Winberry v. . Koonce

83 N.C. 351
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 83 N.C. 351 (Winberry v. . Koonce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winberry v. . Koonce, 83 N.C. 351 (N.C. 1880).

Opinion

Hillard, J.

The case was this: One Mills had a judgment docketed against W. M. Coston, which was a prior lien to. any other oh the lands of the debtor. Subsequently Coston executed a mortgage on his land to secure the creditors therein named, and that being'duly registered became the second lien on the land, and after' the registration of the mortgage the present plaintiff recovered two justice’s judgments against Coston and had them docketed, whereby he acquired the third lien.

In this situation the two judgment creditors, Mills and Winberry, issued executions, under one of which, the entire estate in the land, and under the other, only the equity of *353 redemption could have been sold, and when the. property was being cried by the sheriff, the plaintiff .as he alleges sold his two judgments to Koonce at the price of one-third of their amount, and the moiiey -not being paid, this action was brought to recover the agreed price. The defendant by his answer denies any sale, executed or executory, of plaintiff’s judgments to him at any price, and to settle the question of sale or no sale, the court submitted to the jury the issue: “Did plaintiff sell the judgments to defendant for one-third of their amount? and the jury in their ver•dict respond yes,”

There was no exception to the admission or rejection of •evidence, nor to any instruction to the jury, but as we understand from the statement of the case of appeal, the case was treated in the court below as a verdict for the plaintiff subject to the opinion of the court upon certain points raised by the evidence, and so understanding it, we will proceed to consider the supposed errors of the judge in his conclusion thereon.

1. It was contended by defendant that the assignment of the judgments to him, conceding it to be made, was no consideration on which the promise sued on could be supported, and that plaintiff, on that account and for the additional reason, that nothing had been received by him on said judgments, could not recover. The right of plaintiff to recover in no manner depends on whether the defendant has or will ever collect the judgments. It is true that the plaintiff, by reason that his assignment does not pass the legal title to the judgments, occupies the relation of a sort of trustee to the defendant in the sense of being bound to allow the use of his name in actions at law for their collection and to take the proceeds, but that is ulterior to the consideration of the promise on which this action is brought. The promise sued on is the promise to pay one-third of the amount of the two judgments assigned, and the consideration *354 is tlie assignment of the judgments on Oosfera. Anything; of value or advantage moving to the promisor from the' promisee is in law sufficient to support a promise. It is-obvious that the assignment made,.if in manner sufficient-to enable defendant to have execution and all other necessary remedies for' the collection of the judgments, (about-t-he manner of which» we need» not at present consider) was- & valuable right, and in itself sufficient to- support defendant’s promise, but besides, it had the effect to» put the plaintiff, the holder of the third -lien- on tire land-, out of the way as a competitor in the bidding, and thereby created to defendant the opportunity to buy at a less sum than he otherwise could- haveffione. The assignment if made- was under the rule a sufficient consideration, and so holding., the-judgment-of His Honor was not erroneous,

2. Defendant insisted- that the judgments were a-, lien on* land, and that the assignment, even, if made,- was void as-amounting to a sale or transfer of interest in or concerning; land, without a writing as required by the statute of frauds ;• The debt ascertained and adjudged- by the judgments w-as the principal, and the lien- they had on- land was a security created by statute and only an incident, and the contract to-assign the judgments was not within the statute of frauds. Contracts within the statute of frauds are contracts to sell or convey lands or some- interest in .or concerning them, iñ-the party undertaking to alienate them,and they were required to be in writing signed by the party sought to be-charged, upon the policy to prevent frauds and injuries. There is nothing of the character of vendor or vendee in this transaction of assigning the judgments, and there can-b.e no necessity of a memorandum in writing to he signed-by the plaintiff,- for he has no- interest in the land, but the-judgment debtor only. It cannot be that a law enacted to»protect against the frauds-and injuries of witnesses-in proving sales of land, or interests in land,, can- be construed, to- *355 extend to and include judgment liens created by the law itself as an incident to a judgment. Being an incident, it passes with a grant of the principal by mere operation of law. Miller v. Hoyle. 6 Ired. Eq., 269; Hyman v. Devereux, 63 N. C., 624.

3. The point was taken that judgment should be rendered for defendant, on the ground that what is called ah assignment was incomplete and inoperative to pass any equitable right to defendant in the two judgments: It is unquestionable, that while the judgments were assignable, they must have been assigned in such manner as to be legally sufficient to pass the equitable interest therein, or otherwise-it would be but executory and the action could not be maintained. No particular mode of assignment is prescribed or required. It may be done with or without writing, and in any form of words, provided the intent to assign be clear and some act be done between the parties amounting to an appropriation, or a constructive delivery. Adams- Eq-., 54; 2 Schouler on Personal Property, 676. An intent to sell by one and an intent to buy in the other, at a price paid or agreed to be paid, with such conduct or acts as means that the one resigns all future control of the chose, and the other assumes to regard it as his own, is an appropriation interse, and on notice to the party who is to pay h, approximates-a delivery of a chattel, and is then called a constructive delivery, and thereupon the right of the assignee is perfected against any possible further control of the assignor. Adams’ Eq., 55; Schouler on Personal Property, 678. Now here-the jury find the sale of the judgments, and by the evidence, sent up as a part of the judge’s case, taking it most strongly against the appellant, the fact was that after the land was knocked down to the plaintiff, the defendant in execution of the agreement had the entry of the sale to plaintiff' changed into his own name, and he then and there rehearsed the terms of the trade and procured an indulgence- *356 from the plaintiff for' the money which was to he paid him,, until the next court. And herein there was plainly the assent of plaintiff to cease any further control of the judgments, and of defendant to hold himself to be owner, thus-making in law an appropriation of the judgments to the ■defendant; and besides this, there was a recital before Cos-ton, the judgment debtor., of the sale and its terms, and ■therein the equitable interest of defendant was perfected as .much so as by delivery in the case of a tangible chattel.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.C. 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winberry-v-koonce-nc-1880.