delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Mann Construction Company entered into a contract with Greene county, through .the county’s road commission, to construct a number of roads, involving an expenditure of about $200,000. To obtain money for this purpose Greene county, under legislative authority, issued $200,000 of bonds. It was necessary to sell these bonds to go on with the work, and the Mann Construction Company was vitally interested in this sale, so the construction company entered into a contract with W. W.' Willis, of Knoxville, and Caldwell & Co., of Nashville, bond brokers, whereby it agreed to pay these brokers three per cent, of the amount realized on the bonds if a specified sale was made. At the time the effort was made to float said bends, the market was greatly demoralized.
The brokers sold the bonds according to contract, but +he Mann Construction Company failed to pay them.
This bill was filed by Willis and Caldwell & Co., in which, they alleged the facts above stated, and further set out that there was due to the construction company from Greene county a certain sum of money for the work done by the construction company and its subcontractors during the month of June, 1920, and a further sum held back by the county as retainage out of the estimates on the whole work. The bill was filed July 1, 1920, and sought to subject the June estimates of the construction company and the retainage in the hands of the county or its road commissioners to the satisfaction of complainants’ demand against thé construction company. An injunction was obtained restraining the county and road commis*323sioners from disposing of these fnnds. The bill contained other averments which will be noticed later.
After this bill was filed a number of- persons having claims for labor done for the construction company on said, roads filed petitions in the cause, asserting that they were entitled to a lien and a prior claim on all the assets of the construction company, including the fund above mentioned, under statutes enacted to this end.
Certain subcontractors under the construction company filed petitions, averring that the construction company had made to them equitable assignments of the greater part of the aforesaid funds in the hands of Greene county or its road commissioners. These subcontractors also sought to hold the sureties upon a bond which the Mann Construction Company had executed in accordance with chapter 182 of the Acts of 1899 (Thompson’s Shannon’s Code, sections 113oa-1135a3). This bond was also conditioned to save Greene county harmless from any damage by reason of the contractor’s default.
Some other pleadings were filed and the controversies were brought to issue, proof taken, and the cause heard by the chancellor. He found that the Mann Construction Company was an insolvent corporation and gave the laborers the first claim on the funds in the hands of the road commissioners and'directed that the balance be applied on the claims of the subcontractors, and that the subcontractors have a decree against the sureties on the construction company’s bond for any balance remaining due to them after the funds in the hands of the road commissioners were exhausted.
This left nothing for the complainants Willis and Caldwell & Co., except a judgment against the Mann Con*324struction Company. These complainants, and these alone, have appealed from the decree of the chancellor, and assigned errors which raise a number of close questions.
It is first insisted on behalf of the complainants that the chancellor erred in giving the laborers a prior claim on the funds in the hands of the road commissioners. The chancellor based his action on our statutes, which undertake to provide a lien in favor of laborers of this character. It is urged that these statutes are unconstitutional.
Tiio first one is chapter IS of the. Acts of 1883, which provides a lien for all employees and day laborers of any corporation or partnership on the corporation or firm property for their labor and services.
The scope of this lien was somewhat extended by an amendment to the act of 1883 contained in chapter 78 of the Acts of 1897. It was still limited by the latter act, however, to employees and laborers of corporations and partnerships.
Chapter 414 of the Acts of 1905 undertook to amend chapter 78 of the Acts of 1897 by extending this lien to employees and laborers of individuals engaged in mercantile lines of business. The only reference contained In chapter 414 of the Acts of 1905 to the act which it undertook to amend was “chapter 78 of the Acts of 1897.” The act of 1905 did not, in its caption or otherwise, recite the title or substance of the law to be repealed, revised or amended. A mere reference to a former act proposed to be repealed or amended by chapter number and year of passage is not a sufficient compliance Avith section 7 of article 2 of the Constitution. Memphis Street Railway v. State, 110 Tenn., 608, 75 S. W., 730; Burnett v. Turner, 87 Tenn., 124, 10 S. W., 194.
*325This defect in chapter 414 of the Acts of 1905 was pointed ont by this conrt in Drug Co. v. Stone, 129 Tenn., 608, 167 S. W., 864. The act was not there adjudged to he unconstitutional because such a judgment was not necessary to the decision of the case before the court. The question is directly presented to us, however, and we are constrained to hold chapter 414 of the Acts of 1905 to be unconstitutional and void for the reasons stated.
This, however, leaves chapter 78 of the Acts of 1897 and chapter 18 of the Acts of 1883 to be considered.. It is argued that these acts are unconstitutional, because they only undertake to impose this laborers’ lien upon the effects of corporations and partnerships and not upon the effects of individuals engaged in business. It is said that this is an unlaAvful discrimination, and that chapter 414 of the Acts of 1905 ay as enacted to remedy this situation.
Statutes giving to laborers of corporations a lien on the corporate effects for their services are quite common and have been uniformly sustained. This classification rests on a reasonable basis. 14 A. C. J., 1021, and cases cited. We think likeAvise ¿ statute which gives a lien to laborers of partnerships and not to individuals may be upheld.
The laborer employed by an individual, or any creditor of an individual, has a free and unembarrassed right to subject all the property of that individual to the satisfaction of his demand. On the other hand, the laborer or creditor of a partnership does not have such a right to go upon the individual assets of the members of the firm. He is postponed in that respect to the claims of the individual creditors of the partners. His only clear and unembarrassed right is against the partnership assets or property.
*326These circumstances, we think, furnish a reasonable basis for distinction between a partnership in business and an individual in business and between the laborers and employees of the one and of the other.
It follows that the chancellor was correct in awarding to the laborers a prior claim on the assets of the Mann Construction Company.
The subcontractors claim that they are entitled to the next claim upon the aforesaid funds by reason of an equitable assignment of such funds pro tanto, which they say was made to them by the Mann Construction Company.
Under skillful questioning by their counsel, these subcontractors made out a semblance of an agreement on the part of the president of the construction company to appropriate to them a portion of the funds to be paid the construction company by the road commissioners. The agreement with all these subcontractors was that they should do the work let to them at the same prices which the construction company was to receive from the county, less eight per cent. It was the custom on each pay day for the commissioners to pay the construction company the amount of the estimates for the previous month, less the stipulated retainage, and the construction company in turn, on or about the same day, gave its own checks to Jhe subcontractors for the several amounts due them.
No written assignments were made in favor of these subcontractors, nor do we think the proof is sufficient to show parol assignments.
Under the general rule, it is fatal to the claim of an equitable assignment if the assignor retains any control of the subject of the assignment. 5 O. J., 912. In this case the assignor did retain control and got the estimates each *327month itself, and thereafter paid out to the subcontractors what was due them.
Moreover, in Tennessee, an assignment of a chose in action is not complete without notice of the assignment to the debtor. This is contrary to the rule in some jurisdictions, but is in accord with the English rule as well as the rule prevailing in certain states of the Union. Speaking-on this subject, this court said:
“The latter we consider as the more reasonable and safe practical rule, and have accordingly held, on more than one occasion, that the assignment of a chose in action is not complete, so as to vest the title absolutely in the as-signee, until notice of the assignment to the debtor; and this not only as regards the debtor, but likewise as to third persons. And, therefore, as between successive purchasers or assignees of a chose in action, he is entitled to preference who first gives notice to the debtor, although his assignment be subsequent to that of the other. To perfect the assignment, not merely as against the debtor, hut also as against creditors and subsequent bona fide purchasers, notice must be given. Hence it follows that an attachment by a creditor, in the period intervening between the assignment and the notice, will have preference.” Clodfelter v. Cox, 33 Tenn. ( Sneed), 330, 60 Am. Dec., 157.
This rule applies- to the transfer of equitable interests. Not to assignments of negotiable instruments or instruments assignable by law so as to pass the legal interest and entitle the assignee to sue in his own name. Mutual Protection Ins. Co. v. Hamilton & Goram, 37 Tenn. (5 Sneed), 269.
Clodfelter v. Cox has been consistently followed. Some of the cases are Lambreth & Co. v. Clark & Brown, 57 Tenn. *328(10 Heisk.), 32; Dews v. Olwill, Ex’r, 62 Tenn: (3 Baxt.), 432; Flickey v. Loney, 63 Tenn. (4 Baxt.), 169; Cates v. Baxter, 97 Tenn., 443, 37 S. W. 219; Dillingham v. Insurance Co., 120 Tenn., 302, 108 S. W., 1148, 16 L. R. A. (N. S.), 220.
In McGuffey v. Johnson, 77 Tenn. (9 Lea), 555, the appropriation was to be made out of the proceeds of a note when collected. McGuffey was directed .to get the note ont of the bank where it had been left for collection, and “had instructions” to apply the proceeds as claimed by the assignee. Under the facts of this case McGuffey was the debtor, or was to become the assignor’s debtor, and there was an admission from him of notice as aforesaid.
Wharton v. Lavender, 82 Tenn. (14 Lea), 178, and Crudgington v. Hogan, 105 Tenn., 448, 58 S. W., 642, were unusual cases in which the equitable appropriation had already been made before any question was raised.
We think none of our cases departs at all from the rule of Clodfelter v. Cox, and in the case before us there is no pretense that notice of these alleged assignments to the subcontractors was ever given to Greene county or to the road commissioners.
It follows, therefore, that these alleged assignments, in no aspect of the case, had been perfected so as to give to the subcontractors a prior claim on the funds involved at the time the complainants filed their bill.
The chancellor held that there was no equitable assignment, but for some reason thought the subcontractors were entitled to reach these funds before complainants in order to work out some supposed equity of the- sureties on the general contractor’s bond. He suggested that these sureties were entitled to compel the subcontractors to *329exhaust the funds in controversy before coming on the sureties, and that the sureties were entitled to keep the complainants off this fund until the subcontractors had exhausted it.
We are unable to see any basis for this idea. This is no case for marshaling assets. The complainants have but one fund to which they may look, to-wit, the fund in the hands of the road commissioners. We see no reason why complainants should be postponed to the subcontractors in the distribution of these funds in order to benefit the sureties on the general contractor’s bond. On the' other hand, the complainants cannot force the subcontractors to look first to the bond and deprive the sureties of the general contractor of the benefit of the application of a proportionate part of these funds to the subcontractors’ claims.
The doctrine of marshaling of assets is purely equitable, and will not be enforced to the prejudice of a third party. Gilliam v. McCormack, 85 Tenn., 597, 4 S. W., 521. Galliher v. Galliher, 78 Tenn. (10 Lea), 23, is not in point. The creditor there had two securities and a subro-gation was worked out in favor of a surety which did not affect the creditor’s rights.
We are therefore of opinion that the subcontractors had no prior claim on the funds in the hands of the road commissioners, and the question then remains whether these funds shall be divided ratably between the complainants and the subcontractors, or whether the subcontractors must be postponed to the complainants.
This depends on whether the Mann Construction Company was a going concern at the time complainants tried to fix a lien on its assets, or whether said corporation had *330reached a stage where its assets were a trust fund for the benefits of all its creditors.
This question is involved in much difficulty. The complainants’ bill herein was filed July 1, 1920. No attachment, however, was levied on the assets of the construction company until July 12, 1920.
The proof shows that Mr. Horace Mann, the president of the construction company, left Greene county prior to July 1st. The corporation had been engaged in road work in that county for about two years, and maintained its office and situs in said county. The bill charges that the corporation had no other asset except its contract with Greene county, and that the complainants had no other means of satisfying their demands except by subjection of the funds in the hands of the road commissioners. The bill further avers that it was the purpose of the corporation to defeat the collection of the complainants’ claim, and'that the corporation was “in a failing condition and that its failure is imminent and impending.” It was further stated that the corporation was about to abandon its contract with Greene county or to be discharged therefrom, and that the work done in June, 1920, would be the last work done under the contract. It was reiterated that the construction company had no other asset except this contract and what was coming to it thereunder.
Before the bill was filed, and during the month of June, 1920, it seems that the subcontractors were all pursuing their work under their contracts with the construction company; that the construction company was doing some work directly; and that its secretary was in its office in Greene county. Things seemed to be going on about as usual.
*331The evidence is not very clear, bnt we gather from the record that after the bill was filed no further work was done by the Mann Construction Company directly. The estimates for June were taken up by the county’s engineer on July 3d, and.some payments were made by agreement of attorneys. Thereafter, as the record indicates, while estimates were taken up by the engineer in the name of the construction company, the subcontractors were paid directly by the county, and received the full amount that would have gone, to the' construction company. It has been heretofore stated that the subcontractors had been receiving a smaller amount from the construction company than the construction company received from the county.
So we think that after July 3d, and certainly after July 10th, the Mann Construction Company had permanently ceased to do business. According to the bill, the only business it had was this Greene county contract, and this contract had been abandoned by it or taken away from it.
On July 12th Judge Lindsay, attorney for the Mann Construction Company, appeared before the road commissioners and announced that his client was ’ insolvent and could not go on with the contract.
Its president had gone, it had ceased to work, its only contract was lost, and its only asset, according to the bill, was tied up.
This was the situation on July 12, 1920, when the complainants levied their attachment. At that time the assets of the corporation had become a trust fund for all its creditors, by reason of its cessation of business, and complainants’ attachment could fix no lien on such assets. *332Memphis Barrel Co. v. Ward, 99 Tenn., 177, 42 S. W., 13, 63 Am. St. Rep., 825, and cases therein reviewed.
. On July 1st, however, when the complainants’ bill was filed, we do not think, nnder the proof, that the corporation had committed an overt act of insolvency or had ceased to do business. If the filing of the bill herein fixed a lien on the corporate assets, then the complainants are entitled to the benefit thereof.
We think, however, no lien was fixed by the filing of the bill. There is a class of cases in which a bill filed to reach specific property does fix a lien without attachment.
This, however, is not one of them. Complainants are not judgment creditors. They do not seek to set aside a fraudulent conveyance, nor do they show any trust in the property sought to be reached, nor any lien in their favor. It is only in some such case, where the inherent jurisdiction of equity, or the jurisdiction extended by statutes, as Thompson’s Shannon’s .Code, sections 6091-6097, is invoked, that a lien is fixed by the filing of the bill. McKeldin v. Gouldy, 91 Tenn., 677, 20 S. W., 231.
The complainants’ demand is purely legal, and a court of equity is without jurisdiction to aid them to subject an equitable interest to satisfaction of their claim. McKeldin v. Gouldy, supra.
They may recover on their debt, and, if their bill shows legal grounds, may have an attachment on the property sought to be reached- — all in the chancery court since the Acts of 1877, chapter 97. In such case, however, the chancery court is exercising the jurisdiction of a court of law, and the lien on the property pursued accrues from the levy of the attachment. Allen v. Gilliland, 74 Tenn. (6 Lea), 521; McKeldin v. Gouldy, supra.
*333So it follows that the complainants and the subcontractors are entitled to share ratably in the assets of the construction company. It is not denied that the subcontractors are entitled to judgment for any deficiency after the application of their share of the assets of the construction company to their claims against the sureties on the general contractor’s bond.
The petition of the subcontractors filed herein prays among other things, that their bill be sustained as a general creditor’s bill. In order to remove any question of the jurisdiction of the court over the entire amount of the funds in controversy, this should have been done and it is now so ordered.
This cause will be remanded and the court below will take into its custody the funds in the hands of Greene county or its road commissioners which may be due to the Mann Construction Company, and the court will also take into its custody any other assets of said corporation that may appear. Publication will be ordered directing creditors to file their claims and other appropriate proceedings had as in a general creditor’s suit. The claims that have been herein asserted against the Mann Construction Company will be treated as claims proven and filed, unless upon cause shown the chancellor should be of opinion that the validity of any of them required further investigation.
The funds thus realized will be applied first to the payment of the laborers’ claims and then distributed ratably among complainants, the subcontractors, and other creditors of the Mann Construction Company.
The efforts of all of the counsel have heretofore been exerted so exclusively in behalf of their own clients, for *334services so far rendered, each counsel must look to his own client for compensation. The court costs so far accrued will he paid out of the funds coming into the hands of the court herein.