Norcross v. Pease
Norcross v. Pease
Opinion of the Court
It is admitted that-the promissory note set forth in the declaration was made by the defendant, payable to the order of Fernald, and was by him indorsed to the plaintiffs. They
This instruction was correct. The note having been passed for a good consideration by the plaintiffs before their insolvency to Nesmith, it thereupon became his property. And he thereby acquired a right to maintain an action in their names to recover the amount due upon it, which could not after notice to the maker be controlled or defeated by any act or by the release of the assignors or of their legal representatives. Jones v. Witter, 13 Mass. 304. Eastman v. Wright, 6 Pick. 322. Sigourney v. Severy, 4 Cush. 176. Rockwood v. Brown, 1 Gray, 261. The insolvency of the plaintiffs constitutes no objection to the prosecution of the suit in their names. Before its occurrence, the right so to proceed to final judgment and execution had,- by the transfer of the note to him, become perfect and complete in Nesmith. The plaintiffs did not, as was contended by the defendant, cease, in consequence of their insolvency, to have any legal existence, so that no action could afterwards be carried on or maintained in their names. Where a promissory note was transferred under the general assignment to his assignees in insolvency as a part of the estate of the payee, it was adjudged that a subsequent purchaser of it who received it from the assignees by delivery only, but without indorsement, might
It is objected that, the note having been pledged by Fernald the payee, by whom it was owned, to the plaintiffs as collateral security for the payment of a debt due to them, the transfer of it by them to Nesmith was in violation of the provisions of Gen. Sts. c. 161, § 64, and therefore that the right to or the property in the note could not pass to him. But it is only where the debt for which any kind of personal property is held as collateral security has not become due and payable, that the pledgee is by those provisions prohibited from disposing in any way of the property so held by him. It does not appear from any evidence reported or from any fact stated in the case, that the debt of Fernald to the plaintiffs, for which the note was pledged to them, had not become due when they transferred it to Nesmith. The court could not, therefore, adjudge that the transaction between those parties was illegal. There was nothing in the facts or evidence to warra'nt such a determination. In the absence of all proof upon the subject, a violation of the law cannot be presumed. Exceptions overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Isaac W. Norcross & another v. Lemuel L. Pease
- Status
- Published