Court Opinion

ID: 4930634
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:07:04.622071+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:27.653334
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
Tenney, C. J.
By R. S., c. 81, § 68, and by R. S. of 1841, c. 114, § 14, it is provided that, when an action is brought in this State by any person not an inhabitant thereof, of who cannot be found therein, to be served with process, he shall be held to answer to any action brought against him by the defendant, if the demands are of such a nature that one judgment or execution can be set off against the other.
As between the parties upon the record, in the two cases in which the set-off is claimed by Charles S. Brown, the creditor in one and the debtor in the other, the provision of the statute quoted is applicable. But William W. Goddard in*421sists that the judgment against Brown was assigned to him, so that the set-off cannot be made, consistently with other provisions of the statute.
When an officer has in his hands executions, wherein the creditor in one is the debtor in the other, in the same capacity and trust, he shall cause one execution to satisfy the other, so far as it will extend; if one of such executions is in the hands of the officer, and the creditor in the other tenders his execution to him, and requests him so to do, he shall so set off one against the other. Executions shall not be so set off against each other, when the sum due on one of them has been lawfully and in good faith assigned to another person, before the creditor in the other execution became entitled to the sum due thereon. R. S., c. 84, § § 26 and 27.
When two actions, in the same Court and at the same time, wherein the plaintiffs in each are entitled to judgment, and wherein the creditor in one is the debtor in the other, and a motion is made to the Court to set one judgment off against the other, so far as one will extend towards the satisfaction of the other, the Court exercise the power to sustain sueh motion and make the set-off, if others’ rights do not interfere. And, ordinarily, this may be done whenever the executions issued upon such judgments could be legally set off, one against the other, by the officer who may have them in his hands for service. Makepeace V. Coates, and Coates v. Makepeace & al., 8 Mass., 451. And to enable a party to have the benefit of the exercise of such discretion in the Court, it has the power to withhold judgment, until the defendant, if he will use due diligence, shall obtain his judgment for damages; after which, one judgment may be set off against the other, or one execution may balance the other. Adams & als. v. Manning & als., 17 Mass., 178.
It cannot be doubted that, whenever a set-off can be made by the Court before which the actions are pending, or by the officer having executions, the creditor in one being the debtor in the other, “the demands are of such nature” as to be within the provisions of the statutes first referred to.
*422Assuming that Goddard was the assignee of the demand in favor of the New Haven Copper Company against Brown, in law and in good faith, before he can resist successfully the set-off, it must appear that the assignment to him was before Brown became entitled to the sum due to him, in his action against the same company.
The note on which Brown’s action was founded was dated January 4, 1857, nine months before the order by the treasurer of the company was drawn, and more than that before the order was accepted. The provision under which Goddard resists the set-off is an exception to the rule of the statute. In the case of Porter v. Leach, 13 Met., 482, where an officer, holding two executions, wherein the creditor in one was the debtor in the other, and refusing to make the set-off, as requested, was held liable in trespass, for taking the plaintiff’s property to satisfy that part of the execution which would have been discharged by the application of the amount of that in his favor, Wilde, J., who delivered the opinion of the Court, says, “ nor does it appear that the assignment was made before the plaintiff became entitled to the sum due on his execution, as the statute requires, in order to defeat his right of set-off.” The statute, under which the case cited was decided, is substantially the same as that under which the motion for a set-off in the case which is under our consideration, was made.
To bring the case within the exception in favor of an assignee, the burden of proof is on him. It has not been shown, or attempted to be shown, at what time Brown became the owner of the note, by indorsement and negotiation, which is the foundation of his suit. Hence it does not appear that he was not entitled to the sum due on that note, before the assignment to Goddard.
The proceedings before the Probate Court in Connecticut have no application to the question before us. The rights of Brown were in no manner involved therein.

Exceptions overruled.

Appleton, May, Goodenow, Davis, and Kent, J. J., concurred.