42 Barb. 300 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1864
By the Court,
The plaintiff, Lydia T. Carpenter, the mortgagee, and Thomas E. Carpenter, the mortgagor, were two of the five children of Thomas T. Carpenter, late of Monroe in Wayne county, who died in 1838, leaving a considerable real and personal estate. His widow was entitled to dower in the lands, and also to interest upon the sum of $500 during her life, given her by the will, and the residue was to be divided equally amongst his five children. The lands were afterwards sold by the executors to the two sons, Alfred
The mortgage, which it is the purpose of this action to foreclose, was given upon the lands purchased by Thomas E. Carpenter, to secure the two notes made by the two brothers to the plaintiff, three fifths of the two bonds, two notes for $300 given by Thomas E. to one James Bull, and another for $100 to Henry Pearsall. There was no proof of the debt to Pearsall, but the validity of the debt or notes to Bull was proved, as well as the payment by the plaintiff after this action was commenced. At the time the mortgage was given, the plaintiff made a paroi promise to pay the bonds referred to. And she did not, nor has she since, delivered up the two notes against Alfred and Thomas E. At this time Thomas E. Carpenter and the firm of Havens, Hull & Co., of which he was a member, was insolvent, and the debt upon which the defendant Patrick C. Martin recovered his judgment was contracted. The defendants, Muran & Bonner, are also judgment creditors of the defendants’ firm. The referee found, as facts in the case, that Thomas E. Carpenter executed the bond and mortgage with the fraud
The question is upon the fraudulent character of the plaintiff’s mortgage. Is it void on that account? It is not void because thereby the mortgagor intended to hinder and delay his other creditors, for were it an absolute conveyance,
The judgment should. be affirmed. with costs.
Brown, Scrugham, Lott and .F. Barnard, Justices.]