101 N.Y. 226 | NY | 1886
Owing to the method in which this case is presented by the record, the question of fact discussed by the General Term, does not seem to have been properly before that tribunal. None of the evidence taken on the trial is contained in the error book, and the case was considered below, as it must be here, solely upon the facts found by the referee. It was, therefore, impossible for the General Term to review the case upon the facts, as they were not before it, and its order of reversal, must have been based upon assumed errors of law to which our right of review is necessarily confined. (Case v. Phelps,
The statute relating to fraudulent conveyances provides in express language, that every conveyance of any estate or interest in lands, made with intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors, shall, as against such creditors, be void. It is further provided that in all cases arising under this statute the question of fraudulent intent "shall be deemed a question of fact and not oflaw," and that it shall not be so construed as to affect or impair the title of a purchaser for a valuable consideration, unless it shall appear that such purchaser, had previous notice of the fraudulent intent of his immediate grantor, or of the fraud rendering void the title of such grantor. (Tit. 3, chap. 7, part 2 of R.S.)
It thus appears that the finding of the referee is stated substantially in the language of the statute, and must be deemed conclusive as to the intent with which the mortgage was given, unless some controlling fact is also found, which nullifies it, and renders the conclusion of law predicated thereon, erroneous. It is inferable from the opinion of the court below that it supposed such a fact was discovered, in the finding that the mortgage was given for a valuable consideration. We are of the opinion, however, that the fact of the payment of a valuable consideration upon a transfer of property is not, as a proposition of law, inconsistent with the existence of an intent to defraud, and that in the application of this principle, no distinction can be made between the consideration furnished by an existing debt, or one arising in any other manner. It is undoubtedly evidence, and usually strong evidence, of the intent with which the conveyance is made, but is simply a circumstance *230 to be considered by the court in determining the question of intent. The statute itself declares all conveyances made with a fraudulent intent absolutely void, except in the case of those made upon a good consideration and in ignorance on the part of the purchaser of the fraudulent design of his grantor. It contains, therefore, the strongest implication that the payment of a valuable consideration is not inconsistent with the existence of an intent to defraud, and of such knowledge on the part of the purchaser, of the fraudulent design, as will avoid a conveyance made to him, even though accompanied by the payment of an adequate consideration. The vice in the argument of the court below, if any there is, seems to be in its assumption, that the mere payment of a good consideration by the vendee, upon the transfer of property by an insolvent debtor, as matter of law disproves the existence of a fraudulent intent in such a transaction. It seems to us that this very case illustrates the error contained in such an assumption.
The debtor here was enabled by the inducement, held out to his creditor, in the offer to secure his debt, to obtain from him an assurance that the property mortgaged should be so held and protected by the mortgage from other creditors, as to enable the mortgagor to occupy and enjoy it for an indefinite time, for the benefit of himself and his family. Although the form of the transaction was that of security for a debt, its real object and design, was to so incumber the property by an apparent lien, as to mislead creditors and enable the debtor to possess and enjoy its beneficial fruits. The effect of the transaction was really to diminish the actual value of the security given, and enable the debtor to secure the difference, between the present value of a security payable in the future without interest, and the present value of the land mortgaged. This was property and justly belonged to the creditors of the insolvent debtor, but was practically withdrawn from them by the transaction.
It is argued, if the debtor retains any interest in the property mortgaged, that such interest is property, and can be reached by the creditor, and, therefore, he is not defrauded. It is possible that this might be so if the whole transaction *231 was made known, but the vice here is the imposition of a fictitious, because unenforceable incumbrance, equal to the entire value of the property mortgaged. It is no answer to such a transaction, to say that the same result could have been accomplished by lawful proceedings, taken by the voluntary action of the creditor. It was not so done, and whether it ever would have been accomplished in that way is purely a matter of conjecture. The continued possession of the premises by the debtor was here imposed as the condition of giving the security. Other situations can readily be conceived where the transfer of property, for a valuable consideration, may be made the cover for fraudulent practices. Exchanges by which one kind of property is converted into another more easily concealed or transported; the incumbrance of visible and unavailable property, and the retention of that which is convertible, or even the reverse of this, and other cases, where the aggregate value of the debtor's property is not diminished, but an apparent obstacle to a creditor's proceedings is created, are among the methods by which frauds may be perpetrated, by an insolvent debtor. Such transactions can be justified upon the reasoning of the court below, but they are in fact, fraudulent and condemned by the statute. (Pettit v. Shepherd, 5 Paige, 493, 501).
The cases cited by the General Term to sustain the position taken by it do not seem to us, to bear out the proposition advanced. The case of Auburn Ex. Bank v. Fitch (48 Barb. 344) was a review by the General Term upon questions of fact of the judgment of the trial court in favor of the plaintiff, and the reversal was based altogether upon alleged erroneous findings of fact. In Archer v. O'Brien (7 Hun, 146, 150), the question arose on exceptions to the charge of the trial judge, and the court there held that the debtor's vendee was entitled to a charge that "If he was a bona fide creditor and took a bill of sale as security for his debt, and had no notice of any fraudulent design on the part of the vendor, he was entitled to hold the property as against the other creditors of his vendor." The proposition of law contained in this request was undoubtedly *232
correct, but it affords no countenance to the doctrine that thebona fides of the debt alone is conclusive upon the question of a fraudulent intent. Even the case of Jewett v. Noteware (30 Hun, 192) is sustainable upon the ground that fraudulent intent would not be predicated of the facts, the only fraud found, being the intent on the part of one creditor, to get payment of his debt in preference to another, knowing that the debtor did not possess property sufficient to pay both. The report of the case does not show that there was any finding of fact that the mortgage there was given to defraud creditors, and therein it differs radically from the case at bar. In the case of Bedell
v. Chase (
We have thus briefly referred to the cases cited in the court below, and do not find in them authority for the proposition claimed. The authorities, aside from the statute itself, holding a contrary proposition, are quite numerous, and cannot, within reasonable limits, be either all referred to, or extensively quoted from.
Wait on Fraudulent Conveyances, § 208, says: "If the alienation is effected with a mutual design to hinder, delay or defraud creditors, the presence even of the most bounteous or adequate consideration will not save or cure it." "It is not sufficient that it be upon good consideration or bona fides, it must be both," citing many cases. (Kerr on Frauds, 199.) May on Fraudulent Conveyances, 233, says: "Mala fides supersedes all inquiry into the consideration, but bona fides alone is not always sufficient to support a transaction not founded on any valuable consideration." Senator EDWARDS, delivering the opinion of the Court of Errors in Waterbury v. Sturtevant (18 Wend. 354), said: "This, therefore, appears to be a case between a debtor and a bona fide creditor in which the former has preferred the latter to his other creditors, and *233
if simply a case of this description unaffected with fraud, the conveyance must be considered legal and valid." The case ofBlennerhassett v. Sherman (
From this review of the authorities it seems clear that, where there is an actual intent to defraud, no form in which the transaction is put can shield the property so transferred from the claims of creditors, even though a full and adequate consideration be received for the same.
The order of the General Term should, therefore, be reversed and the judgment entered on the report of the referee affirmed.
All concur.
Order reversed and judgment affirmed.