The civil law had a process of intervention, by which a person not originally a party to a suit, but claiming an interest in the subject-matter in dispute, interposed his claim and filed process on his own independent title, and asserted a right to the thing in controversy against all the other parties, and insisted on his right to intervene in the discussion. So there was a process of interpleader at common law, and the statute (1, 2, Wm. IV, chap. 58) was called the interpleader act, and provided, where a defendant claimed no interest in the money or property for which the action was brought, and a claim was made thereto by another who had sued or was expected to sue therefor, he might before pleading apply for relief under that statute. Such relief, however, as could be obtained at law was found inadequate in many cases, and courts of equity took jurisdiction to compel interpleader, following the analogies of the law and borrowing their bill from the old process of the common law. This.remedy in equity was applicable “where two or more persons claim the same thing under different titles or-in separate interests.” (Story’s Eq. Jur., § 806.)
Then our old Code of Procedure provided for substantially the same relief by order on motion, without the length of a law suit; and now the Code of Civil Procedure, by section 820, provides that a defendant, against whom an action to recover upon a contract or an action of ejectment or an action to recover a chattel is pending, may at any time before answer * * * apply to the court * * * for an order to substitute that person in his place. * * * The court may, in its discretion, make such order.” It was not the design of either of these codes to introduce new cases *505of interpleader, but merely to provide a summary proceeding where interpleader is proper. If no relief could be obtained by bill in equity for interpleader, then it wonld be an indefensible exercise of judicial discretion and power to mahe the substitution, on motion, under the Code. The facts' in this case are these: The defendant collected $153.30 for one Comerford from persons indebted to her, and thereby became indebted to her for that sum. She then assigned her claim against the defendant to the plaintiffs, and the defendant had notice of the assignment; and this action is brought for the recovery of the claim so assigned. Now the defendant, on an affidavit that several persons claim this money on judgments obtained against the assignor, has obtained an order for their substitution as defendants.
An appeal has been taken from this order, and under the rules governing interpleader it cannot be sustained. There is no adverse claim to the debt of the defendant. When he collected the money for the assignor he became her debtor, and a payment to her would have discharged his liability, and after the assignment to the plaintiffs, payment to them would have had the same effect. The claimants substituted by this order only ask to have the money paid on their judgments. They claim no present interest in the debt. That is a chose in action merely, and the assignment transferred it to the plaintiff. There is here no controversy over the right of property, and no question whether the plaintiff or the substituted claimants own the debt. They do not claim to own it. Their claim would have been the same if the action had been brought by the assignor for whom the money was collected, and it would hardly be claimed that interpleader would have been proper in that event. (Sherman v. Partridge, 11 How., 154; Fletcher v. Savings Bank, 14 id., 383.)
The order appealed from must be reversed, with costs and disbursements^''
Barnard, P. J., and Gilbert, J., concurred.Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.