30 Misc. 593 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1900
The action is to recover possession of certain goods, or their value, the sale and possession of which, it is alleged, were induced by the fraudulent representations of Gerrish & Co., to the plaintiffs, as to the former’s financial responsibility. The defendants claim title under a hill of sale, whereby the said firm sold to them, their stock in trade, including the goods received from the plaintiffs, for $16,144.22, payable as follows: $1,000 in cash, defendants’ promissory note for $'3,355.53, payable in three months, the satisfaction or discharge of an indebtedness of the said firm to the defendants amounting to $3,554.87 for goods sold and delivered, and the balance by assuming certain debts and obligations owing by Gerrish & Co. to certain persons named.
The uncontroverted proof amply supports the finding of the jury, as is assumed from their verdict, that the sale of the goods in suit was induced by the fraudulent representations of said firm as to its pecuniary responsibility, and that when purchasing they had no reasonable ground to believe that they would be able to pay. Eor the purpose of inducing the plaintiffs to make the sale, Gerrish &■ Co. stated to one of them, Sawyer, that the financial condition of the said firm was in better condition than the year previous, and that its indebtedness had been reduced and was not over $8,000, referring
The plaintiffs, having thus proved fraud in the purchase of the goods in controversy by Gerrish & Go., were entitled to rest, even as against the defendants, upon whom then devolved the burden of showing affirmatively that they were bona fide purchasers for value. Devoe v. Brandt, 53 N. Y, 462; Moyer v. Bloomingdale, 38 App. Div. 227. The plaintiffs, however, before resting, had already presented sufficient proof from which it might fairly be inferred that the defendants had knowledge of the fraudulent intent on the part of their transferrors to hinder or defraud their Creditors when
While the record fails to disclose any evidence of De Forest’s participation in the fraud, he is nevertheless bound by the knowledge which his partners may have had of the fraudulent intention of Gerrish & Co. to hinder or defraud their creditors. 2 Bates Par., §§ 389-393 and citations. At all events, under the circumstances, it was incumbent upon all the defendants to show that they did not know of the fraudulent motives of their transferrors. This they failed to do. As seen, the nearest approach thereto was the testimony of the defendant De Forest to the effect that he did not know of the purchase of the goods in controversy, by the said firm from the plaintiffs, but no testimony whatever was -offered that neither of the defendants had any knowledge or belief that the transfer, to them, by Gerrish & Go., was made with intent to hinder or defraud the creditors of the latter. Apart from this, the testimony of De
■ The question of the bona fides of the transaction was fairly submitted to the jury, upon all the evidence, which warranted them in finding,- as they did, that when the transfer in question was made the defendants knew that their transferrors intended to defraud their creditors, that the defendants participated in and actually furthered such fraudulent design, and hence that they were not bona fide transferees for value.
The sufficiency of the amended complaint was directly challenged upon the trial by the defendants, who unsuccessfully sought to exclude testimony tending to show knowledge on their part of the fraud perpetrated by Gerrish &. Co. against the plaintiffs, in the original purchase of the goods in suit, as well as the circumstances under which such goods came into their possession. The defendants excepted to such ruling and likewise to the denial of the motion to dismiss the complaint, made when the plaintiffs rested, and renewed at the close of the case. As already observed, the plaintiffs, upon proving the fraud of Gerrish & Co. in purchasing the goods in question, cast upon the defendants the burden of proving the bona fides of the said transfer, and hence were not called upon to give any testimony upon this head until the latter had offered evidence as to the fairness of the. consideration for such transfer. But as the objection applies to the original purchase as well as to the transfer in question, a consideration of the point so urged is deemed proper. The amended complaint alleges that the plaintiffs are the owners of the goods in suit and entitled to the immediate possession thereof; that the sale and delivery of the goods by the plaintiffs to Gerrish & Co. was made in consequence of the false and fraudulent representations of the latter to the former, and their reliance thereon; that “the defendants obtained possession thereof by virtue of an alleged bill of sale given to them by the said Margaret J. Gerrish,” and that, prior to the commencement of this action, the plaintiffs demanded from the defendants the immediate return of said goods, which they refused, and that the latter wrongfully detained the possession of the same from the plaintiffs.” The defendants maintain that the said pleading does not comply with the provisions of section' 1721 of the Code of
Argument is made that the trial justice erred in refusing to instruct the jury that if they found that any part of the consideration paid by the defendants was paid in good faith, then they were entitled to a verdict, and it is urged that the opinion of the court in Cooper Manufacturing Company v. De Forest, 5 App. Div. 43, is decisive of this question. In that case, however, the botia fides of the transfer to the defendants by Gerrish & Co. (which is the identical transaction inquired into in this action) was not submitted to the jury, and solely for that reason a new trial was ordered. The remarks of Van Brunt, P. J., who delivered the opinion of the court, as to the defendants being bona fide purchasers pro tanto, are based entirely upon the theory that they acted in good faith in the transaction in question, and, therefore, have no application to the present case, in which, as we have seen, the jury found that the defendants were not bona fide purchasers for value. In this situation the entire transfer of Gerrish & Co.’s stock in trade to the defendants was wholly void, and consequently any portion of the consideration which, in fact, may have been paid by the defendants cannot stand as security or indemnity for that portion. Baldwin v. Short, 125 N. Y. 553.
The defendants insist that error, is predicable of the refusal to charge the jury, at their request, that unless the jury found that they had notice of the fraud perpetrated, or claimed to have been perpetrated by Gerrish & Go., their verdict must be for the defendants, but as the trial justice had already instructed the jury to the same effect, he was not required to repeat the instructions upon that subject.
The question as to the sufficiency of the form of the motion for dismissal is immaterial in view of our conclusion upon the merits.
For the reasons above stated, the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Beekman, P. J., and O’Gorman, J., concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.