Case Name: Tucker v. Gilman
Court: New York Supreme Court, General Term
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1890-10-24
Citations: 11 N.Y.S. 555
Docket Number: 
Parties: Tucker v. Gilman.
Judges: 
Reporter: West's New York Supplement
Volume: 11
Pages: 555–557

Head Matter:
Tucker v. Gilman.
(Supreme Court, General Term, First Department.
October 24, 1890.)
1. Costs—Assignment of Judgment—Liability of Assignee.
Plaintiff assigned a judgment recovered “and all sums of money that may be had or obtained by means thereof, or on any proceedings to be had thereupon. ” The judgment was reversed by the general term, and the reversal sustained by the court of appeals. Held that, under Code Civil Proa. N. "S'. § 3847, providing that where, after suit brought, the cause of action becomes the property of a person not a party to the action, the transferee, or other person interested, is liable for costs, as if he was the plaintiff, the assignee was liable for the costs recovered by defendant both before and after the assignment, and that his liability was not avoided by his omission to take active charge of the prosecution of the action.
8. Same—Constitutional Law.
Section 3847 is not in conflict with the constitution of the state.
Appeal from special term, Mew York county.
Action by Mary A. P. Tucker against Cornelia Gilman. Judgment was recovered against defendant, and, pending an appeal, Preble Tucker took an assignment thereof. He now appeals from an order directing him to pay the costs of the action upon the rendition of a judgment against plaintiff.
Argued before Van Brunt, P. J., and Brady and Daniels, JJ.
Tucker, Hardy & Wainwright, for appellant. George H. Fletcher, for respondent.

Opinion:
Daniels, J.
The plaintiff, as the assignee of the receiver of the Kings County Manufacturing Company, a corporation formed under the manufacturing laws of this state, brought this action to recover the balance of 60 per cent, of the defendant's unpaid subscription for the stock of the company. The receiver was appointed on the petition of the assignees in bankruptcy of Prances Mirick, who was a judgment creditor of the corporation. She recovered a judgment at the trial for the amount owing by the defendant on her subscription, and after it had been entered she made a written assignment of the judgment, "and all sums of money that may be had or obtained by means thereof, or on any proceedings to be had thereupon." An appeal was taken from the judgment, which was afterwards heard by this general term, and the judgment was reversed, and a new trial ordered. 45 Hun, 193. An appeal was then taken to the court of appeals, (24 N. E. Rep. 302,) where this decision was affirmed. Both decisions proceeded upon the construction of the statute declaratory of the liability of shareholders for their unpaid subscriptions, holding an action in equity, and not an action at law, as this was, to be the appropriate remedy for the enforcement of the liability. The statute has made the shareholders liable upon their unpaid subscriptions so far as to .pay on each share the sum necessary to complete the amount of the share as fixed by the charter of the company, or for such proportion of that sum as shall be required to satisfy the debts of the company, (2 Rev. St., 6th Ed., p. 391, § 5;) and to ascertain and adjust these amounts is the province of an action in equity. And the plaintiff failed to secure redress for the reason that she failed to acquire the right to maintain that action, and did not in fact proceed in that form. But the cause of action presented by her complaint was for the recovery of the unpaid amount owing by the defendant on the shares of the corporation taken by her; and it is the costs recovered by the defendant in this failure of the plaintiff's action that the assignee has been ordered to pay. This order was made under the authority of section 3247 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which has provided: "Where, after the commence menfc of an action, the cause of action becomes, by transfer or otherwise, the property of a person not a party to the action, the transferee or other person so interested is liable for costs, in the like cases, and to the same extent, as if he was the plaintiff, and where costs are awarded against the plaintiff, the court may, by order, direct the person so liable to pay them." And this assignment had the effect of transferring to the assignee the cause of action on which the plaintiff endeavored to maintain her action; for by section 1912 of the Code of Civil Procedure a judgment for a sum of money, which this judgment was, may be transferred by assignment, and it is only when it may have been recovered upon a cause of action not itself assignable or transferable that it will fail to transfer the cause of action in case the judgment shall be afterwards vacated or reversed. This was not such a cause of action. It was for a debt owing by the defendant, and recoverable by the creditors of the corporation, so far as it might be necessary to satisfy the debts of the company, and proportionately with the liability similarly existing against other shareholders for their unpaid subscriptions. The liability was in no sense a penalty, but it was for what the subscribers had rendered themselves liable to pay in purchasing the shares of the company, and that was transferable before judgment under the general principles of the law concerning the assignability of choses in action. The assignment of the judgment, therefore, did assign the cause of action asserted by the plaintiff as the foundation of her suit, and that is the effect which such an assignment of a judgment was held to have at common law. It operated as an assignment of the cause of action itself, (Bolen v. Crosby, 49 N. Y. 183; Spears v. Mayor, 87 N. Y. 359, 369;) and both by this section of the Code, as well as the principle supported by these authorities, the assignee became, by the assignment made to him,' the owner of this cause of action, and liable to pay the costs of defending the action.
This liability has not been limited to the costs accruing after the assignment, but it includes all the costs, for section 3247 has declared that the transferee "is liable for costs, in the like cases, and to the same extent, as if he was the plaintiff;" and that plainly includes all the costs which shall be recovered by the defendant. It is no legal answer to this liability that the plaintiff in the end proved to have no well-founded cause of action. If it were, then the assignee would in all cases escape the liability which the statute has declared, for where the plaintiff has a good cause of action, the assignee would not be liable at all; and if he were not, when the plaintiff failed to establish a cause of action, the statute would provide the way to defeat its own enactment, which plainly could not be the intention of the law. It is only when the plaintiff fails that the assignee is liable for the costs, and an actual right of action could not have been intended to be necessary to produce that liability. The most that the statute can be held to have required is that the assignment shall be of the alleged cause of action, which, by the result of the litigation, shall be defeated. The design evidently was to declare the assignee liable for intermeddling or dealing in the unfounded legal controversies of other persons. He can, by the assignment to him, acquire all the chances of success, but after he shall have done that and they fail, then, under this law, he may be ordered to pay the costs of the defendant. The liability follows the assignment of the asserted, not a real cause of action. FTeither can this liability be avoided by his omission to take the active charge of the prosecution of the action, for it has been made to result from the assignment itself, by which the assignee becomes entitled to the advantages of the litigation in case of its success. All that is requisite is that the cause of action, whatever it may be, when it is capable of being' transferred, shall became the property of the assignee, and that property will be derived from the assignment alone. By taking' the assignment the assignee made himself a party to the litigation. From that time it was car ried on wholly for his benefit. If it had resulted favorably, the proceeds would have belonged to him. It was his suit, and it was by his permission that it afterwards went forward in the name of the plaintiff. He voluntarily assumed that relation to the action, and the merits were as fully heard for him as they could have been if he had been in name, as he was in fact, the party prosecuting. He acquired the litigation with ail its consequences, one of which was this liability. There is no foundation whatever for the objection that this section of the law is in conflict with the constitution of the state. It has gone no further than to permit the assignment subject to the condition that the assignee shall assume the payment of the costs when there shall be an adverse result, and he accepted this condition when he took the assignment. The law has deprived him of no right whatever, but he has done that himself by his own voluntary act. He was at liberty to subject himself to this liability, or not, as he himself elected, and, as he chose to do so for the expected advantages, he must abide by the result the law declared might follow his failure. There was no constitutional restraint standing in his way. It was a matter of pure volition on his part whether he would take this risk which the statute had declared. He did take it, and cannot complain that the law is now enforced against him. The order should be affirmed, with $10 costs and the disbursements. All concur.