• The judge before whom this action was tried found, as facts, that one Malcolm held a judgment against the plaintiff for upward of $2,000, and had told the plaintiff, that he would discharge it for $500, but the plaintiff had not accepted the offer; that the defendant (who was a stranger to the plaintiff), having learned of the willingness of Malcolm to discharge the judgment for that sum, applied to him, and by the false representation, that he came from and was a friend of the plaintiff, induced Malcolm to assign the judgment to him, for which he paid $500, and the plaintiff now claims the benefit of this purchase. *
The plaintiff had no legal right to have the judgment satisfied or assigned for $500, or any other sum less than the amount of it.
There was no contract to that effect, and if there had been, it would have been invalid for want of consideration. It would have been an executory contract to discharge a debt for less than the face, which, it is well established, is not binding. Such a transaction is effectual only when fully executed as an accord and satisfaction. The plaintiff was not, therefore, legally injured. He was liable to pay the whole amount of the judgment before the assignment, and could not be compelled to pay any more after. He neither lost nor' gained by the transaction, in any legal sense. We have been referred by the learned counsel for the plaintiff, to several well established legal and equitable principles, to uphold and sustain the plaintiff’s claim, a brief reference to which becomes necessary, in order to ascertain whether any of them are applicable to the facts of this case.
It has been decided by this court that, if one person, for a good consideration, received from another, promises to pay another person a sum of money, the latter can maintain an action upon the contract, although he was not cognizant of it at the time. (Lawrence v. Fox, 20 N. Y., 272.)
In this case there was no contract, and no consideration to uphold oneand the action is not brought or sought to be maintained upon the theory of a contract, express or implied.
Ho authority has been cited, and I think it safe to assert that none exists, in which .any court has ever held, that a false declaration of agency for another, enables the latter as against the alleged agent, to receive the benefit of an act actually performed for the latter, unless the act was performed under such circumstances as to create an estoppel, or unless the assumed principal has been deprived of some legal right, or otherwise injured. There is no estoppel in this case. The plaintiff neither did anything, nor omitted to do anything in
But it is urged by the plaintiff, that the defendant held the judgment as trustee for him; that Malcolm assigned it believing that it was for the plaintiff, that the defendant procured it by a fraud; and that in such cases a trust is raised ex maleficio, and the fraudulent recipient is turned into a-trustee “ to get at him.” I have examined all the cases cited, and none of them makes the principle invoked applicable to the facts of this case.
It may be laid down, as a general rule, that this principle does not apply, unless the defendant occupies some fiduciary relation to the party making the claim, or that the former owed to the latter some duty or obligation with respect to the property. A stranger cannot claim the benefit of a purchase of property by another, merely because the latter falsely stated that he was acting for the former. It is undoubtedly true, that an officious intermeddler with the rights and property of another, will not be allowed to reap any advantage to himself in dealing with the property of another, but will be held to account in respect to it as a trustee. Such was the case of Mulvany v. Dillon (1 Ball & B., 409).
The defendant, by collusion with one executor, induced a co-executor who was in possession of a farm, held for the estate under a lease, by threats and intimidation, and by interfering to prevent the sub-tenants from paying the rent, to quit the farm and surrender the lease, and then took a lease of the same premises in his own name at a less rent. He also assumed to act for the devisees, who were infants, by renewing a lease of another farm in which he expressly declared the trust. It will be seen that here was an interference as trustee with the property of the estate. The Lord Chancellor, in delivering the opinion, states the question to be “ whether Sir William Dillon had so far interfered in the management of the assets, as to charge him with a fiduciary character, and to preclude him from taking a benefit te himself in this trust property.” He then proceeded to state the
I have cited from this case, because it seems to be the strongest referred to, for the plaintiff’s position, but it differs from this case in the essential circumstance, that the interference was with rights and property which the plaintiff possessed and owned, and in thus acting the defendant “clothed himself with a trust.” In this case nothingewas obtained to which the plaintiff had any legal right. He was, at most, only prevented from obtaining the voluntary clemency of his creditor, an interest too unsubstantial for judicial protection. The defendant committed a fraud, but it was a fraud upon Malcolm, and not upon the plaintiff, and this is the difficulty with the plaintiff’s case. It is said that Malcolm put the judgment in the defendant’s hands for the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff had the legal right to accept and receive it. True, Malcolm was willing to accept $500 from the plaintiff for the judgment, and in assigning it, he supposed he was doing it for the benefit of the plaintiff; but such was not the fact. The assignment was, in fact, received for the benefit of the defendant, and induced by his fraud, and this brings me to another feature of the case, which I regard as material, in determining the rights of the plaintiff
The plaintiff is a stranger to this transaction, and has no interest in it, legal or equitable. It was very uncivil in the defendant, Eoach, to purchase the judgment and enforce it against the plaintiff, and as a question of abstract morals, indefensible toward the plaintiff; but it belongs to that class of wrongs which cannot be i’edressed in courts of justice. As to the plaintiff, there was neither fraud or damage, both of which are indispensable to the maintenance of such an action.
The judgment must be affirmed.