Kelso v. Beaman

Porter, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 21st August, 1828, one Gilbert C. Russell, mortgaged to the defendant a plantation and slaves. The deed expresses that lien was furnished to secure him for advances he had made on behalf of the mortgager, to the amount of seven thousand eight hundred and ninety dollars.

The 30th October, 1829, several judgment creditors of Russell, seized the slaves which had been mortgaged to the defendant, and proceeded to sell them. At the sale the defendant became the purchaser, for the sum of two thousand dollars above the amount for which they had been previously hypothecated to him.

The succeeding year, the plaintiff, who was also a judgment creditor of Russell, seized and sold all the interest either actual or residuary which Russell had in or to twelve hundred dollars of that sum of seven thousand eight hundred and ninety dollars, which by the act of mortgage, he had declared was due to the defendant Beaman.

This seizure could only have been made on the suspicion that the whole of seven thousand eight hundred and ninety dollars, which Russell acknowledged he had been paid by Beaman, was not so in. fact.

A debt as between debtor and creditor is indivisible, without the consent of both. The legal transferee has no greater interest than the voluntary one. The 651st article of the Code of Practice, does not change the rights which under law third persons had to resist partial transfers of their debts

This suspicion appears to be well founded, for by the evidence now before as, it appears that the defendant acknowledged by an instrument of writing, that only three thousand five hundred and forty-two dollars and eighty-two cents was due to him, and that he was ready to reconvey the slaves to Russell, as soon as there was paid to him this sum, together with that of two thousand dollars, which he had advanced at the sheriff sale, and other sums for which he had become responsible.

The petition states that the defendant in consequence of the purchase of Russell’s residuary interest by the plaintiff is indebted to him in the sum of twelve hundred dollars.

The view we have taken of the case, renders it unnecessary to decide what was the effect of the lien on the debt in the defendant’s hands.

The return of the sheriff and his act of sale to the plaintiff state that he secured whatever interest either actual or residuary which G. C. Russell had in twelve hundred dollars of the sum of seven thousand eight hundred and ninety dollars, acknowledged to be due to Beaman by the act of mortgage.

It was decided in the case of King et al. vs. Havard, in this court on principles which are incontestible, and on the highest authority, that a debt as between creditor and debtor, was indivisible without the consent of both. See 5 JY. S. 194.

The legal transfer in in our opinion can have no greater interest than the voluntary one. The 651st article of the Code of Practice, with all the rest of the section to which it belongs, treats of the rights of the plaintiff and defendant in execution, and cannot on any sound principles be held to change the rights which under law third persons had to resist partial transfers of their debt. The sheriff must sell the entire debt; he could not sell half the defendant’s interest in a slave, though the whole might amount to more than the execution in his hands.

The judgment of the court below is unclerical and somewhat abmiguous, we understand it to be one of non-suit, and as such it is ordered, adjudged and decreed, that it be affirmed with costs.