Menken v. Gumbel
Menken v. Gumbel
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant in error sued out an attachment against F. M. Duke, upon the ground that he had assigned, or was about to assign, his property with intent to defraiid his creditors, or give an unfair preference to some of them, and summoned J. L. Combs as garnishee. On the trial of the plea in abatement, the attachment was sustained. Combs, who was the assignee in the transaction upon which the attachment was sued out and sustained, answered that he had certain choses in action in his hands which belonged to Duke, but suggested that, by virtue of an order given to him by Duke in favor of Menken
“ Dr. J. L. Combs : May 18, 1877.
Pay to Menken Brothers or order fourteen hundred dollars out of any balance due me upon settlement, the amount paid on this order to be a credit on my account with Menken Brothers. F. M. Duke.”
The order was accepted by Combs on the same day in the following words: “ Accepted with the following condition, if any thing is due F. M. Duke on settlement Jan. 1, 1878, or thereafter. J. L. Combs.”
It was shown, in opposition to the claim of Menken Brothers, that the attachment was sustained on the ground that the assignment of the choses in action in the hands of the garnishee, and other property, was fraudulent; that Combs had paid back to Duke three thousand dollars out of the assigned assets; and that no settlement had been made between Combs and Duke. There was no other proof of fraud in the assignment to Combs than as above stated. The adjudication in the attachment suit that the assignment was fraudulent, was res inter alios acta, so far as Menken Brothers were concerned, as they were no parties to it. So far, therefore, as their rights are to be affected, that assignment is to be treated as fair and bona fide, if there is nothing but the adjudication to condemn it. The giving of the order upon Combs, and its acceptance by him, were an assignment to them of so much of the funds or assets in his hands as was necessary to pay it. Mandeville v. Welch, 5 Wheat. 277 ; Spofford v. Kirk, 97 U. S. 484; Wadlington v. Covert, 51 Miss. 631. The fact that no settlement had been made between Combs and Duke did not lessen the rights of Menken Brothers. The stipulation in the acceptance, and in the order on that subject, was merely
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Julius Menken v. S. Gumbel
- Status
- Published