Sammis v. L'Engle

19 Fla. 800
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 19 Fla. 800 (Sammis v. L'Engle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sammis v. L'Engle, 19 Fla. 800 (Fla. 1883).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Westcott

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a bill of interpleader brought by E. M. L’Engle as surviving partner of the firm of Sanderson & L’Engle against John S. Sammis, the persons composing the firm of Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co., one of whom was J. L. Small-wood, and against himself and Theodore Hartridge, administrators of the estate of John P. Sanderson. The suit arises out of moneys in L’Engle’s hands as surviving partner of the partnership of Sanderson & L’Engle, attorneys at law, Sanderson, the deceased partner, being the intestate of whose estate he and Hartridge are administrators, and the moneys which are the subject of controversy are the proceeds of claims in favor of J. L. Smallwood & Co., a firm consisting of J. L. Smallwood and Thomas J. Perkins against Thomas, Livingston & Co., which L’Engle as surviving partner of the law firm has collected.

From the testimony of Smallwood it appears that the [802]*802claim of J. L. Smallwood & Go. against Thomas, Livingston & Co. had become an asset of Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co. in A. D. 1870.

L’Engle as administrator and Sammis in his own right respectively claim this fund.

The decree of the Circuit Court being in favor of Sanderson’s administrators and against Sammis, he (Sammis) appealed thei-efrom.

Sanderson’s administrator claims in two aspects. First, by virtue of an assignment by Swallwood, as a member of the firm of Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co., of the claim against Thomas, Livingston & Go. to Sanderson during his life time for collection and application of its proceeds to payment of debt due Sanderson by Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Go. Second, by virtue of a judgment of L’Engle and Iiartridge, Sander-son’s administrators, against Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co., and a garnishment thereon to E. M. L’Engle, the surviving partner of the firm of Sanderson & L’Engle, who has possession of the funds collected on the claim against Thomas, Livingston & Go.

Sammis is a judgment creditor of Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co., and claims priority by virtue of a garnishment to E. M. L’Engle, he (Sammis) insisting that his attachment of the funds in the hands of E. M. L’Engle, surviving partner of the firm of Sanderson & L’Engle, has priority on account of alleged irregularities in the issuing of the attachment in favor of Sanderson’s administrators, the judgment and garnishment in the suit of the administrators of Sanderson against Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co. being prior to the garnishment and judgment in the suit of Sammis against Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co.

Sammis also claims by virtue of equities alleged to exist between himself and Sanderson during his life time and Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co.

[803]*803The facts in reference to the assignment are that on the first of October, A. D. 1870, Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co., as admitted by them, were indebted to John P. Sanderson in the sum of $8,773.05. This was subsequently reduced to $5,773.05. In January, A. I). 1871, Smallwood, representing the firm of Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co., (accoi’ding to his own testimony in this record,) said to Sanderson, “ that a claim of my firm on Thomas, Livingston & Co., of Madison, Florida, was the most available of our assets that I could offer, and much more than enough to pay (him) some thirty thousand dollars, even at a compromise settlement, and that he could so apply enough of the proceeds of that claim when collected. I stated to J. P. Sanderson that I specially set apart the claim of my firm on Thomas, Livingston & Co., of Madison, Florida, to collect as my attorney and pay the balance due himself from my firm as appears by the statement of this account.” The account here referred to is the account of J. P. Sanderson with Small-wood, Hodgkiss & Co., showing balance due him of $8,773.05 already referred to. Smallwood says again: I directed John P. Sanderson to pay the balance due to himself out of the proceeds of the collection of our claim against Thomas, Livingston & Co. This is the testimony of Sammis’ own witness.

It clearly establishes a parol assignment in 1871 by a debtor to his creditor of a claim with power to collect the same and the right to apply the proceeds so far as necessary to the payment of his debt.

The fact that Sanderson & L’Engle were Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co.’s attorneys makes no difference, because they also represented Sanderson. Alexander vs. Adams, 1 Strob. (Law), 47. A positive direction to an attorney to apply the proceeds of a particular claim to a debt due himself accompanied by a delivery is an assignment of the debt [804]*804to him for that purpose. We take it from the testimony that the claim here assigned was an account against Thomas, Livingston & Co., arising from commercial relations with Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co., as his factors. Can such an assignment be sustained, and what is its effect ?

The assignment here is “ special or particular.” The delivery of the subject assigned is shown, and in such a case the assignment need not be in writing. Brown vs. Chamberlain, Miller & Co., 9 Fla., 464.

In such case also the assent of the creditor, even if assent was necessary, is presumed. If the assignment here was of “ a book debt ” against Thomas, Livingston & Co. it is good in equity. The debt is a chose in action, and like other choses in action, except negotiable securities, is not assignable at law, but all choses in action may be assigned in equity, and the assignee has an equitable right which he may enforce at law in the name of the assignor. By this assignment the equitable interest in the debt as between the parties to it immediately passed to the assignee. Such an assignment as exists in this case places the chose in action beyond the future control of the assignor, and is good against a subsequent attaching creditor who cannot stand on any better footing than his debtor, and if his debtor has no equitable interest in the chose in action as a matter of course his creditor can get none by his garnishment. Dix vs. Cobb, 4 Mass., 508; Alexander vs. Adams, 1 Strob. (Law), 47. The garnishment proceedings in this case, as well as the suits upon which they are based, all being long after this assignment as to them, it is only necessary to say that they cannot be effective to bind these moneys in the hands of E. M. L’Engle, the surviving partner of Sanderson & L’Engle, which had been the subject of a previous special assignment.

What has been said disposes of this appeal, unless there [805]*805is something in the alleged relations of Sammis to Sander-son and Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co., which would give Sammis a claim against this fund, or there is something in the objection of the appellant taken to the proceedings herein in his petition of appeal.

The only testimony in this record from which any claim can be made by Sammis against Sanderson arising out of the debt of Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co. to Sammis, and that of Smallwood, is that of Sammis himself. He, Sam-, mis, states its history to be: That before the war Reed & Hooper, of Boston, held the 'obligation of Sanderson & Sammis for part of a debt which they (S. & S.) had incurred as endorsers of a note of the Florida Central Railroad Company. In October, 1870, Sanderson and Sammis compromised the debt, each of them giving Reed. & Hooper their several note for $5,000.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Fla. 800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sammis-v-lengle-fla-1883.