Court Opinion

ID: 3600058
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:46:43.54033+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:22:33.065173
License: Public Domain

By the judgment which Lawrence M. Fox recovered against the respondent, Peter G. Fox, as executor, the liability of the latter became fixed and settled for its payment, so far as the assets in his hands, in that capacity, lawfully permitted that to be done. As long as that judgment remains in force and unreversed, he cannot dispute the right of Lawrence M. Fox to the money recovered by it. That was conclusively established by the judgment. This result of the judgment was not confined to the immediate parties to it, but it included all those afterwards standing in privity with them, or either of them. (Castle v.Noyes, 4 Kernan, 329; Mead v. Mitchell, 17 N.Y., 210; 1 Greenleaf's Evidence, §§ 535-6.) If, therefore, the plaintiff had, by *Page 581 
assignment, become vested with an interest in the judgment equal to the debt owed him by Lawrence M. Fox, it would have remained as conclusive in his favor after such assignment, as it previously was in favor of the assignor who recovered it. The judgment debtor would have had no more legal right, in that case, to dispute or deny his liability to pay the amount assigned, than he would if the creditor had continued to retain and own it. And yet the transaction itself, by which the assignee would derive the title accompanying this right, would be exclusively confined to himself and the judgment creditor. The judgment debtor would be no further a party to it than as his liability to pay the proportion of the judgment assigned would necessarily be changed by the assignment. It would still remain fixed and settled, and the validity of the change would be in no manner dependent upon his assent. Notice to him of the assignment is all that the law would require, in order to render it his duty to observe the rights of the assignee, so far as he might afterwards voluntarily act in the payment of the amount assigned. These rights and obligations do not depend upon the fact of a voluntary transfer from the judgment creditor to the assignee. They arise out of the transfer of the title to the money recovered by the judgment. And they are incidents of it, whether it be voluntary in its nature or arise by the operation and force of legal proceedings. The end and object of the latter is the accomplishment of what is produced by the act of the parties in the former case. When, therefore, such proceedings prove to be effectual, they produce a similar transfer of title to that arising out of an actual assignment itself. And the judgment in favor of the party succeeding to it by force of his proceedings, is as conclusive in his favor as it was in favor of the creditor whose rights he may have acquired. And this was the theory of the plaintiff's action. For nothing is disclosed by his complaint contemplating any new or different proceedings against the judgment debtor for the collection of the judgment, than those provided for and directly and legally following its recovery. On the contrary, *Page 582 
the theory of the complaint is that the judgment should still be collected by execution, if the plaintiff proved successful in his action. The effect of that success being to render the execution, which, without it, would have been exclusively for his debtor's benefit, subservient to the payment of the amount due to the plaintiff. The only change contemplated or intended was the appropriation of so much of the judgment, as might be required for that purpose, to the payment of his own debt. And this was a contest entirely between the plaintiff and his debtor, the judgment creditor. Neither the presence nor the absence of the judgment debtor could have any effect whatever upon the disposition which the law required to be made of it.
The only fact alleged in the complaint beyond the recovery of the judgment, affecting the judgment debtor, was the notice which it was alleged had been given to him of the plaintiff's right to the money recovered by the judgment. As, to this, it was not claimed that any dispute or controversy existed, or that any design had been manifested by the judgment debtor of disregarding it. Neither was it alleged or claimed in the complaint that there was any danger that the rights of the plaintiff would be disregarded by the judgment debtor. No grounds for any relief against him were disclosed. The right to be maintained in the form in which it was asserted, was solely against the judgment creditor. And if that proved to be successful, the plaintiff demanded judgment that it should be enforced against the judgment debtor by the means provided by the law upon the recovery of the original judgment, and not by any new or peculiar proceeding resorted to or provided for by a court of equity. What the plaintiff desired as to the judgment debtor, was the execution, and nothing beyond that, so far as the complaint disclosed his purpose. And his right to that for the purpose of securing his own debt out of the judgment, depended solely upon the result of his controversy with his own debtor. He sought no further relief against the judgment debtor, but only to be substituted for the judgment creditor, so far as *Page 583 
that was rendered necessary for the collection of his own debt. To the controversy involving that result, the judgment debtor was neither a necessary nor a proper party. It neither affected his interest nor his liability. They were exactly the same whichever way the controversy terminated. He was bound to apply the assets in his hands, so far as they were legally applicable to that purpose, to the payment of the judgment recovered against him, and no further obligation was designed to be imposed upon him. And the plaintiff, by making him a party to the present action, could neither accelerate the payment nor increase the amount he had been previously required to pay. The judgment demanded could not affect his interest or his person in any respect whatever. It could only change the direction of his liability. And that would result, if produced at all, by its effect as an assignment from the judgment creditor to the plaintiff, and not from any recovery against the judgment debtor. This was not sufficient to create a cause of action as to the latter.
The rule upon this subject was stated by WOODWORTH, J., inReid v. Vanderheyden (5 Cowen, 733), as follows: "It is an elementary principle, recognized in all the books, that a person having no interest in the subject of dispute cannot be a party litigant; and I am not aware of a single exception in any one of our courts, whether proceeding according to the course of the common, civil or canon law. To show the nature and universality of the rule and illustrate and enforce it, we need only go to the doctrines of a court of equity, where the greatest possible latitude as to parties is indulged. There, not only must the original parties have an interest, but that interest is followed in all its changes."
The present case has no element which will bring it within this principle. The judgment debtor had no interest whatever that could legally or equitably be applied by it. And for that reason judgment was properly awarded to him by the court below. That judgment should therefore be affirmed. *Page 584 
HUNT, Ch. J., WOODRUFF, LOTT and MURRAY, JJ., concurred with MASON, J., for reversal.
GROVER and JAMES, JJ., concurred with DANIELS, J., for affirmance.
Order of General Term reversed, and Special Term affirmed with costs.