Neely v. Jones

16 W. Va. 625, 1880 W. Va. LEXIS 45
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 16 W. Va. 625 (Neely v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neely v. Jones, 16 W. Va. 625, 1880 W. Va. LEXIS 45 (W. Va. 1880).

Opinion

Green, President,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The first enquiry presented by the record is, whether the original bill in this cause was fatally defective on demurrer. This bill states that Neely, the sheriff of Doddridge county, paid to the plaintiffs in several judgments against the defendant, Thomas S. Jones, on which executions had issued, the amount of those judgments; and the defendant, Thomas S. Jones, having a tract of land, on which these judgments were a lien, Neely, the sheriff, by this bill claims that he is entitled to be substituted to the rights of the plaintiffs in these judgments, who were co-plaintiffs with him in this cause, and to enforce the same out of said lands. The judgments were rendered in 1855; and this suit was instituted in 1858.

SylIabus *• It is well settled that a stranger, who pays the debt 0f another without his knowledge and authority, cannot sue the debtor for money paid for his use, unless the debtor has ratified the act of the- stranger by promising to repay him the amount, or in some other manner. See Beach v. Vanderburgh, 10 Johns. 361; Jones v. Wilson, 3 Johns. 434; Menderick v. Hopkins, 8 Johns. 436; Overseers of Walkill v. Overseers of Mamahating, 14 Johns. 87; Lipscomb’s adm’r v. Littlepage, 1 H. & M. 453; Harrison v. Hicks, 1 Porter (Ala.) 423; Garter v. Black, 4 Dev. & Bat. 425. These cases show, that a sheriff or other officer, who has or has had an execution process in his hands, if he pays the judgment or claim without the [636]*636request or authority of the defendant, where it is not afterwards approved or ratified by the defendant, is regarded precisely as any other stranger would be regarded and he can not bring an action of assumpsit to recover of the defendant the amount so paid by him.

Syllabus 2. The next enquiry is: Does such a payment discharge and satisfy the original debt, so that no suit cau thereafter be brought for the original debt, or if it be an execution, so that it cannot afterward be enforced in any manner? There have been cases in which it has been stated by the court, that such a payment by a stranger absolutely extinguished the debt; and the inference to be drawn from them is, that the debt is by such unauthorized payment utterly extinguished at law or in equity. See Sanford v. McClean, 3 Paige 122; Banta v. Gormo et al., 1 Sandf. 385, 386; Douglass v. Fagg, 8 Leigh 601, 602. But these views are not in other cases approved ; and it has been decided, that a payment of a debt by a stranger without the authority expressed or implied of the debtor is no discharge of the debt, unless the payment. is subsequently in some manner .ratified by the debtor, but whenever ratified, it will relate back to the date of the payment and have the same effect as if it had been expressly authorized by the debtor, and therefore it may be ratified even after suit is brought upon it; and the debtor’s relying upon it as a payment is such a ratification. See Simpson v. Eggington, 10 Exchq. 845, 848; Kemp et al. v. Balls, 10 Exchq. 610; Belshaw v. Bush, 11 C. B. (73 Eng. Com. Law. R.) 207; Whiting, use of Sun Mutual Insurance Co. v. Independent Mutual Insurance Co., 15 Md. 314; Leavitt and Lee, ex’rs of Hans Wilson v. Morrow, 6 Ohio St. 71; Webster and Smith v. Wyster, 1 Stew. (Ala.) 184.

From these decisions it would seem to follow as a necessary consequence, that, if after the stranger pays a debt the debtor ratifies the payment, as by relying on this payment as a payment when sued upon the debt, or in any orher manner, he would be liable in an action of [637]*637assumpsit brought by the stranger against him for money paid at his request for his use, the subsequent ratification being equivalent to a previous request. See Lipscomb, adm’r, v. Litilepage, 1 H. & M. 453.

But if the debtor instead of ratifying the payment of his debt by the stranger should repudiate this payment by a stranger of his debt, which he might well do, because he disputed that he was bound for the original obligation, or because he himself had paid it, or did not for any reason owe the debt, and for many other conceivable reasons, then the payment by the stranger could not operate as a discharge of the debt, but the debt would still continue to have an existence after the payment by the stranger. The legal right of action would of course remain in the original creditor, and the suit at law would necessarily be in the name of the original creditor. But as the original creditor had received full payment of the claim from the stranger, it seems to me that he would be under an implied obligation to transfer the debt to the stranger, after the debtor would not ratify the payment and thus extinguish the debt. For if under these circumstances a court of equity would not regard the stranger as the equitable owner of the debt, the result would be that the creditor could make it out of the debtor, after it had been paid in full by the stranger; and thus the creditor would be twice paid his debt, while the stranger would have no one to whom he could look for the repayment of what he had paid out. This result would not only be inequitable, but contrary to .the obvious implied understanding bet vveen the creditor and the stranger when the debt was paid. It is obvious that the stranger did not mean to present' the creditor with the amount paid, for it was made as a payment of the debt, and not given as a present. And if it can not operate as a payment, because of the debtor’s refusal to recognize it as a payment, the general object, which the parties had in view, would under such circumstances be carried out to the extent to which it would under such circum[638]*638stances be capable of being carried out, by the creditor assigning the debt to the stranger. And under these circumstances, it seems to me, a court of equity would, when the debtor refused to ratify the payment, imply that there was such contract, and the rights of the parties would be the same, as though the agreement had been originally, that the payment by the stranger to the creditor shall operate as a full discharge of the debt, if the debtor would ratify it as a payment, and if he would not, and it could not therefore so operate, then that the creditor would transfer to the stranger his right to the debt.

Syllabus 3. Syllabus 4. So understood, if the payment was not ratified by the debtor, the stranger, who would then be the equitable owner of the debt, could sue at law for it in the name of the original creditor for his own use. It is true that the debtor might defeat this action by pleading the payment made by the stranger to the creditor as a discharge of the debt. For he would have the right, as we have seen, to ratify this payment even after suit; nor would his right so to do be affected by his refusal before suit to so ratify it; for a principal may, after he has refused to ratify the act of a person acting as his agent, change his mind and ratify the act; and whenever he does so, it relates back to the doing of the act, and operates just as if he had previously authorized the doing of the act. But if the debtor thus defeated the action, it would follow that the stranger could then bring against him an action of as-sumpsit

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Bluebook (online)
16 W. Va. 625, 1880 W. Va. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neely-v-jones-wva-1880.