7 Misc. 2d 543 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1957
The defendants, husband and wife, move to dismiss the complaint herein for legal insufficiency.
The complaint contains two causes of action founded on article 10 of the Debtor and Creditor Law. In the first cause of action, the plaintiff, being the assignee of a judgment against the husband only, seeks to have his judgment declared a lien upon certain real property (owned by the defendant wife) to the extent of certain payments made by the husband in reduction of one or more mortgages on said property and in connection with the payment of various improvements and other
In passing on the instant motion, there exists the fundamental requirement that the allegations contained in the complaint must be assumed to be true. In this court’s opinion the first cause of action must be held legally sufficient insofar as the same relates to payments made by the husband subsequent to the date of the obligation upon which the judgment is based. A more serious question is presented with respect to those payments made and the transfers of securities effected prior to the date of the afore-mentioned note. However, it has been held that under the provisions of article 10 of the Debtor and Creditor Law (particularly sections 275 and 276 thereof) a conveyance made with an actual and contemporary intent to defraud subsequent creditors may be challenged for fraud and set aside by them where the grantee participated in such fraud; and it is sufficient if such fraudulent intent existed either specifically or generally with respect to the subsequent creditor or creditors. (Matter of Campbell, 164 Misc. 632, 638, -and cases cited therein; and see, also, 37 C. J. S., Fraudu
Upon a consideration of those allegations of the first cause of action and the second cause of action relating to the payments and transfers made prior to the date of the above note, it is this court’s view that the same are legally sufficient to allege a cause of action to set aside the same as conveyances made in fraud of the plaintiff’s assignor as a subsequent creditor. Whether all of the transfers complained of were made within 10 years prior to the commencement of this action, whether an actual and contemporary intent to defraud subsequent creditors existed when the prior transfers were made, whether there was or is such a connection between the act of the debtor and the liability which subsequently accrued as to justify a finding that such intent existed, and whether the transfers were received with fraudulent intent on the part of the wife, are all matters to be determined on the trial of the action. In said connection, see section 53 of the Civil Practice Act; Glenn on Fraudulent Conveyances and Preferences (rev. ed.) Vol. 1, section 319 et seq., and Durland v. Crawford (183 App. Div. 763).
Accordingly, the motion is denied. Submit order.