(after stating the facts as above). It is extremely hard to know what the draftsman of the supplemental bill really did intend to allege, but we think that the District Judge was right in concluding that out of it might be spelled enough to support it as a bill to set aside a fraudulent conveyance. As such it was within the ancillary jurisdiction of the District Court, regardless of the fact that there was no diversity of citizenship between the parties. A fraudulent conveyance is void under the New York statute, and may be disregarded, even by a creditor whose judgment is entered afterwards. Chautauque Bank v. Risley,
Therefore we come to the merits. When a simple creditor has no lion upon the assets pursued (Case v. Beauregard,
Generally, the plaintiff in such a suit must also show that there was a return nulla bona upon the judgment before hill filed, unless the point ho waived. Sage v. Memphis, etc., Co.,
In the ease at bar the supplemental hill alleged that the Practical Company had been left an “empty shell.” This was not proved, because, for all that appeared, it had accounts receivable which made it solvent. On the other hand, all property leviable by execution had been conveyed, for in New York ehosos in aetion can still be reached only by bill in equity (“supplementary proceedings”). McNeeley v. Welz,
Nor was it important that the accounts receivable might have been large enough to make the Practical Company solvent. An intent to delay and binder creditors is as much within the statute as an intent to defraud them, and, if it exist, it is of no moment that the grantor be solvent. Teague v. Bass,
Finally, as to consideration, it is
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enough to say that no consideration will support a conveyance known to the grantee to be fraudulent. It is, however, apparently the rule in New York (Frank v. Von Bayer,
Finding no error, except the purely formal one that the bill did not allege that it was filed on the same day as the decree against the Practical Company, the decree appealed from is affirmed.
