Court Opinion

ID: 8059351
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 04:36:22.105616+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:37:59.149835
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Scudder, J.
The right to set off one judgment against another, or, more properly, to pay and satisfy one judgment by another, where the person holding the one judgment is liable under the other, has often been exercised to prevent circuity of action, and to so control the judgment and process of the court as to do justice between the parties. The recent case of Brown ads. Hendrickson, 10 Vroom 239, discusses this subject in its application to the facts of that case, and makes full proof of the jurisdiction and power of the court in like cases, by many citations.
In that case, George W. Brown, the defendant in the second action, was the holder of a judgment against the plaintiff, by assignment, before the judgment was obtained against him. His right therefore attached, the moment the judgment was obtained by Hendrickson against him, to have the judgment assigned to him applied to the payment of this subsequent judgment.
In this ease, after McAdams had obtained a finding in his favor by the Circuit Court, acting without jury, by consent, in December, 1878, before the entry of judgment nisi, at February Term, 1879, to wit, on January 22d, 1879, he assigned the finding, and whatever right he might have under it, calling it a judgment, to Susan McAdams. There is no question made that this was a bona fide transfer for a valuable *334consideration. The legal effect of such assignment would be that the judgment nisi, and the final judgment subsequently obtained, would enure to the benefit of the assignee, Susan McAdams, as between the parties to that record. At the time she took this interest and right to judgment, by assignment, Isaac E. Randolph had no judgment that he could legally or equitably set off against it.
Hassel had obtained a decree for deficiency against John McAdams, in the Court of Chancery, January 15th, 1878, which was docketed in the Supreme Court, June 13th, 1878, and from that time operated as a judgment of this court, under this statute; but this decree or judgment was not assigned to Randolph until March 19th, 1879, nearly two months after the assignment of the other judgment to Susan McAdams, and after the February Term of this court, when judgment nisi might be entered.
Hassel had no right to off-set, but he could transfer to Randolph ; and at the time Randolph took the assignment from him, all John McAdams’ claim, finding, and interest in the judgment against Randolph had been duly assigned to Susan McAdams. As between these two holders of judgments by assignment, claiming preference, she is prior in time, and has the right and equity to be paid first, by the judgment which has been assigned to her.
This application being addressed to the legal discretion of the court, for the convenience and equitable relief of the parties, without any fixed right of set-off by statute or otherwise, I think this defendant, in the judgment against him, which has been assigned in good faith, has no right or equity to offset against it a judgment which he purchased subsequent to such assignment, doubtless for the very purpose of using it in this form.
The order for set-off will be refused.