Overstreet v. Randolph

1 Va. Ch. Dec. 47
CourtVirginia Chancery Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1789
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Va. Ch. Dec. 47 (Overstreet v. Randolph) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Virginia Chancery Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overstreet v. Randolph, 1 Va. Ch. Dec. 47 (Va. Super. Ct. 1789).

Opinion

THE plaintiff had executed an obligation for payment, to Richard Randolph, the testator, of three hundred pounds, the price for a negro slave sold, the seller had acted so unfairly in the bargain that, if he and the buyer only had been interested, the latter ought to have been discharged from the obligation, but the court, on the 5th day of august, 1789, delivered an opinion, that the plaintiff was not in titled to relief against the obligation in the hands of the assignee, the defendent William Griffin, who having paid a valuable consideration for it,without knowledge of unfairness in the sale of the negro, and being irnpowered, by statute, made in 1748, (eh, 27 of the edit, in 1769, sect. 7,) to commence and prosecute an action in his own name, had a legal right to the money acknowledged by the obligation to be due, and whose equity was not less than the obligors equity, in consequence of which opinion the bill of the plaintiff, which was partly for an injunction to stay execution of a judgment recovered in an action upon the obligation by the assignee, was dismissed, as to that defendent.

Against this opinion, when the same question hath been several times since discussed in other cases, were objected,

1, That it exalteth a derivative right over the primitive right, implying that the obligee may transfer a right which he hath not, or a greater right than he hath, to the assignee.

2, That the opinion supposeth the assignees equity not to be less than the obligors equity, the truth of which was not admitted.

3, That the doctrine, inculcated in the opinion, will encourage fraud and produce more inconvenience than the contrary doctrine, obligees, conscious that, that by their malversation, they were so obnoxious as that demands, in their own names, were not sustainable, will assign the obligations, and, becoming insolvent, which is said to have happened in the principal case, or removing to parts unknown, prevent or render ineffectual recourse to them by injured obligors, more reasonable would be to put the assignee in the same condition in which the obli-[48]*48gee is; for tbe assignee, before be accepts the assignment,might, by inquiry, be informed if the obligor admitted or denied the money to be justly due, whereas the latter can seldom or never give timely notice to the former of exceptions to the demand.

4, That, by equity of the statute, which authorised commencement and prosecutions of actions in the names of assignees, directing discounts, before notice of assignment, to be allowed, obligations in the hands of assignees ought to he liable to objections.which might be urged against them, if they had remained in the hands of the obligees.

ANSWERS:

To the first objection, the opinion is not such a paradox as the objector supposed, if the obligation be such that the action upon it, brought by the obligee hitnsell, would not be barred by any legal plea, tbe court of law could not hinder him from recovering ajugdmentand suing forth execution,although he should appear to have practised fraud in obtaining the obligation. the court of equity can restrain him, by injunction, from enjoying the benefit of his judgement, upon this principle; that he who had injured the obligor, by foul dealing, should make reparation for it. the obligee, when he assigns the obligation, transferred simply his right to the money thereby acknowledged to be due ; but doth not transfer, cannot transfer, thereby, his duty to make that reparation,

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Related

Banner v. May
26 P. 248 (Washington Supreme Court, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Va. Ch. Dec. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overstreet-v-randolph-vachanct-1789.