Williams v. West Chicago St. R. R.

Mr. Presiding Justice Freeman

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is first contended by the attorney for appellants that the assignment of the judgment against the street railroad company from Samuel Williams to R. M. Wing is absolutely void; upon the alleged ground that having been executed and delivered before the judgment was actually entered, there was nothing to which it could then attach; that it assigned a judgment which had no existence. But as between the parties, the assignment of the judgment must be regarded as a valid agreement. It was not an assignment of a mere claim against the railroad company, but of a judgment; in effect an agreement that the judgment when entered should be transferred to the assignee upon the terms and conditions in the instrument specified. If no such judgment had ever been rendered, then the contract of assignment would not have become operative. It was in effect a present executory contract which would and did become operative when the subject-matter of the agreement came into being. (2 Story’s Equity Jur., Sec. 1040.) There is a distinction between an assignment purporting to convey a mere claim, or an interest in a verdict, and a transfer of the judgment itself, and the mere fact that the assignment was prepared and executed in anticipation of the judgment can not affect its validity. It conveyed, not a mere right to litigate, but the result of litigation. In Schubert v. Herzberg, 65 Missouri App. 578, 584, a case of garnishment, where there was a conflict between an assignee under an assignment of a judgment executed before the judgment was entered and a garnishor of the judgment debtor, it is said that in so far “ as the assignment pretended to transfer the cause of action, it was clearly of no validity. We know of no rule, however, that would render the assignment non-effective as to the judgment thereafter entered.” Courts of equity support assignments, not only of choses in action, but “also of things which have no present, actual or potential existence, but rest in possibility only. In respect to the latter, it is true that the assignment can have no positive operation to transfer in presentí, property in things not in esse; but it operates by way of present contract, to take effect and attach to the things assigned when and as soon as they come in esse; and it may be enforced as such contract in rem in equity.” (Crum v. Sawyer, 132 Ill. 443-460, quoting from Mitchell v. Winslow, 2 Story, 630-639.) In the last mentioned case the court further says (p.644): “It seems to me as a clear result of all the authorities that wherever the parties, by their contract, intended to create a positive lien or charge, either upon real or personal property, whether then owned by the assignor or contractor or not, or if personal property, whether it is then in esse or not, it attaches in equity as a lien or charge upon the particular property as soon as the assignor or contractor acquires title thereto, against the latter and all persons asserting a claim thereto under him, either voluntarily, or with notice, or in bankruptcy.” By the statute every garnishee is allowed all demands “ of which he could have availed himself if he had not been summoned as garnishee (R. S., Chap. 62, Sec. 13), and the court is vested with certain equitable powers in cases of garnishment and empowered to make all orders “ which may be necessary or equitable between the parties.” . (Idem., Sec. 24.) “ In garnishee proceedings courts of law will notice and protect the interests of equitable owners of choses in action.” Horn v. Booth, 22 Ill. App. 385-388; Sheldon v. Hinton, 6 Ill. App. 216-221.

But there is another view of the transaction which is, we think, fatal to appellants’ contention in this case. It is apparent from the evidence that the assignment was not intended to be regarded as delivered or to go into effect until the judgment should be entered. It was made just prior to the disposition of a pending motion for a new trial in the suit of the assignor against the street railroad company, which the assignor and assignee both knew would be overruled, because the court had stated this would be done in case the assignor consented to a remittitur from the amount of the verdict returned by the jury in his favor. The assignor bad concluded to make such remittitur, and had so instructed his attorneys. Both parties knew, therefore, that the motion for a new trial would in all probability be at once overruled and judgment entered accordingly in favor of the assignor. It was therefore in contemplation of the immediate entry of the judgment,'and that the assignment thereof might be ready to be recorded in the office of the clerk of court contemporaneously with the judgment; that the document was prepared and executed, to take .effect when the judgment should be entered. Such being the manifest intention of the parties, thé fact that it was actually executed a half hour before the judgment is not material. The assignment and the judgment were practically contemporaneous and went into effect together, when the judgment was entered and the assignment filed for record. As is said in Parsons on Contracts, 184, “ As to what constitutes delivery, regard must be had to all the facts bearing upon the question, and especially to the character of the transaction and the interest of the parties, in order to ascertain if the delivery be such as the nature of the case admits.” The facts in the present case indicate an intention to have the assignment take effect only upon entry of the judgment. The assignment of the judgment to E. M. Wing must, we think, be regarded as valid beyond question as to his own or his firm’s interest therein.

It is urged, however, that said assignment is not valid against beneficial creditors of Samuel Williams, so far as it seeks to convey the balance for the benefit of the son George S. Williams, and that the subsequent separate assignment to George S. Williams is invalid. The delivery of the separate assignment to Leach, by whom it was drawn, at the request of said George S. Williams, was a delivery to the latter, it appearing that Leach acted as agent and attorney in so receiving it. hi or can it be attacked as fraudulent in that it created a secret trust unless such trust was for the benefit of the assignor; and whatever suspicions may exist as to the latter’s interest, the undisputed evidence is that it was not for his benefit, but for the payment to the son of an actual existing indebtedness greater than the balance of the judgment so assigned. Whether the assignment had been executed and delivered at the time of the service of the garnishee summons upon the railroad company as judgment debtor is a question of fact upon which the evidence, if not conflicting, is not absolutely convincing. The burden of proof was on the garnishors. (Horn v. Booth, 22 Ill. App. 385-390; Sheldon v. Hinton, 6 Ill. App. 216-222.) The trial court seems to have found the issue in favor of appellees. There was at the most but a difference of seven minutes between the assignment and the service of garnishee’s summons. The court which saw and heard the witnesses was in a better position to judge as to the value of the evidence than we can be from the record only.

It is urged, however, that the separate assignment to George S. Williams had been held invalid by this court in Williams v. West Chicago St. R. R. Co., 85 Ill. App. 305. This is a misapprehension. In that case George S. Williams did not appear and there was no evidence introduced in that case that he knew of the execution or delivery to Leach of the assignment in his favor. It is there said: “ Under the facts as they appear in this record, said assignment to him is not valid and enforceable as against third parties. To make it valid it must have been delivered to him or to some one authorized by him to accept it. There was no such delivery.” In the present case the delivery is proven.

It is urged that the court erred in refusing to hold certain propositions of law. But those propositions were either not applicable to the facts or were unsound in themselves, and we find no error in the court’s action in that respect.

Eor do we find any harmful error in "the admission of evidence. It appears that Samuel Williams, in conversation with Mr. Wing at the time' of the preparation of the assignment to the latter, directed it to be made so as to cover the whole judgment, and the assignee agreed with him to hold half of it for the firm in payment for legal services as previously agreed, and the balance for George S. Williams in' payment of the assignor’s debt to him. We find no error in the admission of this evidence. It explains at least the reason for the assignment to Wing of the entire judgment. There was then no garnishment pending, and the transaction was, so far as appears, entirely proper and in good faith, and the evidence was competent.

The appellants herein, claiming a beneficial interest in the judgment by virtue of the service of the garnishee summons, stand only in the shoes of Samuel Williams, their judgment debtor. If he parted with all interest in the judgment in his favor beforé the service of the garnishee summons so that he could not claim the money against Wing and his son George S. Williams, then neither can the garnishors so claim it. It is not disputed that the assignment to Wing was filed for record and attached to the entry of the judgment before the service and probably before the issue of the garnishee summons. This ivas notice to all parties, and in view of the evidence we are not disposed to attach final importance to the exact time of the execution and delivery of the second assignment to George S. Williams. This last was in pursuance of the agreement made prior to and in part evidenced by the original assignment to Wing. It was made when the parties had no knowledge of the garnishment proceedings. It constitutes documentary evidence of the trust created by the first assignment transferring the whole judgment to Wing; and we are of opinion that whether made a few moments before or after the service of the garnishee summons is not of controlling importance, because Samuel Williams had previously parted with all his interest in the judgment, had precluded himself from claiming any interest therein, and his judgment creditors standing in his shoes were in no better position. Sheldon v. Hinton,supra (p. 224).

The judgment of the Circuit Court must be affirmed.