Court Opinion

ID: 7091125
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:06:09.849651+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:05.825257
License: Public Domain

Stockton, J.(1)
Tbe complainants allege, as tbe ground *166of their claim for set-off against the defendant Milburn, that he is insolvent; that Davis, one of the complainants, and the principal in the judgment sought to be enjoined, has large claims against him unpaid and unsatisfied, on which he has commenced suit, claiming to recover a large amount; that the suit is undetermined, but will be for trial at the next term of the District Court of Yan Burén county; and complainants pray that when such judgments may be obtained by said Davis, he may be allowed to set • off so much of the same as may be necessary to pay and satisfy the judgment of defendant Milburn, against them; and in the meantime, and until such judgment is recovered, that Milburn maybe enjoined from■ executing his said judgment, an execution issued on which has been levied on the property of petitioners, Mayne and Shepperd, they being only the sureties of Davis, for the payment of the damages, recovered against him by Milburn. It is further alleged by complainants, that they were prevented by the District Court, from setting off the said indebtedness of Milburn to Davis,, in the suit in which the judgment against them was recovered by the strict rules of the common law, and because the said claims were- in different rights.
The known rule of courts of equity is, that they follow the law in regard to matters of set-off, unless there is some intervening equity going beyond the statute of set-offj which constitutes the basis of set-off at- law. Such natural equity arises where there are mutual credits between the parties ; or where there is an existing debt on one side, which constitutes the ground of a credit on the other; or where there is an express or implied understanding, that the mutual debts shall be a satisfaction or set-off, pro tanto, between the parties. Howe v. Shepperd, 2 Sumner, 412. It is said by Judge Story (2 Story Eq. Juris. § 1435), that by mutual credit, in the sense in which the term is here used, we are to understand a knowledge in both sides of an existing debt, due to one party, founded on and trusting such debt as a means of discharging it. The mere existence of distinct debts, without mutual credit, will not 'give a right of set-off *167in equity. Whether in a ease of mutual debts, in the same right, as, for example, mutual joint debts, or mutual seperate debts, the insolvency of either party would entitle the other to set off his debt against the debt of the insolvent party, without any other intervening equity, seems at one time to have been doubted'in England. 1 Atkins’Rep. 231. The doctrine, however, seems to be well established in this country, and courts of equity have entertained the jurisdiction of cases of set-off, when there has been an obstacle to the complainant’s proceeding at law, who seeks to set off his claim, such as insolvency, non-residence, or the like. Tribble v. Taul, 7 Monroe, 457; Simson v. Hart, 14 Johnson, 63; Talbot v. Warfield, 3 J. J. Mar. 86; Buckmaster v. Grund, 3 Gilman, 626. And although courts of equity have held that joint and separate debts cannot be set off against each other in equity, any more than at law (Date v. Cooke, 4 Johnson Ch. 11; Jackson v. Robertson, 3 Mason, 138), yet it has been held, that where there is some new equity to justify it, there may be such set-off. And such equity may arise under circumstances of fraud, or where the party seeking relief, is only a surety for a debt really separate. Green v. Darling, 5 Mason, 209; Jackson v. Roberson, 3 Ib. 145 ; 2 Story’s Eq. Jurisprudence, § 1437.
So far, we do not see that the objection to the relief asked by complainants can be resisted, on the ground that the claim sought to be set off did not arise from mutual credits given by the parties to each other, or are not cognizable in equity. It is further objected to the relief sought by complainants, that the demands against Milburn sought by them to be.set off against the judgment, have not been settled and liquidated at law; and that where they are uncertain and unliquidated, they are not the proper subject of a set-off in equity, any more than at law. The petition alleges, that the said Milburn is indebted to the said Davis in large sums of money, to wit, in the sum of five thousand dollars, of which, six hundred and twenty-seven dollars, is due on a contract between Davis and Milburn, about the cutting of timber and saw logs on Davis’s land; two hundred and sixty *168dollars, for judgments obtained before a justice of the peace of Yan Burén county; ninety-eight dollars, for an account assigned to Davis, by one Pfouts of said county; two hundred-dollars, for other just claims; and for the rent of a mill and distillery for the term of two years and three months, at fifteen dollars per day; and that suits for the recovery of these claims, are pending and undecided.
We do not know that this objection, that the claims of Davis are unliquidated, would of itself be -sufficient to defeat the complainants’ right to relief; although the .doctrine contended for by defendant’s counsel, is well established by the authorities cited, and others. See Livingston v. Livingston, 4 Johnson C. 286; Derman v. Lyon, 3 Ib. 351; Parkinson v. Prousdall, 3 Scammon, 370; Patterman v. Pierce, 3 Hill, 174; Patrick v. Livingston, 3 J. J. Mar. 655.
In Jones v. Waggoner, 7 J. J. Mar. 147, it is held, that where the chancellor has jurisdiction of a case by injunction, or otherwise, he will do justice between the parties; and the insolvency of the defendant, being admitted, he will decree as a set-off against the. judgment at law, damages growing out of a breach of covenant, and the same being fixed by the contract and the law, he will assess them. We are inclined to the opinion, that in such a case as the present, where no other special equities intervene, the court should not deny the relief, on the ground, that the damages are not ascertained, but allow the complainants to have the damages of Davis ascertained, and when ascertained, allow the same to be set off pro tanto, against the judgment of Milburn. If there were no other equity interposing, we should be disposed to sustain the injunction granted to complainants. The case presented in this petition is, prima facie, sufficient to entitle them to the relief sought.
Let us see how the case stands, in the aspect in which it is presented by the petition of Winsell. He became the assignee of the balance due on the judgment in good faith, for a valuable consideration, and' without any notice or knowledge of the matters .charged in the complainants’ peti-. tion, as existing 'between Davis and Milburn, on the 1st, *169May, 1854. It is claimed that the judgment was not assignable at common law, and has not been made so by the Code; and that the assignee takes it subject to all the equL* ties, existing between the original parties to the judgment itself. If this were true in the full sense claimed by complainants, that is very different from admitting that he takes it subject to all equities subsisting between the parties, as to other transactions. There is a wide distinction between the cases. An assignment of a chose in action, conveys merely the rights which the assignor then possesses to that thing.But such an assignment does not necessarily draw after it, all equities of an independent nature. Greene v. Dailey, 5 Mason, 214; Murray v. Lilburn, 2 John. C. 442. In the case of Makpeace v. Coats, 8 Mass. 451, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts refused to permit one judgment to be set off against another, between the same parties, when it appeared that persons, other than the nominal creditor, were interested by assignment of the demand, on which one of the judgments was rendered. In Merrill v. Souther, 6 Dana, 805, the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, held, that where an insolvent debtor in a judgment, obtained a smaller judgment, against the plaintiff, the latter has, eo instanti, an equitable right to set off his judgment against it; and the former cannot deprive him of his-right, by assigning his judgment. The assignee takes only an equity, and his equity is inferior to the equity of the plaintiff. See also Robbins v. Holley, 1 Mon. 191. The right of set-off here, became absolute as soon as the latter judgment was obtained.
In the present case, the facts, which give to the complainants, the right to come into a court of equity, to seek to enforce the set-off not permitted at law, are the alleged insolvency of Milburn, and his absence from the state. The petition, however, does not state, nor are we elsewhere informed, at what time his insolvency or absence commenced, nor whether, it existed at the time of the judgment, or before the assignment to Winsell or not. It appears that he was absent and insolvent at the time of the bill filed; but how long before does not appear, and particularly does it *170not appear, whether such alleged insolvency and absence, existed before the rights of Winsell accrued. The right of the complainants to set off the claims of Davis against the judgment of Milburn, did not exist eo instanti, with the rendition of the judgment against them. The mere fact, that such set-off would have been in conformity with the principles of natural equity and justice, is not sufficient, of itself, to bring it within the jurisdiction of a court of equity; and even where.there are mutual debts, which may be set off in equity, “the right of set-off is extinguished by a bona fide assignment of one of the debts. Howe v. Shepperd, 2 Sumner, 411. Before the application in this case for a set-off, all the right of Milburn in the judgment against Davis, had been assigned to Winsell, and the equity of Winsell is both fair in point of time,' and better in point of right, than that of complainants in regard to the judgment.
On the case made by the petition, and the answer of Winsell, we think the District Court erred in refusing to dissolve the injunction. Winsell, as a bona fide assignee of the judgment, for a valuable consideration, and without any notice of the equity alleged in complainants’ petition, is entitled to 'collect the balance of the judgment, unless the aspect of the case is changed by the testimony, and by other facts not now presented by the record.
We have omitted any mention of the matters presented by the answer of Hall, because, as we gather from the statement of Winsell, there is no disagreement between himself and Hall, as to the claim for attorney’s fees. So also have we omitted any notice of the aspect of the case presented by the garnishee process of Jesse Wear. It is not stated when the notice to appear and answer as garnishees, was served on complainants, nor does it appear that it was before the assignment of the judgment to Winsell. The complainants’ petition was filed March 12, 1255, in which it is stated, that they are requested to answer as garnishees at the next term of the District Court of Jefferson county. The assignment to Winsell was May 1st, 1854, and we do not see, but that complainants would be able to protect themselves by their *171answer as garnishees, from all liability or danger of being required to pay the amount due on the judgment twice over.
The order of the District Court overruling the motion to dissolve the injunction, is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to dissolve the injunction, unless complainants shall strengthen the equitable grounds for continuing the same, by showing other facts, not now before us, either by amended petition, ór replication to defendant Winsell’s answer.
Judgment reversed.

 Wright, C. J., having been of counsel, took no part in the decision of this cause.