Wilkinson v. Culver
Decision Date | 07 December 1885 |
Citation | 25 F. 639 |
Parties | WILKINSON, Receiver, etc., v. CULVER. |
Court | U.S. District Court — Southern District of New York |
Cortlandt Parker and Edgar P. Hill, for plaintiff.
R Floyd Clarke, Frederic F. Culver, and James W. Culver, for defendant.
The plaintiff declares upon a judgment recovered by him, as receiver of the American Trust Company of New Jersey, in the supreme court of that state upon certain promissory notes made by the defendant. The defendant demurs upon the ground that the plaintiff is the receiver of a New Jersey corporation appointed by a court of chancery of that state, and, as such receiver, cannot maintain an action in this court.
The position of the defendant, in this respect, is sustained by the following authorities: Booth v. Clark, 17 How 327; Peale v. Phipps, 14 How. 368; Holmes v. Sherwood, 16 F. 725; Olney v. Tanner, 10 F. 101; Hazard v. Durant, 19 F. 471. The plaintiff, though not admitting the accuracy of this contention, insists that it is not applicable to the present controversy for the reason that he is not suing as receiver, but as an individual. It is argued that the addition of the words 'receiver, etc.,' to the plaintiff's name in the title of the cause is mere descriptio personae, and may be rejected as surplusage. It is thought that this position is well founded. A judgment upon a note merges the note, and no other suit can be maintained on the same instrument. Such a judgment, when binding personally, can be relied on as a bar in a second suit upon the note. Eldred v. Bank, 17 Wall. 545; Ries v. Rowland, 11 F. 657; Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Jones, 8 Fed.Rep. 303.
The plaintiff does not sue because he is receiver, but because he is a judgment creditor. The action is on the judgment. He must, in order to recover, prove the judgment. He is not required to prove his title as receiver; that was done in the action in New Jersey upon the notes. It was necessary there, in order to obtain the judgment; but, having obtained it, the plaintiff, as an individual, can maintain the present suit. That such is the law in the case of an administrator is very clear.
In Talmage v. Chapel, 16 Mass. 71, the court says:
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