1 N.Y.S. 705 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1888
At the time the defendant levied upon the property in question, it was in the actual possession of the judgment debtor named in the execution. The plaintiff claims that at that time he was the owner of part of the property, and that, after the levy and before the sale, he acquired title to the balance by purchase from persons who were the owners at the time of the levy. The serious question presented is whether the title to the property was in the plaintiff or Turver at the time of the sale. In 1886, Turver was a manufacturer of sash, doors, and other building materials, at Suspension Bridge, in this state. A short time prior to the levy, Turver purchased of one L. G. Fuller a quantity of pine lumber at the agreed price of $12 per thousand,
But the defendant insists, and made the point on the trial, that the condition of payment imposed by two of the respective vendors, Frank and Fuller, was colorable only, and was a mere device resorted to by them and the vendeefor the purpose of enabling the latter to keep away his creditors, and hinder and delay them in the collection of their debts, and asked permission to go to-the jury on that question, which the court refused, to which ruling he took an exception. If such was the intention and purpose of the parties, then, as-against the defendant, who in this action represents the judgment creditors-of the vendee, the condition is not available to the plaintiff, and the title will be deemed to have been vested in the vendee. The legal proposition, as thus stated, cannot be disputed. Fraud vitiates all contracts, as against parties-whose legal rights are affected thereby, and will be avoided and annulled at the instance of the defrauded party. Coggill v. Railroad Co., 3 Gray, 549;. Ludden v. Hazen, 31 Barb. 650. We incline to the opinion that a case was made for the consideration of the jury on this question, and that they would have been justified in reaching the conclusion that the agreement with the-plaintiff, as well as the one made with Fuller, was merely colorable. And the conditions mentioned were inserted in those agreements for the purpose of hindering and delaying the creditors of the purchaser in the collection of their debts. In the plaintiff’s contract the bargain contained terms which do not usually accompany conditional sales, and they are such as to naturally excite suspicion in the minds of the creditors of the vendee as to the integrity of the transaction. In disposing of the question of fraud, every feature of the transaction is to be considered, including the fact that the vendee acquired actual possession, and had the apparent title to the lumber, and the articles into which it was manufactured. The value of the property was increased by the labor bestowed upon it by the vendee, and in this new form he was authorized, under the contract with the plaintiff, to ship the same beyond the jurisdiction of the state before paying for the goods, and securing title to the property in himself. By the terms of the contract, he might pay the vendor the purchase price in full, and yet have no title to the property, if the sum stipulated to be paid on the prior indebtedness remained unpaid. This arrangement would enable the vendee, after paying for the property in full, and adding to its value by the expenditures of labor and money, to keep his creditors from seizing and selling the same in the satisfaction of their demands. It also afforded him an opportunity to remove the property beyond the reach of the process of the courts of this state, when in fact his equitable interest in the property would be nearly equal to this entire value. By a series of arrangements of this character the vendor could secure to himself the entire value of the vendee’s labor, and the profits of his business, until his prior indebtedness was fully paid, to the exclusion of all the other creditors of the vendee, and he would incur no risk or hazard by such arrangement. If upheld as valid, it will constitute a novel way of securing the payment of a debt out of the future earnings of an insolvent debtor, to the exclusion of all his other creditors. While such an arrangment does not violate any positive rule of law, yet so far as it provides for securing the vendor’s prior indebtedness out of the property sold, the transaction possesses all the features and objections which exist against an unrecorded pledge or chattel mortgage. By a statute passed before these contracts were made, (Laws 1884, c. 315,) it is provided that every contract for the conditional sale of goods and chattels which shall be accompanied by an immediate delivery, and be followed by an actual and continued
All concur.