Stathos v. Murphy

26 A.D.2d 500, 276 N.Y.S.2d 727, 1966 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2802
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 20, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 26 A.D.2d 500 (Stathos v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stathos v. Murphy, 26 A.D.2d 500, 276 N.Y.S.2d 727, 1966 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2802 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

Breitel, J. P.

The issue is whether an assignee of an interest in a lawsuit is entitled to recover the allocable proceeds of a settlement as against a judgment creditor of the assignor whose judgment was recovered and whose restraining notice was served subsequent to the assignment but before the settlement of the lawsuit. Although the issue is one that has arisen with some frequency in the past, the application of the rule has been surrounded with some confusion.

In the instant case, Special Term, after a reference and hearings before the Special Referee, held that the judgment creditor was entitled to prevail, presumably adopting the view of the Special Referee that the assignment related to subsequently acquired property and therefore could not take effect until the settlement moneys were in hand. By that time, of course, he reasoned, the lien of the judgment creditor had taken preemptive effect. It is concluded, however, that the correct view is that the assignment took immediate effect with respect to an existing cause of action and that therefore the rules peculiar to after-acquired property are not applicable. In consequence, the judgment of Special Term should be modified to allow the assignee’s claim and to disallow that of the judgment creditor.

The confusion in this area of the law arises primarily from a failure to distinguish between the assignment of future rights, such as future wages, revenues on contracts yet to be made, and the like, regarded as after-acquired property, and the assignment of present rights, typically choses in action, which have yet to ripen into deliverable assets, particularly money. While there may be many practical contingencies or even conditions stipulated in the realization of choses in action, such contingencies or [502]*502conditions alone do not negate the fact that a present right exists and is being effectively transferred. A further distinction should be kept in mind between the assignment of a cause of action, an interest in a lawsuit, or a chose in action, however termed, and an assignment of the proceeds or a share of the proceeds of a judgment or settlement to be obtained in the future. This, of course, is the difference between a present transfer and a transfer to take effect in the future. If the authorities are analyzed within a proper classification they are largely reconcilable in result if not always in their rationes decidendi.

The first question in this ease, then, is the nature of what was purportedly assigned.

George Stathos, one of the plaintiffs and the assignor, instituted this action in March, 1958 to recover corporate stock and money. In June, 1964 the action was settled for $65,000 to be paid to specified persons as their interests might appear. At issue in this present appeal is the share allocable to George Stathos of $13,665.50 claimed by his judgment creditors, Seaways Shipping Corp. and Rio Palmea Compañía Naviera, S. A. At Special Term it was also claimed by the coplaintiff Kirkiles to the extent of $8,601.25 by virtue of an agreement with Stathos, and by Victoria Stathos, the mother and assignee of George Stathos, to the extent of $5,065.25.1 On the appeal, there remains only the assertion of the assignee’s claim in the full sum of $13,665.50, the Kirkiles ’ claim having been disallowed.

The assignment to Victoria Stathos was dated May 25, 1959 and the Special Referee found: “The credible proof shows that at the time this assignment was made, Stathos was indebted to his mother for at least $30,000. Victoria Stathos’ uncontroverted testimony establishes that her son owed her this sum of money * * * Nothing in the record warrants the conclusion that any of the loans made by her to her son were ever intended as gifts * * * On the contrary, it clearly appears that the assignment was made by Stathos for good and valuable consideration, in an amount perhaps exceeding this sum of $30,000.” (Emphasis in original.)

The Special Referee also found that Stathos was not insolvent in 1959 when he executed the assignment. Most important, the judgment creditors explicitly acknowledged in this court that they did not contest the findings of the Special Referee. Consequently, there is no suggestion of fraud or like invalidity in the assignment.

[503]*503The assignment in usual form purported to ‘ ‘ grant, assign and convey * * * all my right, title and interest in the cause of action now pending * * * entitled * * * wherein I [Stathos] am plaintiff.” The cause of action was in contract for breach of divers written and oral agreements involving stock in a shipowning corporation, sale and resale of a ship, and the disposition of the proceeds from the resale of the ship. The settlement of the underlying action had occurred during trial. The judgment against Stathos in favor of his judgment creditors was returned on September 20, 1962 and execution returned unsatisfied in November of that year. The judgment creditors served a restraining notice under their judgment sometime after the settlement in 1964 but, of course, before the moneys were received or ready to be distributed.

From the foregoing recital it is evident that the subject of the assignment was a fully matured claim for breach of contract. No future interest or “ after-acquired ” property was involved. The claim, of course, was quite uncertain as to realization because it was disputed and being seriously litigated. Indeed, the eventual amount of the settlement was a fraction of the pleading claims of $869,800 and $376,500. Notably, the assignment was of the cause of action and not of an interest in a future judgment or fund.

The next question is whether the assignment in this case took effect instantly or matured as a transfer only after the proceeds of the settlement were at hand.

There is no doubt that the assignment of a truly future claim or interest does not work a present transfer of property. It does not because it cannot; no property yet exists. However, equity has long recognized such a purported transfer as an agreement or promise to transfer when the capacity to transfer arises—hence, one form of the equitable assignment enforcible in equity with the inchoate right receiving no or only limited recognition at law. Quite different is the assignment of a present claim not yet matured, or disputed, or dependent upon future conditions. There has never been any doubt that such an assignment was one of a presently-existing interest. Difficulty only arose because there might not be an immediate action at law available to enforce the claim, and the unmatured claim would be the best example. However, even in such case, while law and equity were still separated, equity would provide whatever recognition or protection was necessary, but always considering the transfer as one of a present interest. But, for the purposes of this case, an existing right was transferred for which there was a pending mode of enforcement and the assignor lost the [504]*504power to transfer to another or to create rights in his creditors pre-empting those of the assignee. And, of course, the problems engendered by the separation of law and equity should no longer plague us. (Lane v. Mercury Record Corp., 21 A D 2d 602, esp. 603, affd. 18 N Y 2d 889.). (As to assignment of rights in existing claims and of rights in claims to arise in the future, see Restatement, Contracts, §§ 149, 150, 151, 154; as to assignment of conditional rights, see ibid., § 155.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 A.D.2d 500, 276 N.Y.S.2d 727, 1966 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stathos-v-murphy-nyappdiv-1966.