The plaintiffs put into the hands of Christian Hiestand, a principal, the interest of which is equal to the annuity, to which he was entitled, by his father’s will. It was the same, as if they had advanced to him, at once, all which he could claim from them, during his life. But a bond, with security, was taken from him, in order to preserve the principal for those, to whom it will [190]*190belong, after his death. Suppose Christian had not been discharged under the Insolvent Act; could he have called upon his trustees to pay him his annuity, while he had the principal in his own hands ? or could he have compelled them to bring suit, on the bond, against his own security, in order to recover the interest, and pay it to him? Most certainly he could not. What right then have his assignees to make demands of this kind ? They want the trustees, in the first place, to account to them for the yearly interest, and then to come in, as bond creditors, for a dividend, from the estate of Christian Hiestand, in their hands. But this is manifestly against equity; because the fund, out of which the interest is to arise, was delivered to him, before he assigned to the plaintiffs., What .right have the plaintiffs to say, that Christian might not make an arrangement of this kind, before he became insolvent ? The defendants had large dis’ retionary powers, as trustees, by the will of Jacob Hiestand; and it was necessary that they should have them. They might have paid him any part of the principal, they thought proper. But it seems, they judged it most prudent, to keep the principal entire. Whether they have acted discreetly, in trusting Christian with the principal; whether they have taken good security; and if not, whether they will be responsible to his representatives, after his death,— are questions not now before us. What we have to decide, is, whether the assignees of Christian, can undo an arrangement made by him, touching an affair in which he only was concerned, that is to say, the payment of interest, during his life. It is evident, it was never intended, that the defendants should be liable for Christian's annuity, while he retained the principal. It would be but receiving with one , hand, and paying with the other. If the plaintiffs, who stand in the place of Christian, will refund the principal, they will then have a right to call for the interest; but not until then. Neither have they a right to insist on the defendants’ bringing suit against Christian’s surety. That would he against equity; because, when the surety became bound, he knew that Christian was entitled to the interest, and therefore he was put to no hazard on that account. It was not in the power of Christian, by any assignment he could make, to introduce a third person, who should destroy the equitable re [191]*191lation which subsisted between him and his security. I consider the transaction between the defendants and Christian Hiestand, in the form of a loan, as amounting, in sub- . r - . . , , . r. ° . stance, to a satisfaction of Christian’s claim of interest, under his father’s will, as long as he retains the fund, out of which the interest is to arise ; and therefore his assignees cannot support an action for that interest. My opinion is, that the judgment should be re-versed, and a venire facias de novo awarded.

Gibson J.

Except as to the arrears due at the assignment, I think the matter of the defence could not be allowed as set off. An assignee can be affected by transactions between the original parties, only where the assignment was of a duty presently owing, although it may be payable in future ; and here it was nbt of a duty at all, but of an estate, in the produce of money at interest. This interest was not even the accessory of a debt owing to the assignor, and passing incidentally by an assignment of the principal: it was itself the principal. It was not a chose in action, but an incorporeal hereditament; and might, with some propriety, be called an equitable annuity. Now the arrears of an annuity, cannot have the character of a debt or duty, before they are due; for non constat, that they will ever become due, as the annuity may be terminated, in an instant, by the death of the annuitant; arid, during its existence, they are not, at law, properly a debt, or recoverable as such, even after they are actually due ; for the remedy is by writ of annuity, in which the judgment is to recover the annuity itself; and on this judgment, which is executory, the plaintiff has a scire facias to recover all arrears, whether due at the time of the impetration of the writ of annuity, or growing due afterwards. This plainly shews, that the nature of an incorporeal estate, like the present, is altogether different from that of a debt presently owing, but payable in future ; on a fancied resemblance to which, the argument in favour of the set-off turns. Between the debt offered to be set off, and th'e arrears which grew due after the assignment, there could be no mutuality; for those arrears did not then exist, nor was there any certainty that they ever would exist. To say, that the person, by whose hand the annuity is payable, may set off a debt of [192]*192the assignor, against an assignee claiming arrears that have grown due sjnce the assignment, is to say, that such person have a ben on the estate assigned, for all the debts the annuitant owed him. Could the grantor of a rent charge, set a debt due by the grantee, against arrears claimed by an assignee, which became due after the assignment ? To allow the set-off; would give the trustees a lien, and an unjust preference over the other creditors.

But it has been argued by counsel, that however this may be, the transaction furnishes an equitable defence. To be sure, as the action is in the place of a bill in equity for performance of a trust, whatever defence the trustees may have, must, in its nature, be equitable. It is not the least among the evils of our mixed system, that it breeds a confusion-of ideas, and consequent uncertainty, as to the rules of equity, and the nature and extent of the relief to be claimed, which would never occur, if the suit were viewed, as divested of the dress of an action at common law.

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Related

Gochenauer v. Froelich
8 Watts 19 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1839)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Serg. & Rawle 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gochenauer-v-cooper-pa-1822.