Citation Numbers: 33 N.Y.S. 518, 86 Hun 415, 93 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 415, 67 N.Y. St. Rep. 174
Judges: Martin
Filed Date: 5/4/1895
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The purpose of this action was twofold: (1) To set aside a general assignment for the benefit of creditors made by the defendant Francis G. Hall to the defendant Taber; and (2) to set aside certain deeds, assignments, bills of sale, and other transfers and conveyances made by the defendant Francis G. Hall to the defendant Samuel S. Hamlin. The ground upon which the plaintiff sought to set aside the general assignment and the other conveyances mentioned was that they were made with an intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of the defendant Hall.
On August 21, 1884, the plaintiff’s assignor recovered a judgment against the defendant Hall for $1,050.21. An execution was issued thereon, which was returned wholly unsatisfied. Subsequently, and in March, 1889, the judgment, which was the basis of this action, was duly assigned to the plaintiff. For several years prior to July 21, 1884, the defendant Hall was engaged in business as a private banker at the city of Elmira. On that day he suspended payment at his bank, and closed the doors, claiming that he was unable to continue business and meet his obligations. At that time he was the owner of a large amount of valuable real and personal property, and was indebted to a large number of persons in an amount which exceeded the value of such property. After his suspension, the depositors and other creditors of the defendant Hall called upon him for a settlement of their claims. He made a list of his property, and placed an estimate of value opposite each piece, which he showed his creditors as a true list and a correct statement of their value. The list did not specify all his property, and the values were exaggerated. In his negotiations with his creditors, he offered them the property mentioned in the list at the prices designated, in payment of their claims, and to some of them stated that he had no other property, and could pay in no other way, and that if they would not take the property at_ the prices they would get nothing, and would get nothing if they sued. Between the 21st of July and the 1st of August he compromised with some of his creditors by transferring to them a portion of his property at excessive prices, and thus paid and extinguished about $85,000 of his indebtedness. These transfers were made and received in good faith, without any intent to hinder, delay, of defraud his creditors. Among the creditors of the defendant Hall were Samuel S. Hamlin and Betsy P. Hall. The latter transferred to the former all her claims against the defendant Hall on July 24, 1884. Between the 21st of July and the 1st of August the defendant Hall transferred to the defendant Hamlin the real estate and property mentioned in the complaint. These transfers were in form absolute, but were made and accepted upon the agreement between the defendants Hall and Hamlin that the latter should accept them as collateral security for the indebtedness of Hall to him, and that he should be responsible only for what he received out of the property so transferred. The defendant Hall was indebted to Hamlin at that time in a sum exceeding $60,000. After these transfers were made, and on the 1st of August, 1884, the defendant Hall made a general assignment to the defendant Taber of all his property, not exempt
The important issues in this case were whether the general assignment made by Hall, and the transfers and conveyances made to Hamlin as collateral security for the debts held by him against Hall, were made with an intent to hinder, delay, or defraud his creditors. We deem it unnecessary to state in detail all the various acts, circumstances, and transactions which are relied upon by the appellant as evidence that the assignment and transfers in question were made with a fraudulent intent. The evidence disclosed a variety of circumstances and many transactions from which, if unexplained, an inference of fraud might perhaps have been drawn. The defendants have, however, introduced evidence which has explained the circumstances and transactions thus relied upon in a manner which, if believed, would show that the purpose of the transfers in question was an honest one, and that they were made in good faith. While the evidence shows that Hall transferred to Hamlin a large amount of real and personal property, yet it also discloses that he was largely indebted to Hamlin. These transfers were as security only, so that, if the property transferred exceeded in value the amount of Hamlin’s debt, the creditors of Hall would have the benefit of any surplus there might be. It was at least natural that Hall should have secured his indebtedness to Hamlin, who was a relative, and had been his friend from his youth up, and advanced to him these large sums of money. If his purpose in making these transfers was an honest one, and it was intended thereby to secure the debts owing Hamlin, and that was its only purpose, he had a right to thus secure him, and the transaction was valid. Bank v. Williams, 128 N. Y. 77, 28 N. E. 33; Williams v. Whedon, 109 N. Y. 333, 337, 16 N. E. 365; Paper Co. v. O’Dougherty, 36 Hun, 79, affirmed 99 N. Y. 673; Knapp v. McGowen, 96 N. Y. 75, 86; Dorr v. Beck, 76 Hun, 540, 28 N. Y. Supp. 206; Sumner v. Skinner, 80 Hun, 201, 30 N. Y. Supp. 4; Murphy v. Briggs, 89 N. Y. 446, 452. The fact that Hall agreed to take charge
Again, it is contended that the amount of the property transferred was large. This is true, but the debts it was given to secure were also large. The property transferred was not so greatly in excess of the debts to be secured as to constitute a circumstance of much weight bearing’ upon the question of fraud. Indeed, the referee has found that the Value of the property transferred was in fact less than the amount of the debts owing by Hall to Hamlin. Moreover, if the general assignment was valid, this action, under the allegations of the complaint, could not be maintained by the plaintiff to set aside the transfers and conveyances made to Hamlin. Under such circumstances, the action could only be maintained by the assignee, as the right to assail those conveyances on the ground of fraud was vested in him alone. Spring v. Short, 90 N. Y. 538; Crouse v. Frothingham, 97 N. Y. 105, 113; Loos v. Wilkinson, 110 N. Y. 195, 209, 18 N. E. 99; Prentiss v. Bowden, 145 N. Y. 342, 40 N. E. 13.
"When we consider the question of the validity of the general assignment, we find that the evidence renders it quite clear that at the time of his suspension the defendant Hall did not intend to make a general assignment for the benefit of his creditors, but believed that he could adjust his debts by distributing among his creditors all the property owned by him at excessive prices, and that he could borrow sufficient money to pay the remainder after his property had been so distributed. This course was industriously and effectively pursued by him until his creditors, by attachments, issued and threatened, rendered an assignment practically necessary.
But it is said that when the inventory was filed the property transferred to Hamlin as collateral security, and property transferred to some of his other creditors as collateral, and some other small items of property, were omitted from the schedule, and hence the referee should have found that the general assignment was made with an intent to hinder, delay, and defraud his creditors. The evidence discloses that the schedules were made by the assignee, and not by the assignor. It is true, however, that he was consulted in regard to making them. We do not think the act of the assignee in making the schedules in any way reflects upon the act of the defendant Hall in making the assignment. Denton v. Merrill, 43 Hun, 224, 232. The question here was as to the intent of the defendant Hall at the time the assignment was made. If his purpose was honest, the instrument was valid. Hardmann v. Bowen, 39 N. Y. 200. But the subsequent acts of the assignor were admissible to reflect upon
“It would be hard to find any schedules absolutely perfect, or any debtor who could inventory every item of his property with strict accuracy. Room must be allowed for honest mistake, and, possibly, even for careless and thoughtless error.”
See, also, Peyser v. Meyers, 135 N. Y. 599, 32 N. E. 699, and Ellis H. Eoberts & Co. v. Buckley, 145 N. Y. 215, 39 N. E. 966.
It is also said that the transfers of property to pay a portion of his creditors, and of other portions of his property to secure other of his creditors, including the defendant Hamlin, his wife, his brother, the Chemung Canal Bank, and Charles J. Langdon, were evidence-that the assignment was made with an intent to defraud his creditors. Each of these transfers was a circumstance to be considered by the referee in determining this question of intent, and yet, when it is. found that in each of those cases the defendant Hall was in fact indebted to the creditors secured, and that the property transferred as collateral for such debt was not greatly disproportionate to the debt sought to be secured, the referee might well have been led to the conclusion that those circumstances were entitled to but little weight in determining the question of tire intent with which such general assignment was made.
The appellant also contends that the exhibition by Hall of an incorrect list of his assets, his representations concerning it, and his' threats to creditors, were evidence of an intent to defraud his creditors by the assignment which was subsequently made. It may be assumed, we think, that this was a circumstance which the learned referee was authorized to consider in determining that question, but it was neither controlling nor conclusive evidence of fraud.
Upon all the evidence in the case, the referee has found that the general assignment made by the defendant Hall and the transfers by him to the defendant Hamlin were made in good faith, for a valuable consideration, and without any intent to hinder, delay, or defraud the creditors of the defendant Hall. A patient and careful examination of the great volume of evidence contained in the appeal books in this case has led us to the conclusion that these findings of the referee are sustained by the evidence. The evidence in the case was conflicting, and it is quite possible that different inferences might have been drawn, and different conclusions reached, from the testimony of the witnesses and the transactions and circumstances de
The appellant, however, contends that a former judgment, in an action in which John R. Purtell and another were plaintiffs, and Francis G. Hall and Samuel G. Taber were defendants, was a bar or conclusive evidence against the defendants Hall and Taber. That action was brought by the plaintiffs therein against the defendants for the sole purpose of setting aside the general assignment of Hall to the defendant Taber. The judgment adjudged the assignment to be fraudulent and void, and set it aside only as against the plaintiffs in that action. That action was by the plaintiffs therein alone, and not in behalf of other creditors. The plaintiff in this action was not a party to that action, nor a privy of the plaintiff therein, and hence was in no way bound by the judgment. Indeed, he was not a creditor of Hall until March, 1889, when he purchased the judgment upon which he bases his right to maintain this action. We think the judgment in that action was not an estoppel or conclusive evidence against either of the defendants in this action, and the referee properly so held. Shipman v. Rollins, 98 N. Y. 311, 330; Moore v. City of Albany, Id. 396, 409; Masten v. Olcott, 101 N. Y. 152, 160, 4 N. E. 274; Quinby v. Carhart, 133 N. Y. 579, 30 N. E. 972.
While an examination of the requests to find proffered by the plaintiff and those proffered by the defendants shows that in some instances the learned referee has made findings upon such requests that are perhaps somewhat inconsistent, still we find nothing in those findings which materially affects the questions at issue in the case, and therefore they furnish no reason to disturb the judgment. We have examined the various rulings to which our attention has been called