18 N.J. Eq. 532 | N.J. | 1867
The opinion of the court was delivered by
A careful examination of the evidence in this case, has led me to the conclusion that the premises in question were conveyed to the respondent for a consideration which was below their real value. There appear to be strong reasons to justify the belief that, at a fair sale, these lands would have brought more than enough to pay all the liabilities of the grantor who, as matters now stand, is an insolvent. The
We are called upon, then, to deal in the first place with this conjuncture: A debtor having property which, at a fair valuation, is ample to satisfy all that he owes, transfers such property, by way of sale and payment, to one of his creditors; such creditor being a near relative.
No one, it is presumed, will deny that such a transaction is well calculated to excite suspicion and awaken vigilance. Its honesty is defensible only on the supposition that both vendor and vendee were ignorant of the value of the property transferred. The vendor, as against the just rights of creditors, could not give away his property, nor could any creditor, knowing the position of affairs, receive anything for which he did not give an equivalent. Such a conveyance can stand only on the ground of its entire dona fides, and the burthen of proof, in this respect, under such circumstances, is manifestly on the purchaser. The defence of the respondent is, that he took the property at what both he and the insolvent thought was a fair price; and this, as the claim defeats the equities of the case, he must establish by plain proof. Has he done this ?
The price^ which the respondent in his answer says he and the debtor set upon the land, was $3000. This is $500 less than the valuation fixed by some of his own witnesses. The testimony on the part of the complainant places the value at from $4000 to $6000. It seems inexplicable, then, how the respondent and the debtor could, in sincerity, deem $3000 the full worth of the land. They were both well acquainted with it; it had been the home of the debtor, and the respondent was living upon it at the time. It is true that the respondent in his answer avers that, in point of
But although of this opinion, it does not seem to me that the facts are such as must lead necessarily to the conclusion that the conveyance, at the time it was executed, was tainted with actual fraud. Such a judgment would be unnecessarily severe. There is but a shade of difference, sometimes, between the act of taking a conveyance of property as security for the payment of a debt which approximates the value of such pledge, and taking it in payment of such debt; so that, subsequently, that shade of difference may, perhaps innocently, be lost sight of by the parties. This, I think, has happened to this respondent. Probably the arrangement by force of which he took his conveyance, was loose and ill-defined; such is often the case; but the fair presumption, from all the facts of the case I think, is, that the purpose of such conveyance was to enable him to raise the money due him, by a sale, without the expense or delay of a suit in equity on his mortgage. This hypothesis is the most favorable one which can be raised up for the respondent, and may be, it seems to me,
And again, we find the same idea in the evidence of Mr. Echerson. Referring to a conversation with the respondent, his words are: “ I asked him how it was that he was in possession of this property, and I had a claim against the doctor; I think he told me the doctor owed him, and that, in the first place, he got a mortgage, and afterwards he got a deed; he spoke of the mortgage not being satisfactory, and that the property was now his • he said he did not want anything more than his claim.”
This evidence, then, shows conclusively that the respondent was desirous of obtaining the payment of his debt; that with that view he took his mortgage to his solicitor for foreclosure, who advised him that if he could get a conveyance, it would answer the same purpose, and would be attended with less expense; that the respondent said he would endeavor to do this; that he succeeded in getting a conveyance; and that he told one witness that he meant the surplus, after he should
Making then this deduction, I am brought to the result that the conveyance of these premises to the respondent was, to a partial extent, voluntary and without consideration. So far as the debt due to the respondent reaches, the conveyance was founded in value; beyond that, it had nothing to support it. As to this excess of the value of the land over the consideration to be given for it, the respondent should be held as a trustee for the creditors of the grantor. Plainly on this ground, therefore, the appellant is entitled to the aid of the court. Nor is the frame of the bill inapplicable to this aspect of the case. It proceeds upon the point of a conveyance, without consideration, and which was, on that account, a fraud upon creditors. The case laid, therefore, is partially proved; the conveyance, though not wholly, is in some degree voluntary, and is, thus far, constructively a fraud, delaying, and if not set aside or controlled, defeating creditors. I do not, consequently, find any difficulty, arising from the structure of these pleadings, in granting relief in the form above indicated. In the case of Boyd v. Dunlap, 1 Johns. C. R. 478, the bill, in its substance and general construction, was similar to the one under consideration, for it was founded on a complaint that a conveyance was voluntary, and was fraudulently made to defeat the complainant and other creditors. The evidence showed, as in the present instance, a partial, but not a full consideration; and Chancellor Kent concluded that there was sufficient ground for a
My conclusion is, that the appellant should have a decree in his favor in the court below, and that it should be referred to a master to ascertain the amount due to the respondent, and which sum should be declared a first lien on the said lands; and that said respondent, or a master in chancery, should be directed to sell said lands at public sale, and that the proceeds thereof should be applied to the payment of the said debt due to the respondent, with the interest thereon; and that, in the second place, out of the surplus, if any such there be, the taxed costs of both parties, as well in the court below as in this court, be paid; and in the third place, that the principal and interest due, or to grow due, cn the judgment of the appellant, be paid.
Let the decree be reversed, and the case remitted with instructions in conformity with the above view.
For reversal — Beasley, C. J., Belle, Clement, Dalbimple, Depue, Elmeb, Kennedy, Yail, Ybedenbubg-h, Wales, Woodhull. 11.
For affirmance — Eobt.