Court Opinion

ID: 7985294
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:24:50.484673+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:10.994174
License: Public Domain

Chalmers, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
The bill alleged that the notes sued on had been assigned to the complainant, and that the’ respondent, who was the maker, had notice of the transfer at and before the maturity of the notes, to wit, on Sept. 10, 1876. The respondent answered that he had in a suit at law between one Spencer and Garner, the original payee of the notes, been garnished as the debtor of said Garner; that he had answered on July 15, 1876, admitting his indebtedness to Garner upon the notes now sued upon ; that judgment had been entered against him upon his answer, under which judgment his land had been levied on and sold. He expressly denied that any notice of the transfer of the notes had been given him at the time he filed his answer as garnishee in the suit at law. The complainant set the case down for hearing upon bill and answer before the expiration of the period allowed for taking depositions, thereby admitting the truth of the answer. He had *132decree, from which the repondent appealed. The bill alleged that the notes were transferred to the complainant in May, 1876 (before the institution of the action at law, in which the respondent was garnished), and that notice of the transfer was given to the respondent on September 10th following. The answer does not deny this, but avers that before notice of the transfer, to wit, on July 16th, respondent had answered as garnishee, and it denies that at that time he had notice of the transfer. But the answer shows that no judgment was entered upon the answer as garnishee until March, 1877, long after the time when, according to the undenied allegations of the bill, notice of the transfer had been given. Admitting the answer, therefore, to be true, it constituted no defence to the bill, because it was the duty of the respondent, as garnishee in the action at law, having received notice of the transfer of his notes after the filing of his answer, and before judgment upon it, to put in an amended answer informing the court that he was no longer the debtor of his original creditor, but of the present complainant, who had become the holder of the notes. This would have been his duty even after judgment and before satisfaction by execution. Oldham v. Ledbetter, 1 How. 43 ; Code 1871, §§ 1451, 1452, 1453. Not having discharged the duty to his new creditor which the law imposed upon him, he has subjected himself to a double payment of the debt.

Decree affirmed.