Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. A. M. Wright & Co.

38 Mo. App. 141, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 432
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 38 Mo. App. 141 (Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. A. M. Wright & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. A. M. Wright & Co., 38 Mo. App. 141, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 432 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Smith, P. J. —

C. 0. Christie was for many years engaged in the grain and commission businóss in the city of St. Joseph, Missouri. Christie had, as his correspondents in Chicago, A. M. Wr%ht & Co. At the particular time in his business career with which this suit is connected, Christie had a shipping contract with the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, providing for a considerable rebate on all the grain that should ' be shipped by Christie on the road. Christie drew drafts on A. M. Wright & Co., on account of grain shipped by him’ to them, which were paid by the latter, until they had paid the sum of $1,819.92 in excess of the net amount realized by them for the sale of the grain shipped to them by Christie. Christie claimed that the railroad company owed him about twenty-seven hundred dollars on account of said contract on rebates. In order to pay Wright & Co., Christie gave them the following order:

[145]*145“Chicago, November 29, 1884.
Mr. L. A. Emerson, G. E. A., Mo. P. R. R. Go., St. Louis.
“Dear Sir. — Please pay to A. M. Wright & Co., ($1,819.92) eighteen hundred and nineteen and ninety-two-hundredths dollars out of the amount due me on overcharge on freight, and oblige,
“Respectfully yours,
“ C. C. Christie.”

The order was not paid. The railroad company denied the contract providing for rebates. Afterwards, Christie brought suit in the Buchanan circuit' court against the railroad company on said contract, claiming, as due him thereunder, about twenty-seven hundred dollars, and, in said suit, obtained judgment, on May 2, 1885, for the sum of twenty-six hundred and twenty-one and twelve-hundredths dollars ($2,621.12), which judgment, on appeal, was affirmed by the supreme court of the state.

After the rendition of the judgment in the circuit court, the various defendants in the present action, other than Wright & Co., having heretofore obtained judgments in various circuit courts of the state, had issued execution thereon, and caused the railroad company to be summoned as a garnishee. The garnishment proceedings were continued until after the affirmance by the supreme court of the judgment in favor of Christie, against the Missouri Pacific Railway Company. After the affirmance of said judgment, the railroad company instituted this proceeding of inter-pleader, setting up the facts as to the judgment, as to the garnishments, and as to the claim of Wright & Co., based on a formal assignment of the judgment made by Christie to them, on March 20, 1888, asking that the garnishees and said Wright & Co. be ordered to interplead for, and litigate their rights to the amount of said judgment. ^ ■

[146]*146The court made the order requested, and the parties accordingly interpleaded for said fund. Upon the trial, the facts appeared as above stated. The court held that the order given by Christie to Wright & Co., on November 29, 1884, constituted an equitable assignment of' the fund to the extent of the sum named in the order, and that, therefore, Wright & Co. were to be paid first out of said fund, thus postponing the garnishees to Wright & Co.

The assignment of the judgment by Christie, to Wright & Co., was long subsequent to the levy of the garnishments. The defeated execution creditors appealed from the judgment and decree of the court directing that Wright & Co. were to be first paid out of the fund interpleaded for.

I. The question thus presented for our decision is, whether the order of Christie to Wright & Co., on the railway company, for $1,819.92, out of the amount claimed to be due him on rebates, was an equitable assignment of so much of said fund. The garnishment creditors contend that there can be no assignment, either in law or equity, of a portion of a debt without the consent of a debtor.

In the case of Rice v. Dudley, 34 Mo. 383, decided at last term, which is “on all fours” with this, we entered into rather an extended examination and review of the various decisions of the supreme court of this state, supposed to have any bearing upon the question then under consideration, and the conclusion reached by us, was that the order given by the creditor on the debtor, to pay the payee so many dollars “ out of any money in his hands,” being only for a part of the debt due the creditor, and not having been accepted by the debtor, did not transfer to the payee either a legal or equitable right against the creditor either to so much of the fund as the order called for, or give him a lien thereon. Our ruling in that case is in strict accord with [147]*147the doctrine established in this state by the decided cases cited in the opinion, and which we feel bound to follow in the present case.

When the order drawn by the debtor, in favor of a creditor, on the drawee, for the whole of a specific fund, the acceptance of the drawee is not necessary to the validity and lien of the assignment so made. An order calling for a fund in its entirety seems not to be within the operation of the rule which enjoins acceptance by the drawee. This qualification to the rule has for its foundation the opinion of Lord Tiiuko in Haddock v. Gandell, 13 Eng. L. & E. 30. If the cases cited by the industrious counsel for the interpleaders, who were successful in the circuit court, announce the rule to be as stated by them, then these cases are not in harmony with a long line of decisions in this state.

The successful interpleaders however contend, that even if the rule is as we have decided it to be, and that it does not permit a creditor to split his debt into fractions, yet that since the rule is intended to be for the benefit of the debtor alone that the garnishment creditors have no right to invoke it against the assignment. We are not prepared to yield our unqualified assent to this statement limiting the application of the rule. Under the rule we are considering, an order drawn on a fund, general or special, for a part only is not of itself an assignment either inlaw or in equity, and it can-never become an assignment until it is accepted by the drawee. If the drawee accept it, the order becomes an assignment, binding as such, and no one can object on the ground (waived by the drawer) that the order was for part only of the fund; until the drawee accepts the order,' it is not an assignment to any one, the drawer can maintain an action on the debt, the drawee may compromise the debt with the drawer, and the drawer’s creditors may attach it. Bennett v. Crandall, 63 Mo. 410.

[148]*148In Chase v. Alexander, 6 Mo. App. 503, and Rice v. Dudley, supra, the garnishee was allowed to pay the funds into court, and the claimants were ordered to interplead, and yet in each of these cases the garnishing creditors prevailed over the payee in the order. In Kimball v. Dewald, 20 Mo. 577, the drawer subsequent to the garnishment filed his bill of interpleader to compel the garnishing creditors and payee in a bill of exchange to litigate among themselves their respective claims to the fund in the hands of the drawer, and in that proceeding the garnishing creditors prevailed over the payee.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Mo. App. 141, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-pacific-railway-co-v-a-m-wright-co-moctapp-1889.