Fuller v. Parmenter
Fuller v. Parmenter
Opinion of the Court
The defendant, by an agreement fairly made and for a valuable and an adequate consideration, sold and assigned his expectancy in his father’s estate to his brother, the claimant, of which his father had notice, and to which it does not appear that he objected. After the father’s death, and after the trustee was appointed administrator of his estate and before the trustee process was served on him, the claimant notified the administrator of the assignment. The defendant’s share of the estate has been ascertained to be $542, which the administrator holds in his hands to await the result of this suit; and the question is whether the plaintiff shall have it or the claimant. It is to be
Lord Bacon says that “ the law doth not allow of grants except there be a foundation of an interest in the grantor; for the law that will not accept of grants of titles nor of things in action that are imperfect interests, much less will it allow a man to grant or incumber that which is no interest at all, but merely future. But of declarations precedent before any interest vested, the law doth allow, but with this difference, so that there be some new act or conveyance to give life and vigor to the declaration precedent.” Bac. Max. Beg. II. It is said in Lunn v. Thornton, 1 C. B., at page 386, that Lord Bacon takes the first part of this rule, namely, that a disposition of after-acquired property is altogether inoperative, as beyond question, and labors only to estab" lish the second part, namely, that life and vigor may be given to the declaration by some act or conveyance after the property is acquired; that this evidently imports more than the mere acquisition of the property at a subsequent time, and points to some new act to be done by the grantor in furtherance of the original disposition. It is said in Holroyd v. Marshall, 10 H. L. 191, 216, that if after the property comes into existence the assignor delivers it to the assignee, or allows him to take possession of it, there would be the norms actus interveniens of the rule, and that the title would pass. A good illustration of such an act is afforded by Peabody v. Landon, 61 Vt. 318, in which said rule is recognized, and which holds that taking possession of after-acquired property by the mortgagee with the consent of the mortgagor, brought it within the operation of the mortgage as of the time of its execution, and protected it from the mortgagor’s assignee in insolvency appointed in proceedings subsequently commenced.
In the case at bar the claimant could not take possession of the defendant’s share of the estate, for the administrator had a right to hold it for the purpose of administration, and all he
It remains to consider whether the intestate’s assent to the assignment is necessary to its validity, or whether it is enough that he had notice of it and did not object. It is contended that the claimant was not a competent witness to prove notice. But notice is also found on the testimony of the administrator alone, to whose competency no objection is made.
Some cases hold that the ancestor must not only have notice of the assignment, but must actually assent to it, because otherwise it would be a fraud upon him, and against public policy to enforce it. Boynton v. Hubbard, 7 Mass. 112, and McClure v. Raben, 133 Ind. 507, 36 Am. St. Rep. 588, are of this class. On the other hand it is held that notice, even, is not necessary, much less assent, if the contract is otherwise fit to be enforced. This question is considered in Hale v. Hollon, 90 Texas, 427, 59 Am. St. Rep. 819, in which the cases, English and American, are very fully discussed, and the conclusion reached that neither in England nor by the weight of authority in this country is assent necessary. In many of the cases in this country in which the contract was enforced, no mention is made of notice nor assent, while in others it is said that if the ancestor had notice and did not object, it is sufficient. This is said in Curtis v. Curtis, 40 Me. 24, 63 Am. Dec. 651, which adopts the language of Judge Story, who says that if the transaction has been fully made known to the ancestor and is not objected to by him, the extraordinary protection generally afforded by courts of equity in such
It would seem, therefore, that assent is not necessary, but that notice and not objecting is enough, if even that is required; and this is the reason of the thing, for with notice the ancestor can defeat the assignment if he will, and thus prevent the fraud upon him that the books talk about.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- David L. Fuller v. Milo D. Parmenter, Trustee and
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