Fisk v. Brackett
Fisk v. Brackett
Opinion of the Court
There is no subject upon which greater conflict and confusion exists, both in the decisions of courts and among elementary writers, than upon the legal effect of an assignment under the bankrupt or insolvent laws of a country, upon the property of the bankrupt or insolvent in another jurisdiction. But in the present case it does not become necessary at al to enter into this extensive field of legal discussion, for at the time this debt was contracted the defendant and the insolvent were both residents of Massachusetts; the debt was contracted there, and all the parties continued to be residents of that State up to and after the time of the proceedings in insolvency, and the transfer .of the effects of the insolvent to the plaintiffs under those pro
Does it follow that a transfer of a chose in action in our State, by the act and assent of the parties, is to have all the legal effects and incidents in every other State, that it might be entitled to where made ? Suppose that in Massachusetts there should exist a law enabling the assignee of any chose in action to sue upon it in the courts of that State in his own name, would that authorize ' such assignee of a debt not negotiable by the laws of this State, to maintain an action upon it in our courts in his own name ? It seems to us that it would not, any more than it would entitle him to adopt some particular form of action given by the laws of that State, but not known to our law. That the plaintiffs would be entitled to sue here in their own names for the recovery of property the title to which vested in them by the assignment, we do not doubt, for such would be the legal effect and legal remedy
But it seems to us quite another thing to authorize them to sue in their own names upon a contract of the insolvent here, by virtue of the statute of Massachusetts. The distinction we think is plain and clear. The real owner of a note or bond, made to another, not negotiable, or not legally assigned, might maintain trover for the conversion of it, but if he wished to enforce payment by the maker or obligor, he must sue in the name of the payee or obligee. We have felt every inclination to get over this objection, if possible, for it is merely technical, but we are satisfied that, upon principle, the right to sue by the plaintiffs in their own names exists only by force of the statute of Massachusetts, and cannot be regarded as operative beyond the territorial force of the statute, and that in this State we can give no other force to the assignment than to any legal assignment of the same debt here, and that the remedy must be pursued here in the name of the assignor. The case of Pickering v. Fisk, 6 Vt. 102, seems fully to support this conclusion. That was an action upon a bond given by the defendant, as sheriff of the county of Grafton, New Hampshire, to the treasurer of the State, for the faithful and due execution of his office, and setting forth a breach of duty by the defendant, as sheriff, in not collecting and’ returning an, execution in favor of one Moore. It was conceded that by the statutes of New Hampshire such an action could be sustained there, but it was held not to lie in this State. The whole subject is most ably examined and elucidated in the opinion given by Phelps, J.
The very point here raised has often been before the courts in this country, and from the examination we have been able to give to it, we think the great balance of judicial opinion is adverse to the maintenance of such action in the name of the foreign assignee.
In Orr et al. v. Amory, 11 Mass. 25, it was decided that the assignees of an insolvent debtor in Pennsylvania, could not maintain an action in their own names against a debtor of the assignor in Massachusetts.
In Bird et al. v. Caritat, 2 Johns. 342, it was held that an action in the name of an English bankrupt was properly brought,
So in Raymond v. Johnson, 11 Johns. 488, the plaintiff had become an insolvent under the insolvent law of New Jersey, but it was held that this action in New York was properly brought in his name, and not in the name of his assignee.
The same doctrine is laid down in Merrick’s estate, 5 W. & Sergt. 9, and incidentally stated in many other cases.
This whole subject is fully examined by Judge Story in his Conflict of Laws, and all the authorities collected and examined. He says, sec. 565, “ and this rule (that choses in action are not assignable) is applied to assignments of choses in action, made in foreign countries, although the assignee might be entitled to found an action thereon in such foreign country in his own name, in virtue of such assignment. For such have been thought to belong not so much to the right and merit of the claim as to the form of the remedy. Thus it has been held that a Scotch assignee of a bankrupt could not maintain a suit in his own name in England for a chose in action of the bankrupt, which was admitted to pass under the assignment. In America, contradictory decisions have been made upon the same point., some decisions affirming and others denying the right of the assignee to sue in his own name, though the weight of authority must now be admitted to be against the right.” But by an examination of the cases cited by Judge Story to this section, I do not find any case where it has been decided that such foreign assignee can maintain an action at law here in his own name.
It is said by judges in many of the eases, that our courts will respect the rights of the foreign assignee, and that he will be permitted to sue in our courts, &c., but generally all these dicta occur, where the general effect of such foreign assignment was under consideration, and whether the foreign assignee had' here any rights under it, and not where any question arose as to the
There are many other cases which support the same general view of what pertains to the remedy merely, and therefore governed by the law of the forum.
In New York it has been held that a note in form negotiable, executed in Connecticut, (by the law of which State such note could not be negotiated so as to entitle the assignee to sue in his own name there,) might be sued in the name of the endorsee in the courts of New York.
So in the same State it has been held that upon an instrument executed in Virginia, having a scroll in the place of a seal, and which by the law of Virginia is equivalent to a seal; the action must be brought upon it as a simple contract; Warren v. Lynch, 5 Johnson, 239.
A similar decision was made in New Hampshire; Douglass v. Oldham, 6 N. H. 150.
The saíne principle has been decided in Maryland; Thrasher v. Everhart, 3 Gill & Johns. 234.
The judgment below we regard therefore as erroneous, an,d the same is reversed and the case remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Augustus Fisk and Herman C. Fisher v. William C. Brackett
- Status
- Published