Western National Bank v. Maverick National Bank

90 Ga. 339, 35 Am. St. Rep. 210
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 1, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 90 Ga. 339 (Western National Bank v. Maverick National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western National Bank v. Maverick National Bank, 90 Ga. 339, 35 Am. St. Rep. 210 (Ga. 1892).

Opinion

Simmons, Justice.

. The Maverick National Bank of Boston recovered against Huguley & Co. and the Western National Bank of New York, upon the following state of facts:

Certain promissory notes of the Alabama & Georgia Manufacturing Company to Huguley & Co., amounting in the aggregate to $15,000, were delivered by the latter to the plaintiff, before maturity, as security for a debt of $5,000 and interest. To secure these notes and others not transferred to the plaintiff', the maker of the notes had given to Huguley & Co. a mortgage on certain real estate, but no assignment of this mortgage or of any interest in it was made to the plaintiff'. After all the notes had matured, Huguley & Co., in their own name, foreclosed the mortgage for the entire indebtedness which it had been given to secure, having first gotten back the transferred notes, after maturity, from the transferee, under an agreement with the latter to hold them [341]*341in trust to be exhibited in court ” in the foreclosure proceeding and to return them immediately thereafter. Without the knowledge or consent of the transferee of the notes, Huguley & Co. assigned the judgment of foreelosui’e to the Western National Bank of New York, the consideration of the assignment being the ex-tinguishment by the assignee of its antecedent debt against them and the payment of a large sum in cash. Afterwards at a receiver’s sale of all the property of the mortgagor, the assignee of the j udgment, together with other persons who were joined as defendants in this case, purchased the property, and the amount of the judgment -was credited by the receiver as paid payment of the purchase money. The plaintiff, in its petition, claimed that it was legally and equitably entitled to follow into the property thus purchased the collateral which it alleged had been fraudulently taken from it, and it prayed for a money decree against the defendants for the amount of the indebtedness to secure which the collateral had been given, or if all the defendants were not parties to the fraud, then against such only as had participated in it. Huguley & Go. filed no defence, but the Western National Bank answered, and in its answer set up that the assignment of the judgment had been taicen by it in good faith, without notice of the transfer of the notes in question to the plaintiff, or that the plaintiff had any interest in the mortage security or in the judgment of foreclosure. On the trial there was evidence tending to establish this defence. The verdict was for the full amount sued for, and the Western National Bank made a motion for a new trial, which was ovenmled, and it excepted.

The grounds of exception mainly relied upon are based upon the failure of the court below to charge the jury as to the defence of good faith and want of notice on the part of the assignee of the judgment. In [342]*342this we think the court erred. We think, if the assignee took the judgment in good faith and without notice of the plaintiff’s equity, the title was taken free from that equity. It was contended in behalf of the defendant in error that the doctrine caveat emptor applies to the .purchaser of a judgment, not only as to the equities of the debtor, but as to all equities which at the time of the transfer exist against the judgment in the hands of the assignor; and in support of this view the following authorities are cited: Davies v. Austin, 1 Ves. 247; Cockell v. Taylor, 15 Eng.L.& Eq. 101; Bush v. Lathrop, 22 N. Y. 535; Sheldon v. Edwards, 35 N. Y. 279; Schafer v. Riley, 50 N. Y. 61; Clark v. Hogeman, 13 W. Va. 718; Downer v. Bank, 39 Vt. 25; Cox v. Palmer, 60 Miss. 793; Mitchell v. Hackett, 25 Cal. 538; 2 Pomeroy, Eq. Jur. §703 et seq. On the other hand, numerous decisions are cited to the effect that the assignee is not affected by the latent equities of third persons, not parties to the judgment, of which he had no notice at the time of the assignment. Mr. Black in his work on Judgments states that this is “the generally recognized doctrine.” (Yol. 2, §956, ed. 1891.) To the same effect see 2 Freeman on Judgments, §428, and cases cited (ed. 1892); 12 Am. & Eng. Ene. L. 149(c), and notes. We have found no decision of this court which deals with the exact question here presented. Under our statutes, however, we think the question is free from difficulty. An examination of the cases cited for- the defendant in error will show that there is a fundamental difference between all of them and the case before us. Under our statutes, the legal title to dioses in action is assignable, and judgments “ are negotiable by indorsement or written assignment in the same manner as bills of exchange and promissory notes.” Code, §§2776, 2244, 3597. In those cases the chose in action was nou-negotiable and the legal title was not assigned. Under the common [343]*343law, dioses in action, except negotiable securities, could not be assigned so as to carry the legal title; and in a court of law, any rights in them acquired by other persons than the owner could be enforced only in his name. Hence the rule laid down by Lord Chancellor Thurlow in Davies v. Austin, supra, that “ a purchaser of a chose in action must always abide by the case of the person from whom he buys.” As a transfer could convey only an equitable interest, courts of equity, in sustaining as against the transferee the equities of third persons which prior to the transfer had attached to the chose in action in the hands of the legal owner, were governed by the maxim prior in tempore potior in jure. But this rule of priority, while applicable in a contest between merely ■equitable interests, of course does not apply in favor of a latent equity as against a purchaser who in good faith has become vested with the legal title. It will be found that the non-negotiable or non-assignable character of the chose in action is the basis of all those decisions which have extended the doctrine caveat emptor to the equities of third persons against the assignor. Still, •even in the absence of statutes placing the chose in action upon a different footing as to assignability from that occupied at common law, many decisions have followed the view announced by Chancellor Kent in Murray v. Lylburn, 2 Johns. Ch. 442, that the rule which subiects the assignee to the equities which attached to the chose in action in the hands of the assignor, is to be understood as meaning the equity residing in the original obligor or debtor, and not an equity residing in some third person against the assignor. Chancellor Kent, in stating the reasons for this view, says: “The assignee can always go to the debtor and ascertain what claims he may have against the bond or other chose in action which he is about purchasing from the obligee; but he may not be able, with the utmost diligence, to ascertain [344]*344the latent equity of some third person against the obligee. He has not any object to which he can direct his inquiries; and for this reason, the claim of the assignee without notice, of a chose in action, was preferred in the late case of Redfearn v. Ferrier and others, 1 Dow. Rep, 50, to that of a third person setting up a secret equity against the assignor. Lord Eldon observed in that case that if it were not to be so, no assignments could ever be taken with safety.” "Whatever may be the force of this reasoning as applied to a merely equitable assignment, there can be no question as to its soundness in the case of a legal assignment, especially where the chose in action is of a negotiable character.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 Ga. 339, 35 Am. St. Rep. 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-national-bank-v-maverick-national-bank-ga-1892.