Shaffer v. Federal Cement Co.

225 F. 893, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1326
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 2, 1915
DocketNo. 3638
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 225 F. 893 (Shaffer v. Federal Cement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaffer v. Federal Cement Co., 225 F. 893, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1326 (E.D. Pa. 1915).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.-

[1] This is in substance an action of debt. In any such actions, one or both of two questions may arise, which in a sense are merged into one. The two questions are: The one, does the defendant owe the claimed debt? The other, does he owe it to the plaintiff? The merger results in the query: What, if anything, does he owe the plaintiff? In all legal actions these questions are distinct and separate, and differ in kind and character.

!¡2J The practice which prevails in Pennsylvania of administering equity through legal forms permits equitable defenses to be presented in actions of assumpsit. Legal principles are, however, none the less give.n their full sway and application. No action at law can be maintained unless the right of action is in the plaintiff. The fact that the fruits of the legal victory, if obtained, belong to another, in no wise affects the question of determining who is the legal plaintiff, or the legal principle that the suit must be brought in the name of the legal plaintiff.

¡ § | Where a claim of debt justly arises out of the promise sued upon, so as to give a right of action to the plaintiff, the fact (although it be a conceded fact) that the claim has been assigned to a third person is no legal defense, and that mere fact presents no defense at all. Out of such a claim of ownership by a third party, however, an equitable defense, or the right of defendant to equitable relief, may arise. Under the Pennsylvania practice he may call upon the claimant to come in and defend, or invoke the equitable powers of the court through the form of a motion or rule to have the case marked to the use of the real owner of the claim, or, if within the terms of the statutes, to have the parties interplead, or may file a bill in equity for the purpose, or may pay the amount of the claim into court, SO' that an issue may be framed to determine to whom it belongs, or he may [896]*896permit the cause to proceed, to have determined the existence or amount of the debt, and then ask for relief through any of the appropriate forms above indicated, or through the exercise of the control which every court 'has over its execution process.

[4] When, however, suit has been brought in the name of the legal plaintiff, the averment by the defendant of his ignorance of the true ownership of the claim, or his averment even of its assignment (unless such as to carry with it the right of action), is no defense.

[5] On the other hand, an action brought.by and in the name of the assignee, even if the fact be admitted, who is not the proper legal plaintiff, cannot be maintained, and the absence of a right of action in the plaintiff is a good defense. Let us apply these principles to the facts of this case as set forth in the statement of claim, and as modified by the averments of the affidavit of defense. The first question to be determined is: In whom is the right of action? If it is not in the plaintiff, that is the end of the case. If it is in him, we go to the next question.

[6] The record facts are these: the defendant company issued a series of bonds, and executed a collateral trust agreement to secure their payment. In and by each of the bonds the defendant promised to pay the amount named within a certain time, and the interest semiannually on the 1st days of January and July of each year at a given rate per cent. The claim is for this interest, and-the action has been brought to recover it. Neither the fact that the interest claimed is due and payable, nor the amount of it, is in dispute. The bond is in the form of an acknowledgment of indebtedness to the “registered holder,” with a further promise to- pay the interest to “such holder,” and the added provision that the “bond is transferable upon the books” of the defendant “at its office in the city of Philadelphia, and the registered owner only shall be entitled to receive tire principal and interest,” etc. This part of the defense turns upon the latter quoted clause. The bonds in suit were issued to and registered in the name of the plaintiff. The argument is( that, although the promise to pay is made to the registered “holder” he is given the right to assign to a registered “owner,” and such owner thereafter is alone entitled to receive the interest. In other words, this latter phraseology means that, after a bond has been assigned, the company is not called upon to pay the interest, except to one in whose name the bond is registered, and who can also otherwise prove himself to be the “owner.”

The averment of facts to which this meaning of the contract is applied is that defendant is informed that the plaintiff disclaimed ownership in the bonds, and that different persons at different times had asked to have the bonds, or some of them, registered in their names as assignees of the plaintiff (which registration was refused by defendant), and that defendant expects to be able to prove that plaintiff is not the real owner of the bonds. The inferential denial of indebtedness because of these facts is made. This case is no exception to the general rule that every case worth decision always presents a practical question, as well as sometimes a purely legal one. The practical phase is the absence of any averment that any one' other than the [897]*897plaintiff lias ever demanded the interest on these bonds, or that any one has notified or warned the defendant not to pay the plaintiff, or threatened it with the danger of a double payment in case it did so. The statement, of facts accompanying the above averments of the affidavit, is wholly consistent with the truth of such a situation as this. The bonds, although registered in the name of the plaintiff, in fact belonged to other members of his family, and the effort was made to have them assigned to the real owners. When registration was refused by defendant, the effort was made to- sell or pledge them, and to have'the proposed change of ownership noted. The position of defendant (except with respect to the feature next to be discussed) resold es itself into this: That it may first refuse to permit a transfer of the registered ownership, and then refuse to pay the interest to the registered holder, in whose.names the bonds stand, because of his attempted transfer.

We can find no such meaning in the quoted language of the contract. The phrase was inserted for the benefit, in that it was for the protection, of the defendant in making payment to the registered owner. It, is justified in paying him, because he alone can demand payment. This means that no one else has a right of action against the corporation. There is no difference in legal meaning between “‘registered holder” and “registered owner.” Either expression means that the person in whose name the bond is registered is the owner, so far as the propriety of payment by the corporation and so far as the right of action to enforce payment is concerned. In this aspect of the case the affidavit shows no defense.

[7] This brings us to the other feature of the affidavit, to which reference was above made. There is the positive averment of an adjudication in bankruptcy, with the usual legal consequence that the title to these bonds passed along with the other property of the bankrupt to his trustee. There is, however, the accompanying statement that the bonds were not included in the schedule of assets, and that after inquiry made into the facts the trustee disclaimed all title to the bonds.

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60 F. Supp. 979 (S.D. New York, 1945)
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In re Toole
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Federal Cement Co. v. Shaffer
229 F. 1021 (Third Circuit, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
225 F. 893, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaffer-v-federal-cement-co-paed-1915.