Where a prior assignee of a claim against Mexico gave no
information of the assignment until a subsequent assignee had
prosecuted the claim before the commissioners and obtained an award
in his favor, the equities of these parties were equal, and the
possessor of the legal title ought to retain the fund.
The award was not conclusive amongst the claimants. The decision
of a former court upon this point again affirmed.
The cases examined respecting the relative equities of prior and
subsequent assignees of a chose in action.
The case is stated in the opinion of the court.
MR. JUSTICE CATRON delivered the opinion of the Court.
Judson brought this suit in equity to recover $6,000 from
William W. Corcoran, in whose favor a decree had been made for
about $15,000, by the board of commissioners acting according to
the 15th article of our treaty with Mexico of 1848.
Corcoran claimed, as assignee, under Bradford B. Williams
Page 58 U. S. 613
and Joseph H. Lord, who were owners of the cargo of the ship
Henry Thompson, and which was unlawfully seized and
confiscated by the authorities of Mexico.
The claim having been presented to the mixed commission under
the convention between the United States and Mexico of April, 1839,
the American members of that board made a report in favor of the
claim, but the Mexican commissioners not concurring in the opinion
of their colleagues, the case was referred to the umpire and was
returned by him without a decision. It therefore constituted one of
that class of cases embraced in the 5th article of the unratified
convention of the 20th November, 1843, and which is referred to and
incorporated into the 15th article of the Treaty of Peace of
Guadaloupe Hidalgo, and having been modified in some of its
provisions, the ratifications were exchanged on 30 May, 1848.
On the 3d March, 1849, an act of Congress was passed to carry
some of the provisions of this treaty into effect. Among other
things, it provided for the establishment of a board of
commissioners
"whose duty it shall be to receive and examine all claims of
citizens of the United States upon the Republic of Mexico which are
provided for by the treaty and to decide thereon according to the
provisions of the treaty."
On the 11th of June, 1845, Bradford B. Williams assigned
one-half of his interest in the claim in dispute to E. H. Warner.
August 15, 1845, Warner assigned the same interest to William B.
Hart. October 15, 1846, Williams assigned to Hart the residue of
his interest. October 3, 1846, Joseph H. Lord assigned to Hart all
his interest in the claim. June 18, 1847, Hart assigned the whole
claim to William W. Corcoran.
"By these several assignments, says the late board, the whole
became vested in the said William W. Corcoran, and the award was
therefore made in his favor."
On the first day of January, 1845, Bradford B. Williams had
assigned to William Judson, the complainant, an interest of $6,000,
of the amount of the suspended claim pronounced valid by our
commissioners, in 1842, with interest from the date of the
assignment.
From January, 1845, to June, 1847, about two years and a half,
Judson held his assignment without filing any notice of its
existence at the Department of State, so that others might have
notice of his interest, nor did he set up any pretension until the
assignee, Corcoran, had prosecuted the claim to a final award, and
was adjudged by the board of commissioners to be the legal owner of
the amount awarded; and as legal owner Corcoran is sued.
In regard to the preliminary questions raised at the bar, it
Page 58 U. S. 614
may be remarked that we have no doubt the district court had
authority to hear and determine the equities of the parties,
notwithstanding the judgment in Corcoran's favor by the board of
commissioners. The question that an award like the present is not
conclusive among adverse claimants, was settled in the case of
Comegys v.
Vasse, 1 Pet. 193, in 1828, and has not since been
open.
And as respects the validity of assignments of claims like the
one here presented, no question can be raised at this day, as such
assignments have been recognized by the various boards of
commissioners and the courts of justice for many years. The case of
Comegys v. Vasse also adjudged this point.
The contest here depends on the merits. Judson had the earliest
assignment of part of the amount declared to be due to Williams, by
the two United States commissioners, in 1842, to the extent of
$6,000, and the claim assigned being a right depending on an equity
against the government of Mexico, and assuming that both sets of
assignments are alike fair, and originally stood on the same
bona fide footing, the rule of necessity is that the
assignor having parted with his interest by the first assignment,
the second assignee could take nothing, and as he represents his
assignor, is bound by the equities imposed on the latter; 1 White
and Tudor's Eq.Cas. 236; and hence has arisen the maxim in such
cases that he who is first in time is best in right. But this
general rule has exceptions, and the case before us was obviously
decided in the court below on an exception to the general rule.
Judson took his assignment in January, 1845, which he first
produced in May, 1851, when this bill was filed. In the meantime,
Corcoran had got his assignment, and immediately gave written
notice of it to the Department of State, and August 17, 1847,
received an answer from the Secretary recognizing the fact of
notice having been received, and that it was filed with the
documents of the postponed claim of Williams and Lord appertaining
to the unfinished award.
Corcoran's assignment was fair and accepted on his part without
knowledge of Judson's; nor is the contrary alleged in the bill. And
assuming Judson's to be fair also, and that no negligence could be
imputed to him, then the case is one where an equity was
successively assigned in a chose in action to two innocent persons,
whose equities are equal according to the moral rule governing a
court of chancery. Here, Corcoran has drawn to his equity a legal
title to the fund, which legal title Judson seeks to set aside and
asks an affirmative decree in his favor to that effect.
Now nothing is better settled than that this cannot be done. The
equities being equal, the law must prevail.
Page 58 U. S. 615
There are other objections to the case made by the appellant
growing out of negligence on his part in not presenting his
assignment and claim of property to the state department so as to
notify others of the fact. The assignment was held up and operated
as a latent and lurking transaction, calculated to circumvent
subsequent assignees, and such would be its effect on Corcoran,
were priority accorded to it by our decree. It is certainly true as
a general rule as above stated that a purchaser of a chose in
action or of an equitable title must abide by the case of the
person from whom he buys, and will only be entitled to the remedies
of the seller; and yet there may be cases in which a purchaser, by
sustaining the character of a
bona fide assignee, will be
in a better situation than the person was of whom he bought -- as
for instance where the purchaser, who alone had made inquiry and
given notice to the debtor or to a trustee holding the fund, as in
this instance, would be preferred over the prior purchaser, who
neglected to give notice of his assignment and warn others not to
buy.
The cases of
Dearle v. Hall and
Loveridge v.
Cooper, 3 Russell 1, 60, established the doctrine to the
foregoing effect in England; they were followed in the case of
Mangles v. Dixon, McNaughten & Gordon 437. And the
same principle of protecting subsequent
bona fide
purchasers of choses in action &c., against latent outstanding
equities of which they had no notice was maintained in this Court
in the case of
Bayley v.
Greenleaf, 7 Wheat. 46. That was an outstanding
vendor's lien, set up to defeat a deed made to trustees for the
benefit of the vendees' creditors. The court held it to be a secret
trust, and although to be preferred to any other subsequent equity
unconnected with a legal advantage, or equitable advantage, which
gives a superior claim to the legal title, still, it must be
postponed to a subsequent equal equity connected with such
advantage.
The rule was distinctly asserted by Chancellor Kent in 1817 in
Murray v. Lylburn, 2 Johns.C.C. 442, before the question
was settled in England, and before this Court discussed it, which
was in 1822. And the same principle was applied by the Court of
Appeals of Virginia in the case of
Moore v. Holcombe, 3
Leigh 597, in 1832.
Secondly. There is no satisfactory evidence, as we apprehend, to
establish the fact that a sufficient consideration was paid by
Judson to Williams for the assignment on which the bill is founded,
to authorize Judson to set it up, and thereby to postpone Corcoran,
who paid a full price, as did those under whom he claims; yet as
these objections depend on facts peculiar to this cause, we deem it
useless to critically investigate them, as the decree below
dismissing the bill was clearly proper on the first and merely
legal ground.
Page 58 U. S. 616
It is ordered that the decree be affirmed.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Columbia, holden in and for the County of Washington, and was
argued by counsel. On consideration whereof it is now here ordered,
adjudged, and decreed by this Court that the decree of the said
circuit court in this cause be and the same is hereby affirmed with
costs.