33 N.Y.S. 777 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
This action was brought by plaintiff, as a judgment creditor, to set aside a general assignment executed on May 10, 1884, by O. K. Wood & Co., composed of Orville K., Albert G. H., and Victor A. Wood, and also individual assignments of Orville K. and Victor A. Wood, executed at the same time. On the trial it was shown that in the spring of 1882 the above-named firm of O. K. Wood & Co., being financially embarrassed, its members organized a corporation called the Queen of the Harvest Manufacturing ■Company, with a capital stock of 4,000 shares at $25 each. On
It is urged by appellant’s counsel that the firm of O. K. Wood & Co. and its members, in organizing the Queen of the Harvest Manufacturing Company in 1882, while financially embarrassed, and transferring to the corporation the greater part of their available assets, evinced a fraudulent intent. But the corporation was organized two years before the assignments. No connection was shown between the act of forming the corporation and the assignments. If the corporation was organized, and the property of O. K. Wood & Co. transferred to it as a fraudulent scheme to defraud creditors of the firm, the assignee, Clark, could properly proceed, under the provisions of chapter 314 of the Laws of 1858, as amended by chapter 487 of the Laws of 1889, to set aside such fraudulent transfer. Under the evidence it did not appear that the action of the copartners in organizing the corporation and transferring their assets to it two years before the execution of the assignments which are assailed had any connection therewith, and hence the prior fraudulent act of the copartners, if any, did not Afitiate the assignments. For the same reason we are of the opinion that if the cancellation of the mortgage of W. W. Wood six weeks before the execution of the assignments in question was a fraud on the creditors of the copartnership, the referee was not, on that account, compelled to find fraud in the assignments. He found, on sufficient evidence, that the assignors did not contemplate making the assignments sought to be set aside in this action for more than a week before the execution thereof. It is true that he held in another finding that in March, 1884, the firm had began making preparations for an assignment, but he does not find, nor did the evidence require him to do so,
The point suggested by counsel for appellant as to the preferred .notes of the wives of the assignors does not require a discussion since the opinion of the court of appeals in this case, reversing the judgment first entered herein. 128 N. Y. 35, 27 N. E. 1020.
Other objections are made by plaintiff to the validity of the assignments, which we do not deem it necessary to discuss. We think, on the questions of fact raised by such objections, the conclusions of the referee were sustained by the evidence. We are also of the opinion that neither of the exceptions to the rulings of the referee on the trial require us to award a new trial. The judgment should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.