Hobart v. Andrews

Shaw, C. J.

It appears that before the failure of any ol the parties, or any assignment, Timothy H. Carter, holding the business notes of Carter, Hendee & Co. given by them to him for a full and valuable consideration, had indorsed them to Andrews, as collateral security for moneys advanced by him to said Carter, or raised for the use of Carter, on the credit of Andrews’s indorsement. Being notes given for value, and indorsed, Carter, Hendee & Co. were bound to pay the amount in full to the holder, whether the holder had or had not a claim to the full amount against the indorser ; and the obligation of Andrews was, to account for the surplus, if any — after his advances were paid and his indorsed notes taken up — with Timothy H. Carter. Upon this surplus, Carter, Hendee & Co. had no lien, and no claim of any sort, legal or equitable.

*267Suppose then it is true, as now claimed by the defendant, that at the time when Carter, Hendee & Co. made their assignment to trustees, in May 1834, of all their effects, Timothy H. Carter was indebted to them on account, in the sum of $ 5000 ; it was a personal debt, for which they had no security, and it passed, as a chose in action, to their assignees, Samuel G. Goodrich & others, and subsequently by assignment, from them to Bowen, Heywood and Andrews. They, as such assignees, had a claim, in the name of Carter, Hendee & Co. against Timothy H. Carter. But they had no means of charging it on the balance in the hands of Andrews, without some pledge or assignment of that balance by Timothy H. Carter ; and none such was made. Had the notes of Carter, Hendee & Co. to Timothy H. Carter been made without value received, for the accommodation of Timothy H. Carter, and by him pledged to Andrews to secure him for advances, then, as far as Andrews held for value, he could demand payment of the notes of Carter, Hendee & Co. ; but as to the surplus, not holding for value, he could not enforce payment, for the use and benefit of Timothy H. Carter ; because, as between him and the promisors, there was no real debt, and the holder could have no legal or equitable right to recover against them for his use, nor against their assignees, to whom their property had been assigned subject to the same equity. But they were not accommodation notes. They were negotiable notes given for value, duly indorsed so as to pass the whole property, and the indorsee and lawful holder of them was entitled to be paid in full ; and against such payment Carter, Hendee & Co., and their assignees, had no legal or equitable set-off in the debt due from Timothy H. Carter. Andrews, therefore, must recover the full amount of these notes, as against them, although such payment, with other funds, would place in his hands a surplus beyond what would be necessary to meet and reimburse his claims.

This surplus then, either actually existing, or depending upon the contingency of future collections, being in the hands of Andrews, without any lien thereon, or any equitable right of set-off, on the part of Carter, Hendee & Co., Timothy H. Carter had a *268disposing power over it, and could assign it in equity, as against them, to any person. In this state of things, he did, in May 1834, make an assignment of property for the benefit of his creditors, and in that assignment included this surplus, in terms ; and the equitable right to it then vested in his assignees. It made no difference that Andrews, from whom the balance was to come, was one of the assignees of Carter, Hendee & Co. ; he was also a creditor, holding their notes, and had a right tr recover the amount in full; and when recovered, he was accountable over to Timothy H. Carter and his assignees, in the same manner as if the money had come from any other source.

Nor does it make any difference, that the payment of those thirteen notes was effected by means of a provision for their being preferred, in the trust assignment of Carter, Hendee & Co. That assignment was not, in the first instance, made to Andrews and others. Andrews was then a stranger to it; and he and his co-assignees came in afterwards by an assignment from the first assignees. In making that assignment by Carter, Hendee & Co. to trustees for their creditors, it would have been competent for the parties to have limited the preference, therein provided for the thirteen notes held by Andrews, to such part of them as would be sufficient to pay and satisfy the demands of Andrews against Timothy H. Carter, and not have extended it farther. In that case, the creditors of Carter, Hendee & Co. would have had an equal share in the benefit of this surplus. But such limitation was not made. The notes were preferred in full, although they might be more than sufficient to pay Andrews. After the execution of that assignment, the time had passed for providing in it for any equitable set-off in favor of the creditors of Carter, Hendee & Go, by so limiting the preference, or otherwise.

It appears then, that at the time of T. H. Carter’s assignment for the benefit of his creditors, he had a right to dispose of this surplus in the hands of Andrews, and that he did dispose of it; and the only remaining ground relied upon is, that as Andrews afterwards became assignee of Carter, Hendee & Co. in trust for their creditors, he had the power to apply this surplus *269to their use, and thus set it off against the claims of Timothy H Carter and his assignees upon himself. What superior equity had the creditors of Carter, Hendee & Co. to this, over that of the creditors of Timothy H. Carter, to enable Andrews thus to defeat their claim against him personally ? Suppose that the assignees of Timothy H. Carter had brought an action against Andrews, or a bill in equity for an account; we do not perceive how he could have resisted that demand by showing that he and others had since become assignees of Carter, Hendee & Co., and as such, had a claim against Timothy H. Carter. He was but one of three assignees ; but had he been a sole trustee, it appears to us the result must be the same. His debt was due in his individual capacity ; his claim, merely as assignee and trustee for others. The demands, which he held, were held en autor droit, and seem not, therefore, the proper subject of a set-off, either legal or equitable. So, as it appears to us, it was understood by Andrews and his co-assignees ; and upon this principle they acted. Andrews himself never offered to bring that surplus into this trust fund ; and if the co-assignees did call upon him so to account for it, they did not persist in that claim, but, on the contrary, without relying on it, they closed this trust, settled with the creditors, and re-assigned the remaining effects to Carter, Hendee & Co. for their own use. Such is the effect of the provisional agreement of June 9th 1838, executed in 1839.

Carter, Hendee & Co. cannot claim this surplus, under their re-assignment, because it was no part of the effects, before transferred by them to their assignees. The debt of $ 5000, due from Timothy H. Carter to them, was originally assigned by them, and if this sum was not paid, in whole or in part, to the assignees, it was conveyed back to them by the re-assignment. But this gave them no claim to the surplus in the hands of Andrews. If therefore Andrews alone, or with the two other trustees, ever had a right of equitable set-off, or any power over this surplus, by refusing to pay the whole of the thirteen notes held by Andrews, under the trust for - preferring those notes, specifically or otherwise, yet they forbore to make that set-off. at *270the only time at which they could make it, that is, whilst they remained such assignees and trustees. The right or power, if it existed at all, was personal to them, in consequence of the ac cidental relation, in which Andrews at one time stood, as debtor in his own right to T. H. Carter, and creditor as assignee. The power ceased when that relation ceased, and when the effects of Carter, Hendee & Co. assigned to them, (including the simple contract debt due from T. H. Carter,) was reassigned. In whatever view, therefore, we consider it, we are of opinion that the right to this surplus passed to T. H. Carter’s assignees, and from them, by subsequent conveyance, to Hobart, and that, as Hobart has deceased since the bill was filed, his administrator is entitled to a decree for the amount.