Lillibridge v. Tregent

30 Mich. 105, 1874 Mich. LEXIS 146
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 24, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 30 Mich. 105 (Lillibridge v. Tregent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lillibridge v. Tregent, 30 Mich. 105, 1874 Mich. LEXIS 146 (Mich. 1874).

Opinion

Cooley, J.

On the 18th of February, 1S61, in a foreclosure suit by Tregent against William A. Pratt and others, in the circuit court for the county of Wayne, in chancery, a decree was rendered in favor of complainant for eight thousand nine hundred and sixty-eight dollars and fifty-four cents. In the decree was incorporated a clause for execution against Pratt, for any deficiency that might exist after the mortgaged premises were sold; but this was ineffectual, because Pratt was not served with process, and had not appeared in the cause. One note, secured by the mortgage, and for the payment of one thousand dollars, was not included in the decree, as it would not fall due until July 31, 1861. ,

A sale was had under the decree, April 16, 1861, which realized only one thousand and fifty dollars. Tregent after-wards sold and assigned the decree and the note, to George Jerome, giving him a written assignment, by which Tregent authorized him to collect and enforce payment thereof, in my name or otherwise, but at his own costs and charges, and without recourse to me in any event.” Jerome after-wards sold and assigned to the plaintiff.

Plaintiff now sues Tregent to recover back the price paid by Jerome for the assignment, on the ground that there was a total failure of consideration. How this can be so, I have been unable to see. It is certainly true that no valid decree was assigned, because there was none to assign; but the mortgage debt was undoubtedly transferred, and Jerome would have been entitled to enforce it by all appropriate remedies. This could hardly be disputed in this state after the two decisions of Niles v. Ransford, 1 Mich., 338, and Gilbert v. Cooley, Wal. Ch., 494. Besides, the note not due when the decree was rendered, was expressly transferred, so that Jerome got the whole demand against Pratt which he bargained for, though without having any of it in the form of a valid decree, as, perhaps, the assign[107]*107ment assumed a part of it to be. How important this circumstance may have seemed to the parties, we cannot tell, nor is it material in this suit. It is a sufficient answer to the plaintiff’s demand here, that something of value which Jerome bargained for was transferred to him, and that the failure of consideratiou, if there was any, was partial, instead of total.

It does not become necessary to consider the effect of the assignment being made without recourse, since, with or without that clause, the present action is not, in our view, maintainable. The judgment, we think, should be affirmed, with costs.

Campbell, J., concurred.

Christiancy, J.

This was an action of assumpsit, brought by plaintiff in error against defendant in. error in the Wayne circuit.

The action grew out of the assignment and sale, or what purported to be the assignment and sale, by the defendant below, through his brother, Augustus Tregent, as his agent, to George Jerome, of a decree, or rather the'balance remaining due upon a decree in chancery, and an assignment (which plaintiff offered to prove) of that decree for such balance to the plaintiff; the latter, claiming that what was represented to be, and purported to be sold as a personal decree in favor of defendant against one William A. Pratt, was not in fact such decree, but was absolutely void and of no effect; that the thing sold, or attempted to be sold, had no existence in fact, and that defendant was liable for the consideration received by him, as for money had and received to the use of Jerome; and that plaintiff, as the assignee of this chose in action, standing in the place of Jerome, was entitled under the statute to recover it in his own name.

A question was raised on the argument, as to the sufficiency of the power of attorney to Augustus Tregent to authorize him, as agent of the defendant, to sell the decree [108]*108and to execute the assignment to Jerome; but, as the plaintiff offered to prove that the purchase money arising from the sale was paid by the agent to the defendant, and accepted by him, and this would be a ratification of the act of the agent, without any previous authority, the question of the sufficiency of the power of attorney becomes unimportant.

The plaintiff offered in evidence the assignment to Jerome, executed in behalf of the defendant by his brother, and also an assignment from Jerome to the plaintiff, the due execution of both of which was admitted. But their introduction as evidence was objected to by the defendant on the following grounds (besides others, which went to sufficiency of the power and the mode of its proof): first, that the assignment to Jerome was not admissible under the declaration for money had and received; second, that it expressly negatives any liability on the part of the assignor by the use of the words “without recourse to me in any event;” third, that the assignment from Jerome to plaintiff was an affirmance of the contract of purchase of the decree, and is a waiver of the cause of action set up in the declaration.

The plaintiff, by his counsel, then offered to prove these papers for the purpose of showing that Augustus Tregent, as agent of defendant, made an assignment of what purported to be a decree made in the circuit court for the county of Wayne, in chancery; that he executed the paper for and on behalf of defendant to Jerome, who assigned all his right to the plaintiff. He further offered to follow this up with evidence tending to show that a suit was begun in the Wayne circuit, in chancery, wherein this defendant (Patrick Tregent) was complainant and William A. Pratt and others were defendants, to foreclose a mortgage executed by said Pratt to one Broadhead, and by him assigned to said Tregent, who was complainant in that suit; that an order for publication was entered, and the bill was taken as confessed against said Pratt, but that no personal service was ever had upon him, and that he did not appear in the [109]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Mich. 105, 1874 Mich. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lillibridge-v-tregent-mich-1874.