Stoddard v. Benton

6 Colo. 508
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 6 Colo. 508 (Stoddard v. Benton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stoddard v. Benton, 6 Colo. 508 (Colo. 1883).

Opinion

Beck, C. J.

This was an application by the appellee Benton to the district court of Ouray county for a writ of mandamus to compel the appellant, as county treasurer of said county, to pay a county warrant alleged to have been issued by the board of county commissioners.

The warrant was drawn payable to O. P. Goss, or bearer, in payment of a judgment against the county, and bears date January 14, 1880.

The petition alleges that Benton is and has been the legal holder thereof ever since the 15th day of June, 1880. That Treasurer Stoddard had paid a portion of the warrant, but that on the 28th day of September, 1880, the appellee demanded payment of the balance due thereon, and that although there was money in the defendant’s hands applicable to its payment, unappropriated, he refused to pay any portion of the amount due thereon.

The substance of the answer is that the warrant was not issued by the county commissioners, but by George A. Scott, its chairman, and the deputy clerk of the board, without any action having been taken by the board of county commissioners in the matter. It alleges that Goss recovered a judgment against the board of county commissioners on the 9th day of July, 1878, for the sum of $834.50 and costs of suit, which judgment Goss, on the 11th day of August, 1879, assigned, for a valuable consideration, to Adelbert Parsell, sheriff of Ouray county, and his successor in office, in trust, to ,pay out of the proceeds, when collected, to Ira T. Munn, his heirs and assigns, the sum of $350, without interest, and to pay the balance of the judgment and all the interest to said Goss.

Notice is alleged to have been given the board of county commissioners and to Scott, the chairman, of the assignment of the judgment before the warrant was drawn. •It- is averred that the sole and only consideration for the warrant was the said judgment, and that Benton [511]*511had full knowledge of the assignment of the judgment, and that the warrant was issued without lawful authority, before he purchased the warrant.

The answer further alleges that pn the 10th day of July, 1880, the board of county commissioners, at a meeting held on that day, made an order, and caused the same to be served on the appellant, setting out the irregularities of the warrant issued to Goss, and the previous assignment of the judgment to Parsell, and directing him to pay the judgment to Parsell.

On motion of the plaintiff the court struck out from the treasurer’s answer all the new or affirmative matter, and refused to permit him to prove the facts therein alleged on the trial.

Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff, awarding the peremptory writ of. mandamus to issue against the defendant, as county treasurer of Ouray county, commanding him forthwith to pay the balance unpaid upon the warrant.

The proceeding was instituted in the name of the appellee, and on the part of the appellant it is urged that this was irregular, and that the action cannot be maintained in this form. It is insisted that the proceeding must be prosecuted in the name of the people, upon the relation of the party aggrieved.

We are of opinion that this point is not well taken. The provisions of our Civil Code upon the subject of mandamus are almost identical with those of California. It is there held that a private person has not the right or power, at his election, to use the name of the people for the purpose of obtaining redress for private Wrongs. When a private individual is the real party in interest, the code provisions are held to govern, that the writ “shall be issued upon affidavit on the application of the party beneficially interested;” and that “every action shall be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest,” etc.

[512]*512Another reason assigned for the ruling is, that the attorney general is required by statute to attend each term of the supreme court, and prosecute, or defend, as the case may be, all causes to which the state may be a party. People v. Pacheco, 27 Cal. 213. It seems, however, that if the attorney general assents to the use of the name of the people, the proceeding will not be dismissed when instituted in that form, for the reason that it seeks redress for private wrongs. People v. San Francisco, 36 Cal. 595. Mandamus being a civil remedy, given for the protection of civil rights, public and private, the position appears to be a sound one, that when the writ is invoked for the protection of a purely private right, by the individual aggrieved, the proceedings may be conducted in the name of the actual parties in interest.

The other errors assigned present two principal questions for consideration and decision: First, whether there was a valid assignment of the judgment by Goss to Par-sell. Secondly, the regularity of the issuance by the chairman and clerk of the board of county commission.ers to Goss, of the county warrant, in payment of the judgment.

If the facts pertaining to the assignment of the judgment, and to notice, set out in the answer were sufficient to show a valid assignment, and due notice thereof, the court erred in striking out those portions of the answer.

The law is well settled, that, after notice to the judgment debtor of a bona fide transfer of the judgment, the rights of the assignee will be protected from any and all acts of the parties. McJilton v. Love, 13 Ill. 486; Hughes v. Trahern, Adm’x, 64 Ill. 48; Fore v. Manlove, Sheriff, 18 Cal. 437; Freeman on Judgments, sec. 421.

So far as the alleged notice is concerned, the allegations were clearly sufficient. The answer averred notice to the treasurer and to the county commissioners, long before the warrant was issued to Goss, that the judgment had been assigned. It also averred notice to Benton, the [513]*513plaintiff below, of the assignment of the judgment, and of the invalidity of the warrant, before he purchased the warrant from Goss. The answer averred that the judgment was assigned for a valuable consideration, and this averment was sustained by the written assignment admitted in evidence. The admission of an indebtedness by Goss to Munn, coupled with the written direction to the assignee to pay the same out of the judgment, was a .sufficient consideration, prima facie, to sustain the assignment.

It was not necessary to aver, as counsel contend, that the assignment was under seal. Mitchell v. Hackett et al. 25 Cal. 538; Ford v. Stuart, 19 Johns. 342.

The fact that the assignee was required to collect the judgment, and, after satisfying the claim of Munn, to pay over the balance of the judgment, and all interest which had accrued, to the assignor, would not of itself invalidate the assignment. Where a general assignment is made, for the benefit of creditors, of all the property and effects of the debtor, the authorities agree that a reservation of any portion of the fund arising therefrom, to the exclusion of creditors, renders the assignment void. But the assignment of a judgment, or other chose in action, does not come within the rule governing general assignments for the benefit of creditors, and the reservation, by the assignor, of a balance remaining after payment of a creditor does not render the transaction fraudulent. Beach et al. v. Bestor et al. 47 Ill. 521.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Colo. 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoddard-v-benton-colo-1883.