Whitteker v. Charleston Gas Co.
Whitteker v. Charleston Gas Co.
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
Taking the view I do of this cause, it seems strange that the defendant did not file a demurrer to complainant’s bill. But even without demurrer, the court, at the hearing of the cause, should have dismissed the bill with costs. The allegations of the bill setting up the contract plainly indicate that complainant had a full, adequate and complete remedy at law. As to the note, his remedy was clearly at law. The object of the bill seems to be for the purpose of inducing a court of chancery to usurp law jurisdiction, by permitting the complainant to dispose of the collateral by public auction, instead of taking the plain track prescri bed by law for the collection of such collaterals.
The decrees of the circuit court appealed from must
Decrees Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Whitteker v. The Charleston Gas Company
- Cited By
- 16 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1.It is well settled, that where a chose-in-action, such as a bond, note, or accepted order on a third person, is transferred and delivered to A . a creditor .as collateral security for a debt, it is the right of the debtor to sue upon such chose-in-action at law, and, if necessary, to use the name of the legal owner of such chose-in-action. 2. Unless a power to sell is superadded to the agreement, whereby such chose-in-action is pledged as a collateral security, the creditor has no right to sell such chose-in-action, and he cannot come into a court of equity to ask the sale thereof. 3. City-script or orders are choses-in-action, which, if pledged as collat-lateral security, must be collected by the creditor, if not returned by him, and cannot be sold by him, or by a chancery court at his instance.