Case Name: Cornelius Ives, assignee, &c., v. William Goddard
Court: New York Court of Common Pleas
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1857-10
Citations: 1 Hilt. 434
Docket Number: 
Parties: Cornelius Ives, assignee, &c., v. William Goddard.
Judges: 
Reporter: Hilton's Common Pleas Reports
Volume: 1
Pages: 434–435

Head Matter:
Cornelius Ives, assignee, &c., v. William Goddard.
tn an action by the assignee of B. & E. against G., the latter interposed, as a set-off or counter-claim, a claim held by him against tiro assignors B. & E. Upon, the trial it appeared that he had recovered judgment therefor prior to this action.
Held, that the justice erred in admitting evidence of the original claim on which such judgment had been recovered. The claim was merged in the judgment, and could not be used as evidence of indebtedness.
In the action by G. against B. & E. brought after their assignment to the present plaintiff, evidence of their claim against G. was offered as a set-off, and excluded upon the ground that it had been assigned.
Held, that it was properly excluded; and the fact that it had not been set off in such action was no bar to another action on such claim by the assignee.
- Appeal by plaintiff from a judgment of the Marine Court. Tbe action was brought by tbe plaintiff, as assignee of the firm of Bates & Franc. The defence was a set-off. Judgment was rendered for tbe defendant, which was affirmed by the general term of tbe Marine Court, from which the plaintiff appealed. The .facts are fully stated in the opinion of the court.
William E. Stafford, .for the appellant.
Niles and Bctgley, for the respondent.

Opinion:
Ingraham, First Judge.
This action was for goods bold and delivered. The defendant pleaded, among other things, a counter-claim of $225 due from tbe-assignors of plaintiff to them,, at tbe time of tbe assignment, November, 1855.
Upon tbe trial, it appeared that the defendant bad recovered against tbe assignors of tbe plaintiff a judgment jfor the same counter-claim on tbe 18th of December, 1855, which action was brought after jhe assignment to tbe plaintiff.
The defendants then offered evidence of tbe original claim for which such judgment bad been recovered, which was objected to by the plaintiff, and the objection overruled by the court. Evidence was then received of such counter-claim.
After a recovery of a judgment for that counter-claim against the plaintiff's assignors, the claim became merged in the judgment, and could not any longer be used as evidence of indet^ edness. The judgment, then, was the only indebtedness of Bates & Franc to Goddard, and the original claim could not form the basis of a counter-claim. The justice ruled otherwise, and I think he erred in so ruling.
Upon that trial the defendant (then plaintiff) objected to the set-off, offered by Bates & Franc, of this claim now in suit, upon the. ground that the same had been assigned to Ives, and could not be used as a counter claim. The same was excluded, and properly, as a defence on the original trial. The defendant now objects to the plaintiff's recovery, upon the ground that the claim sued on should have been set off in the other action.
Where a claim has been thus properly excluded, because it is not legally a set-off in the action, to the plaintiff's claim, such trial forms no bar to another action. Beebe v. Bull, 12 Wend. 504.
It would be a monstrous proposition, to hold that a plaintiff" may exclude a counter-claim upon the ground that the same had been assigned to a third person, and then, when such third person brings his action to recover it, to say that it should have been allowed as a set-off in the first action, although properly assigned before that action was brought.
Judgment reversed.