Cooper v. Perdue

Citation16 N.E. 140,114 Ind. 207
Decision Date21 March 1888
Docket Number12,969
PartiesCooper et al. v. Perdue et al
CourtSupreme Court of Indiana

From the Monroe Circuit Court.

Judgment affirmed.

J. W Buskirk, H. C. Duncan, J. B. Mulky and J. F. Pittman, for appellants.

OPINION

Elliott, J.

The appellants allege in their complaint that they recovered judgments against Calvin R. Perdue; that executions were issued on the several judgments and returned no property found; that Wyatt W. Wick is indebted to Perdue in the sum of one thousand dollars, evidenced by a promissory note executed by Wick to him; that Perdue is insolvent; that the money due from Wick is subject to execution; that the note was assigned to Charles W. Royse by Perdue for the purpose of cheating and defrauding his creditors; that Royse placed the note in the hands of a partnership, known as the Bank of Salem. The case of the appellants was subsequently consolidated with one wherein Carmichael, the assignee of Perdue, was the plaintiff, and Wick and Royse were defendants.

The complaint of Carmichael is not against the appellants, and we can not perceive any reason upon which they can successfully attack it for the first time by the assignment of errors in this court.

The cross-complaint of Carmichael alleges that he is the assignee of Perdue, and gave bond and qualified as such assignee on the 5th day of June, 1885. That before that time Wick was indebted to Perdue on the note described in the appellants' complaint as therein alleged, and that he transferred it to Royse as charged by the appellants. This pleading is not a model, but we think that it is not subject to the objections urged by the appellants, and we shall consider those objections, and none others.

The assignee had a right to the relief sought, although he did not have possession of the note described. An assignee may recover property fraudulently conveyed, or he may reach funds in the hands of a fraudulent holder. It is not necessary that an assignee, who pursues money due his assignor on a promissory note fraudulently transferred, should have possession of the note before he sues, for, by bringing all the parties into court, he may obtain a decree that the money due on the note be paid to him.

The complaint of the appellants, as we have seen, charges a fraudulent transfer of the note executed by Wick and the cross-complaint also charges that it was transferred without any consideration and...

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