110 N.Y. 435 | NY | 1888
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *437
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *438 This controversy is a struggle between creditors of the same debtor for a preference. The defendant has obtained it by negotiation and agreement, and has had it wrested from him by the judgment of the court from whose determination he appeals.
The question turns upon the validity of his chattel mortgage, which was assailed as fraudulent. The finding of the referee was to the contrary, and has not been reversed by the General Term, which acted upon supposed errors of law, leaving the facts to stand as determined by the trial court. We must assume, therefore, that the transaction was not fraudulent if such an assumption is legally possible. And so, the circumstances of the allowance by the debtor of $200 for alleged services of the creditor, and the delivery of checks by the latter almost immediately returned, ceased to be material; for they were merely probative facts, bearing upon the honesty of the dealing, and while, to some extent, they may have been badges of fraud, their force is exhausted by the finding of honesty and good faith. We are confined to *441 a study of the transaction itself, and to the inquiry whether, as matter of law, it was fraudulent and void against other creditors.
The view of the case which prevailed with the General Term was, that the mortgage, and the agreement which led to it, taken together, amounted to a general assignment by an insolvent debtor, which was void because it reserved to him a possible surplus at the expense of unpaid creditors, and the right to make preferences subsequent to the conveyance. If the basis of the reasoning be sound, the result reached was a proper inference; but we are not satisfied that the mortgage and agreement amounted to a general assignment by the debtor. In form it was an absolute sale upon a chattel mortgage given for a fixed and agreed consideration; and while, nevertheless, such a sale, in spite of its form, may be proved to be an assignment in trust (Britton
v. Lorenz,
The dealing, therefore, must be treated as a chattel mortgage by a debtor to his creditor, the consideration of which was evidenced and settled by the outside agreement. So regarded, the findings declare it to have been in good faith and not fraudulent. The arrangement for the sale on credit was made harmless by the stipulation that Guthrie should take the credits as cash, and himself bear the delay, and risk the solvency of the purchasers. (Brackett v. Harvey,
The order of the General Term should be reversed, and that entered on the report of the referee affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Order reversed and judgment affirmed.