Pheiffer v. Harris

JUDGE LINDSAY

delivered ti-ie opinion op the court.

Pheiffer sued Harris on a promissory note for the sum of $500. Harris made defense, and pending the litigation — to wit, on the 7th of November, 1874 — Pheiffer assigned the claim to A. E. Wilson, in payment of a subsisting debt the latter held against him. On the 11th of this same month judgment was rendered against Harris for the sum of $250. ■ On the 14th he moved for a new trial, and on the same day the assignment of the claim to Wilson was filed with the papers of the case. On the 28th the motion for a new trial was overruled, and immediately thereafter Harris, upon written grounds, moved the court to set off against this judgment a judgment and execution rendered and issued in the same court in favor of Werne against Pheiffer, which had been for a valuable consideration transferred and assigned to him by Werne. This assignment seems to have been made on the 14th of November. Wilson and Werne were made parties to the motion. Upon hearing the court below allowed the set-off, except as to $50, the amount due to Wilson as attorney for Pheiffer in the action against Harris. To reverse this order Wilson and Pheiffer prosecute this appeal.

According to section 407 of the Civil Code of Practice, *402“judgments for the recovery of money may be set off against each other, having due regard to the legal and equitable rights of all persons interested in both judgments.”

It is admitted that Plieiffer is insolvent, and that when Harris purchased Werue’s judgment he had no notice of the assignment by Plieiffer to Wilson.

Proceedings to set off one judgment against another are not in every respect similar to those to set off independent and disconnected claims in actions before judgment. Section 31 of the Civil Code provides that in case of an assignment of a thing in action, except bills of exchange, promissory notes placed upon the footing of bills of exchange, common orders and checks, the action by the assignee shall be without prejudice to any discount, set-off) or defense allowed by law. But the language of this section confines its application to discounts, set-offs, and defenses asserted pending the action by the assignee. It does not purport to and does not affect the right to set off judgments against each other. This right is regulated by section 407, heretofore quoted. It can onty be exercised in cases in which the legal and equitable rights of all those interested in both judgments can be respected and upheld. It will not be exercised to the prejudice of a bona fide assignee. (Davidson for McKim v. Geoghagan, 3 Bibb, 233.)

Wilson is a bona fide assignee, and was in equity the owner of the judgment against Harris when it was rendered. It is perfectly clear that if Harris had bought the judgment from Werne with notice of Wilson’s claim he could not have made it available as a set-off against it, either at law or in equity. His want of notice does not in our opinion improve his position. The right to use against an assignee debts due by the assignor and purchased before notice of the assignment is a statutory right, and the statute does not provide that it may be enforced after judgment. In this case Wilson is the equitable owner of the judgment against Harris, and Harris the equit*403able owner of the judgment against Pheiffer. Neither party can claim to hold a legal advantage over the other. If, under such circumstances, a court of law has jurisdiction to act at all (a question we do not decide), it certainly can not afford relief which the chancellor would deny. As Harris can not have relief without disregarding the rights of Wilson, whose equities are superior to his, in point of time at least, and who has acted in Hie transaction with equal good faith, his motion should have been overruled.

The order appealed from is reversed and the cause is remanded for a judgment consistent with this opinion.