Court Opinion

ID: 3596648
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:43:52.37722+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:45:25.113419
License: Public Domain

The alteration of the practice, allowing the beneficial owner of a chose in action, not negotiable at law, to sue thereon in his own name, does not change the actual rights of the parties to any assignment of it. The defendants in this *Page 491 
action are therefore entitled to the same defence which they would have had if the former rule had continued to prevail, and this action had been brought in the name of Watrous  Lawrence, and to no other or different defence. The assignee would have been protected in his equitable rights, notwithstanding the non-negotiable nature of the contract, to the same extent that he is entitled to have them protected now that he can prosecute in his own name. The change effected by the Code is simply as to the form in which the action is to be carried on.
An assignee of a chose in action not negotiable, who has given notice of the assignment, is not liable to be prejudiced by any new dealings between the original parties to the contract; but he takes the contract assigned subject to all the rights which the debtor had acquired prior to the assignment, or to the time notice was given of it, where there is an interval between the execution of the transfer and the notice. When this assignment was executed, the defendants, by accepting the order for the manufacture of the utensils, and entering upon the execution of the work, may have reckoned upon paying the debt which they owed to Watrous  Lawrence in that way. If they had completed it before the assignment, the right to a set-off would have attached, of which the defendants would not have been deprived by any act of Watrous  Lawrence; but, unfortunately for the defendants, no debt had arisen in their favor when Watrous 
Lawrence failed and made their assignment; and when a debt afterwards came into existence, by the completion of the work, the demand against the defendants had become the property of the plaintiff as a trustee for the creditors of the insolvent debtors. The rule of law applicable to the case is stated in 2d Revised Statutes, 354, section 18, subdivision 8. To understand the provision, we must bear in mind that, when it was enacted, non-negotiable contracts could only be prosecuted in the name of the original promisee or creditor. It declares that, in an action founded upon a contract not negotiable, which has been assigned by the plaintiff, a demand existing against him at the time of the assignment, *Page 492 
and belonging to the defendant before notice of the assignment, may be set off against the plaintiff's debt, if the demand be such as might have been set off against the plaintiff while the contract sued on belonged to him. If this suit had been prosecuted in the name of Watrous  Lawrence, for the benefit of their assignee, under the law as it stood before the Code, the defendants' claim for a set-off would have been regulated by this provision; and the condition, that the demand proposed to be set off must have been one existing against the assignors before the assignment, and have been capable of being set off against them while the contract sued on belonged to them, would have been fatal to the defendants. I have said that the change in the practice does not affect the right to set off. It certainly does not improve the defendants' condition; for the set-off, if the demand was perfect at the time of the assignment, would not be within the words of the statute, for it would not be against the plaintiff, but against his assignors. Still, it would, no doubt, be within its spirit. The defendants' difficulty is, that, at the time of the assignment, they had no demand against any one.
A question somewhat similar to this arose in the late Court of Chancery. The complainant had held the note of one Isaacs, but had indorsed and transferred it to a third person. Afterwards he became indebted to Isaacs, and gave him his notes for $700. Before the note made by Isaacs to the plaintiff, and which the latter had transferred, had matured, Isaacs failed and made an assignment to the defendant for the benefit of his creditors. After that, the complainant was obliged to take up Isaacs' note which he had indorsed, and he filed the bill against the assignee of Isaacs to compel a set-off of his note against the notes which passed by the assignment. The bill was dismissed, on the ground that no right to a set-off existed when Isaacs made the assignment, though the complainant was then contingently liable on his indorsement, and after the assignment was compelled to take up the note. He then, for the first time, had a demand capable of being set off; but before it arose in his favor, Isaacs had ceased to have a corresponding demand *Page 493 
against him, so that there was not, at any time, any mutual credits or mutual demands. (Chance v. Isaacs, 5 Paige, 592.) So here, there was a contract between Watrous  Lawrence and the defendants, which, if performed by the latter, would create a demand in their favor against them; but, at the time of the assignment, no demand had arisen. A similar principle was determined in this court in Bradley v. Angel (3 Comst., 475). The complainants filed a bill to compel the set-off of notes which they held against the defendant's testator, payable in one and two years, against a debt which they owed the testator in his lifetime, payable presently; and they showed that the testator died insolvent. The relief was denied, on the ground that it would change the contract of the parties, to the prejudice of the other creditors of the testator. At the time of the assignment to the plaintiff, in this case, the demand of the defendants had not matured so as to be the subject of a set-off; and when it had so matured, the demand against them, on which this suit is brought, had passed into the hands of the plaintiff, against whom they had no claim whatever. If there had been an express agreement that Watrous  Lawrence would receive their pay for the merchandise sold the defendants in articles to be manufactured by them, the demand would not have been collectible until after a default of the defendants in executing their orders. But the judge has found that there was not any such agreement. There was no relation, therefore, between the claims of the respective parties other than that which always exists between persons having reciprocal demands against each other. The rule is, that when such claims exist in a perfect condition at the same time, either party may insist upon a set-off. So, where the one claiming a set-off has a demand against the other, presently payable, and the other party is insolvent, the former may claim to have the set-off made, though the demand of his adversary against him has not become payable. But if, before the demand of the party claiming the set-off becomes mature, the opposite claim has been assigned, whether the assignment carries the legal or only an equitable title, the *Page 494 
right of set-off no longer exists. This is the present case, and the set-off cannot, in my opinion, be claimed.
The judgment must be reversed, and a new trial ordered.
DAVIES and CLERKE, Js., expressed no opinion; all the other judges concurring,
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered.