March 14, 1919, plaintiff company, on confirmation of default, obtained a judgment against defendant for $942.52, with legal interest from August 1, 1919. February 1, 1924, it placed this, judgment in the hands of the United States Commercial Adjustment Company for collection. In the contract of agency between plaintiff and the said commercial agency, in a corner, at the beginning of the agreement and in print, is found the following provision:
“The following correct and unpaid claims due us are assigned to you in consideration of the services to be rendered, subject to your discretion in settlement, and in accordance with terms printed on the back hereof; and remit commissions on the day payment or settlement is made.”
It is proper to say here that the terms printed on the back of the contract make no changes or modifications in the power thus conferred on the adjustment company.
It is true that in this printed authority to the adjustment company, the words, “unpaid claims due us are assigned,” are used; also these, “subject to your discretion”; but then following the words, “in settlement”; and then this clause of the contract says: “and we agree to report and remit commissions on the day payment or settlement is made”. Although the word "assigned” as to unpaid claims is used and “subject to discretion,” we think that they have reference to payments or settlements which would be realized by the adjustment company as a collection agency.
The record shows that a letter was written by the adjustment company to plaintiff herein on April 11, 1924, in which it says, that after having had considerable correspondence with Clarke, defendant, he was willing to pay one-quarter of the entire claim in full settlement. The adjustment company said in the letter, we “would suggest that you accept his proposition”; also said: “If you accept said amount, kindly forward judgment covering same”. In a letter to the adjustment company by plaintiff, of date April 14, 1924, in answer to the former’s letter of April 11, plaintiff said, in part, that they were surprised the adjustment company had suggested an acceptance of a settlement on a 25 per cent basis in settlement of their account. Further in the letter, plaintiff said: “You can just as well get settlement for 50 per cent ,and this we will agree to accept”. This letter from plaintiff carried a clear refusal to allow the settlement suggested by the adjustment company. In a reply to the letter of the 14th by plaintiff, the adjustment company wrote another letter dated April 17, in which it says that it could not secure a settlement at 50 per cent; and says therein that -a third party interested in Clarke, defendant, offered a settlement at 25 per cent. Again, the adjustment company' advises a settlement on that basis, and in conclusion writes “that if the same meets with your approval we would appreciate your forwarding to us all the *579papers covering this account”. It is evident from these letters of the adjustment company that it did not consider itself an assignee with the discretionary power to accept a settlement upon any basis, however disproportionate to the amount of the judgment. There can be no doubt that plaintiff never intended to confer such authority, and in which the adjustment company fully concurred, if we are to be guided by its own construction of the contract as appears from its own letters. Notwithstanding all of that, the adjustment company sold this judgment to H. C. Craft for $235.50, on May 24, 1924, on about a 25 per cent valuation, a little over a month after plaintiff had refused its approval of a settlement on that basis. This amount of $235.50 was ¡paid to Craft by defendant, Clarke, who got from Craft a full receipt for the judgment. Plaintiff, in these proceedings, obtained the issuance of a fi fa on his judgment of $942.32, which it had obtained against defendant, who obtained a preliminary injunction restraining the execution of the writ. The court recalled the preliminary restraining order, and dismissed the rule. A judgment is property. C. P. 548. The power to alienate or sell must be special and express. C. C. 2996, 2997. There was no such power given by plaintiff to defendant under the provision of the contract above quoted. Besides, as appears from the letters above referred to, the authority granted the adjustment company was so construed by it and plaintiff company. As the adjustment company had no power to sell; the sale to Craft was null; and so was the payment to Craft by Clarke, defendant. Por the foregoing reasons the judgment is affirmed.