37 N.Y.S. 540 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
Lead Opinion
This action was brought by the plaintiff as a judgment creditor of the firm of Horace IT. Eapalyea & Go., composed of the defendants, Horace IT. Eapalyea, Frank Nickerson and John S. Provost, on behalf of himself and all other judgment creditors similarly situated who might come in and contribute to the expenses of the action, to set aside an assignment made by said Eapalyea & Co., and certain mortgages given and judgments suffered by them, as being fraudulent and void and of no effect as against the plaintiff and such other judgment creditors, and also to have the preferences sought to be created in and by said assignment, mortgages and judgments, so far as they exceeded one-third in value of the estate sought to be assigned, declared to be invalid and of no effect as against the plaintiff and such other creditors as aforesaid.
The complaint alleged the co-partnership of the defendants Horace H. Eapalyea, Frank Nickerson and John S.' Provost under the firm name of Eapalyea & Co.; that the defendant John C. Provost was the father of the defendant John S. Provost; that the defendants Prince W. Nickerson and Charles W. Nickerson were co-partners doing business under the firm name of P. W. Nickerson & Co., and that the defendant Prince W. Nickerson was the father, and the defendant Charles ~W. Nickerson was the brother of the defendant Frank Nickerson, who was one of the members of the firm of Eapalyea & Co.
The complaint further alleged the obtaining of a judgment by the plaintiff against the defendants composing the firm of Eapalyea & Co., on the 9th of July, 1889, the issuing of an execution thereon and its return unsatisfied; and further, that on the 16th of January, 1890, the defendant Frank Nickerson made and executed under the firm name of Eapalyea & Co. a certain chattel mortgage and bill of sale to P. W. Nickerson & Co. of a large amount of property belonging to the firm, to secure the payment of a large indebtedness of the finn of Eapalyea & Co. to the firm of P. W. Nickerson & Co. in the amount of upwards of $42,000 ; and that said Frank Nicker-son made and executed such chattel mortgage and bill of sale in the name of said firm of Eapalyea & Co. without the privity, consent or authority of either of the other members of the firm.
The complaint further alleged that on the 21st of January, 1890, the defendant Frank Nickerson made and executed in the name of said firm, a certain other chattel mortgage and bill of sale to the defendant John 0. Provost, the father of the defendant John S. Provost, of a large amount of property to secure the payment of a large indebtedness of Bapalyea & Co. to said John C. Provost in the sum of upwards of $22,000, and that said mortgage and bill of sale were voluntary conveyances and utterly without consideration to support the same.
The complaint further alleged that on the 22d of January, 1890, said firm of Bapalyea & Co. permitted the defendant John C. Provost to obtain two judgments by default against them upon an alleged partnership liability of said firm; and that on the 23d of January, the said firm of Bapalyea & Co., being insolvent and unable to pay their partnership debts, duly executed an assignment for the benefit of creditors to the defendants John D. Kurtzcrook and Elihu B. Frost of all their property with preferences, such assignment being expressly made subject to the lien of the chattel mortgage made by Bapalyea & Co. to the firm of P. W. Nickerson & Co., and also subject to the lien of the chattel mortgage made by Bapalyea & Go. to the defendant John C. Provost. It further alleged that said mortgages, bills of sale and assignment were not made in good faith, but, together with the judgments, all constituted and were to be treated as one and the same transaction and plan to hinder, delay and defraud the plaintiff and other creditors of the firm of Bapalyea & Go.; that the value of the assigned estate attempted to be conveyed by said assignment and mortgages and bills of sale after deducting the charges for wages and salaries and the expenses of executing the trust created by said assignment was less than $100,000, and that the amount of the preferences made and created in and by said assignment, mortgages and bills of sale was upwards of $80,000, and exceeded by many thousands of dollars, one-third of the value of said assigned estate, and that said instruments, and judgments and said preferences were fraudulent,
The complaint then further alleges that the defendant Samuel D. Coykendall claimed to be the purchaser and assignee from the mortgagees therein named of said mortgages hereinbefore referred to, and that the assignees in said assignment have been requested on behalf of the creditors of the concern to commence an action as such assignees against the owners and holders of such mortgages, hills of sale and judgments for the purpose of invalidating the same and obtaining a judicial declaration that said mortgages, bills of sale and judgments were intended to and did create an unlawful preference as against the other creditors of said firm of Rapalyea & Co., and that as such they were fraudulent and void, but that although thereunto duly requested, said assignees distinctly and finally refused to commence such an action, but, on the contrary, expressly stated that it was their purpose and intention to recognize said mortgages, bills of sale and judgments as debts of said firm, and that it was their intention to pay the same out of the assets of said firm. And the complaint further alleged that in March, 1890, the firm of P. W. Nickerson & Co. made an assignment to the defendants Caleb B. Knevals and Elihu B. Frost.
The defendants answered, admitting the allegations in regard to the existence of the various co-partnerships, the execution of the various instruments stated in the complaint and the recovery of the judgments, but denied that they were without consideration or made with any fraudulent intent, or that the mortgages were executed and judgments obtained in contemplation of an assignment by the firm of Rapalyea & Go.
Upon the trial of this action the court held that the execution of the mortgages, the suffering of the judgments and the execution of the assignment were all one transaction and created invalid preferences in excess of the amount of one-third of 'the value of the assigned estate, and that such preferences must be reduced and scaled down to conform to the statutory limit of one-third in value of the assigned estate after making the statutory deduction, which amount of one-third in value of the assigned estate after making such statutory deduction was alone applicable to the payment of said preferences, and that an accounting be had as in the decree
From the interlocutory judgment entered upon this decision this appeal is taken.
It is conceded upon the part of the respondent that in order to reach and scale down alleged unlawful preferences created by transactions separate and apart from tire assignment, but claimed as matter of law and fact to constitute a ■ part thereof, it is necessary to prove an intent on the part of the assignors to execute .a general assignment and a knowledge of that intent on the part of the creditor at the time he receives the security which is the subject of attack.
The claim urged upon the part of the appellants is that there is no evidence which justified the court in finding that the execution of these mortgages, the suffering of the judgments and the execution of the general assignment were one and the same transaction, or that at the time the mortgagees received their securities, and the actions were commenced which resulted in the judgments, they had reason to know or believe that their debtors would shortly thereafter make an assignment. For the determination of this question it will.be necessary to consider briefly the testimony on this point. We must first bear in mind the chronological order of events, and then consider the relations of the parties and what was done and what inferences must be drawn therefrom. And it seems to me that if the transaction is capable of two inferences, one in favor of its integrity and the other to the contrary, the inference in favor of the position that no fraud upon the law was attempted must be the one that should prevail. This is certainly the rule in regard to fraud in fact (Morris v. Talcott, 96 N. Y. 100), and I can see no reason why it should not prevail in respect to fraud upon the law.
The evidence showed that from the spring of 1887 until the filing of said general assignment by said firm on January 24, 1890, the firm of Rapalyea & Co. had been doing business in the city of New York and Long Island City. Their capital when the partnership was formed consisted of $10,000 in cash and $10,000 in buildings, material and merchandise. This latter was transferred to the firm by John C. Provost as the contribution of his son, John S. Provost, and the $10,000 in cash was furnished by Prince W. Nickerson
From the foregoing facts it undoubtedly appears that Nickerson & Oo., Rapalyea & Oo. and John 0. Provost knew that if the support which the firm of Rapalyea & Co. had been receiving from Nickerson & Co. and John C. Provost was withdrawn and the overdue claims held by Nickerson & Co. and John C. Provost should be pressed for payment, that the firm was insolvent and that it would be unable to meet its liabilities, and that this had been the condition of the firm for a long period of time. -It was the undoubted intention of Nickerson & Co. and Jolm C. Provost in the commencement of the suits and the obtaining of the mortgages in question to get some security for the advances which they had been making to the ■firm of Rapalyea & Co., and it was undoubtedly Provost’s intention in the commencement of the suits in October and December, 1889, not to enter judgments in those suits until some necessity arose for his protection, and it was a great surprise to him when on the 20th or 21st of January, 1890, he learned the fact that Nicker-son & Co. liad stolen a march upon him and secured a mortgage from Frank Nickerson for $42,000 upon the assets of the firm of Rapalyea & Co. We must necessarily conclude that the firm of Nickerson & Co. were influenced by their knowledge of the condition of Rapalyea & Co., in attempting to get security for the amount of their claim against said firm; and that the mortgage given to Nickerson & Co., was not entirely the result of an effort to please the officers of the bank which was discounting the obligations of Rapalyea & Co. for the
In respect to the judgments obtained by John C. Provost, there does not seem to be any ground for prohibiting a creditor from bringing an action upon a claim which is due. And I know of no penalty which he incurs by his failure to enter a judgment as soon as he is entitled to do so, nor of any penalty which any party may incur by reason of his failure to defend an action to which no defense exists. And unless some such penalty can be imposed it is difficult to see how these judgments, which were not entered by Provost until after he knew that Rapalyea & Co. were going to make an assignment, can be attacked. The consent of Rapalyea & Co. was not necessary to the entry of these judgments. A party has the right to avail himself of the ordinary processes of the law
In respect to the mortgage which was executed to John 0. Provost under the circumstances stated, I think that the conclusion must necessarily be drawn that it was executed at a time when all the parties knew that Rapalyea & Co. 'would make the assignment which was executed on the 23d of January, 1890. It appears that that mortgage to Provost was suggested when he learned of the mortgage which Nickerson & Co. had received, and Rapalyea & Co. seem to have at once discussed the question of making an assignment. It is true that Hr. Rapalyea states that the discussion as to the advisability of making an assignment took place the next day, but it seems to me that the fair inference to be drawn is that that question was discussed at the interview had upon the day upon which it was decided to execute the mortgage to Provost. Provost was familiar with all that was going on, and undoubtedly knew that the assignment was to follow. This being the condition of affairs, he would seem to be within the rule that a party taking security from a debtor, knowing that this debtor is about to assign, can only hold such security to an amount which will bring the preferences within one-third of the assigned estate after the statutory deductions.
It follows, therefore, that the judgment must be modified so as to dismiss the complaint as to P. W. Nickerson & Co., and hold valid the judgments obtained by John C. Provost, and scale down the mortgage to John C. Provost and the preferences contained in the assignment; and the provision prohibiting the preferred creditors from participating in any part of the assigned estate must also be modified, as such preferred creditors become general creditors in respect to that portion of their claims for which they have not received payment.
Judgment ordered accordingly, without costs to either party.
Rumsey, Patterson and O’Brien, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
It is a little difficult, from an examination of the complaint, to determine upon just what theory this action was brought. It would
From the demand for júdgment it would appear that the relief to which the plaintiff supposes himself to be entitled was that the assignment itself and the judgments and chattel mortgages described in the complaint should be set aside as fraudulent and void as against the plaintiff and the other creditors of Eapalyea & Co. Such an action would be based upon fraud, and the usual rules applying to actions for fraud, both as to the admission of evidence and the nature of the proof necessary to sustain such causes of action, would have to be observed. Before the case came on for trial, however, it had been finally settled by the Court of Appeals that the proper remedy in such a case was not that the assignment and other instruments, by which a violation of the provisions of the act in question was attempted, should be set aside, but that the court would give effect to that act by treating the instruments complained of as a part of the assignment, and as an attempt to create a preference prohibited by the act referred to and would scale down such preference to the amount allowed by the statute. The case was tried upon that theory and judgment was awarded granting the plaintiff such relief.
The complaint clearly alleges facts sufficient to sustain an action of this character, and the only question that we have to determine is, whether or not upon the evidence in the case and the facts found by the court below the judgment was authorized. In the opinion of the presiding justice, he seems to assume that this is an action based upon a fraud upon the law, and applies the rule that if a transaction is capable of two inferences, one in favor of its integrity and the other to the contrary, the inference that no fraud was attempted is the one that must prevail; but I do not think this action is one based upon fraud.
The act in question (Laws of 1887, chap. 503) which is claimed to have been violated by the defendants is an amendment to the act
The court below found that two chattel mortgages, two bills of' sale and two judgments in favor of certain of the defendants were and are a part of the same transaction with the general assignment for the benefit of the creditors of the firm of H. H. Eapalyea & Oo.; that such chattel mortgages and bills of sale and judgments created invalid preferences in excess of the amount of one-tliird in value of the assigned estate, and directed judgment by which that preference was reduced and scaled down to conform to such statutory limit of one-third in value of the assigned estate left after making the statutory deductions as aforesaid, and an accounting was ordered before a referee to determine the amount of the estate in the hands of the defendants Crook & Frost as assignees of H. H. Eapalyea & Co., the final judgment to be reserved until the coming in of the referee’s report.
Is an action to obtain such a judgment an action based upon fraud, or one to which the rules, before stated as applicable to actions to obtain relief because of fraud, are applicable ? In a case where preferences in excess of those allowed by the act in question were contained in the general assignment itself, and the question was whether or not such preferences should be paid in full or should be limited to one-tliird of the assigned estate, the sole question to be determined would be the amount of the assigned estate, and whether or not the debts preferred exceeded one-tliird of that amount after making the proper deductions. No fraud need be alleged or proved to entitle an assignee or a creditor seeking to enforce the provisions of the statute to maintain such an action. Whether or not the assignor and the creditor fraudulently created the preference, or innocently created it under a mistake of fact, would not be at all material. What the court would be bound to do would be to prevent either the assignor from paying, or the cred
In determining this question, therefore, it seems to me that it' should be viewed simply as one where the court is to determine, first, whether these mortgages, bills of sale and judgments were executed before, but in contemplation of the execution of a general assignment; and, second, whether, if so, the preferences thereby created exceeded one-third of the assigned estate. Both of those propositions being found, it becomes the duty of the assignee and of the court, in an action by him or in his behalf, in aid of the assignment for the benefit of creditors, to provide that the preferred creditors should be paid not more than one-third of the assigned estate. (Berger v. Varrelmann, 127 N. Y. 281; Spelman v. Freedman (130 id. 421). In Maass v. Falk (146 N. Y. 39), Gray, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, says: “ The prohibition of the act of 1887 (Chap. 503, N. Y. Session Laws, sec. 30) against the creation of preferences, except to the amount of one-third in value of the assigned estate, cannot be evaded by resort to instrumentalities, which, however independent, are merely parts of a plan,
It seems to me that a proper consideration of what was decided in these cases makes reasonably clear the rules which should govern in disposing of attempted violations of this act of 1887. That is, that where a debtor is insolvent and intends to apply all of his property to the payment of his debts, either by a general assignment or by instruments, which, taken together, are parts of a plan through which all the debtor’s assets are to be distributed among his creditors, but one-third of the assets can be devoted to the preferred creditors, and the remaining two-thirds must be distributed among the general creditors of the estate; that the purpose of the statute is to prevent any preference other than for wages or salaries of employees beyond one-third of the assigned estate, and if that amount is exceeded, the penalty is not the annihilation of the assignment, but the reduction of the preference to the prescribed limit. (Manning, v. Beck, 129 N. Y. 1.)
We have then the question to determine, is there evidence here to sustain the finding that these assignors executed these mortgages and bills of sale and allowed these judgments to be entered against them, and executed the general assignment as a part of a plan or scheme by which all of their assets were to be devoted to the payment of their debts, but giving to the favored few a preference in excess of that allowed by statute ? The court below has found that such was the intention of the assignors and of the favored creditors. Was there evidence to support that finding ? In determining this question, I know of no principle which requires us to hold that any particular method of proof is necessary. When we come to inquire as to the intent with which the act is done, or as to the knowledge of the persons concerned in an act, it is not required that we should have evidence of any particular communication made to or by the parties whose intent or knowledge we are inquiring about. The
As I understand the rule, settled by the authorities referred to, to justify the court in finding that the separate instruments are part of the general assignment, it must be shown by the evidence that they were made with the intent of both parties to the agreement that they should be used to secure to the creditor an excessive preference when a general assignment was made. There must be proved such facts as would justify the inference that it was contemplated by both the debtor -and the creditor that a general assignment would be necessary and would be made; that the security given or the judgment obtained would be used, not as a security to enable the creditor to obtain his money from his debtor, but to obtain a preference when such assignment was made.
Now it is obvious that in nearly all cases there can be no direct proof of what the debtor and creditor had in mind when the instrument giving the security was executed. The knowledge existing at •the time and the intent with which the security was given and accepted must in the great majority of cases be shown by proof of the circumstances existing at the time of the transaction and the acts and relations of the parties to it. Nor does it follow that when the ■security is given either by a firm or to a firm, all members of the firm must be shown to have had the knowledge and intent referred to. If one partner representing the debtor firm executes the instrument, and another partner representing the creditor firm receives it, with such knowledge and intent, that is of course sufficient to •charge both firms. Bearing this in mind, a short examination of the condition of affairs and the circumstances surrounding the giving of these chattel mortgages and bills of sale and the obtaining of
As the Nickerson mortgage was first in point of time, it will be well to consider that mortgage first. And first, let us see just what knowledge of the condition of this debtor firm Nickerson.& Co. had at this time. It is clear that the real condition of Rapalyea & Co., the amount of its capital and the business that it was doing, were well known to the Nickersons. Of the members of the firm of Nicker-son & Co., one was the father and the other the brother of a member of the firm of Rapalyea & Co. The father had contributed to the firm of Rapalyea & Co. all of the cash that went into that firm as the contribution of his son to the capital of Rapalyea & Co. He had been in the habit of making advances to the firm and had known for months past that its notes had been protested for nonpayment, that its checks had been returned from the bank as “ not .good,” and that it had been in urgent need of money. P. W. Nicker-son, the father, had been present on or about the 1st of January, 1890, when a statement of the firm’s condition had been prepared, and had taken part in making up that statement, and the fair inference from the evidence is that P. W. Nickerson was fully cognizant of the financial difficulties of the firm of Rapalyea & Co., must have known its exact condition and was in constant communication with his son, who was a member of that firm and who transacted the financial business of the firm. And, viewed in the light of subsequent events, it quite conclusively appears that, on the 1st day of January, 1890, Rapalyea & Co., if they had been forced into liquidation, would have been insolvent.
Prior to this time, it appears that the son of Prince W. Nickerson, who was a member of the firm of Rapalyea & Co., had been endeavoring to sell out his interest in the firm, to Mr. John C. Provost, who was the father of another member of the firm of Rapalyea & Co., and that negotiations for such sale were then pending. Nickerson & Co. had at that time a large number of past-due notes signed by Rapalyea & Co., which the latter was unable to pay, and was a creditor of the firm in a considerable amount. P. W. Nickerson had been advised by the cashier of his bank to obtain security from Rapalyea & Co., and about the 16th of January, 1890, he asked his son for such security; the
The question is, what was the intent and understanding between this father and son at the time this mortgage was given? The subsequent action of the parties to it is quite material. The mortgage was taken the next day and filed in the proper office in Queens county, where the property was situated, but all knowledge of it was withheld from the other members of the firm of Rapalyea & Oo., and, although the mortgage was presently due, no attempt was made to enforce it, to collect any of the obligations to secure which it was given, some of which had been for several months due. No disclosure was made to any one of the fact that this mortgage had been given. It was a secret agreement between father and son to secure the father at all hazards for a debt that was presently due and enforcible, studiously kept from the knowledge of the other .members of the firm of Rapalyea & Co. and all other interested persons while the negotiations for the sale of the son’s interest in the business to John C. Provost continued. What was the object of obtaining this security, and what was the intent with which it was given by the debtor and accepted by the creditor ? Mr. Haviland, an apparently disinterested witness, testified that, just after the failure, he met P. W. Nickerson and spoke of the failure of Rapalyea & Co., and P. W. Nickerson said : “ Yes, it was too bad the boys had to go under ; and when I found they had to go under, I told them they must * * * protect me.” Do not all of the acts of the parties show that this was true ?
I think we are entitled to assume that P. W. Nickerson & Oo. had knowledge of the system established in this State by which debtors,, who are engaged in business and who become insolvent, make assign
The remaining question to be determined is as to whether or not the judgments and the chattel mortgage and bill of sale obtained by John 0. Provost were obtained with a like intent and understanding. It seems to me clear that they were. It appears that on the 2d of October, 1889', John 0. Provost, who also had a son a member of this firm of Rapalyea & Co., caused a summons to be served upon his son as a member of that firm. No complaint was served with the summons, and after its service it was allowed to sleep without the slightest effort being made to enter judgment ®r to enforce it for months. The notice at the foot of the summons was that in case of their default judgment would be entered against the defendants for the sum of $5,375.37, with interest from the date of the summons, but that is the only evidence we have as to what claim it was intended to enforce by the action thus com
The judgment rolls in these two actions were filed in the clerk’s office of Queens county on January 22, 1890, at four o’clock in the afternoon, and on the next morning the defendant Rapalyea, one of the judgment debtors against whom these judgments were obtained, took the executions upon these two judgments to the sheriff of Queens county, giving the sheriff explicit directions upon what to levy, and that the levy should be made at once. The sheriff made such levy, and immediately afterwards and upon the same day the assignment was executed and was filed the following day. It is conceded that Provost had the right to commence these actions against the members of the firm of Rapalyea & Co. and to enter judgment against them for the amount that was due; and but for the levy that was obtained upon the executions issued under such judgments, no question could arise. It is settled that where a judgment and a levy under an execution upon it are used as instrumentalities by which a preference is to be obtained in violation of the statute, it will be treated as a part of the assignment and as though the preference that was obtained was included in the assignment itself. (Berger v. Varrelmann, 127 N. Y. 281 ; Central Nat. Bank v. Seligman, 138 id. 444.)
After the service of the summons in these two actions nothing was done; no attempt was made to enter judgment; the complaints were not even prepared until after the disclosure of the existence of this chattel mortgage, when it is perfectly clear that all
As to the chattel mortgage and bill of sale given to John 0. Provost, which were dated the 21st of January, 1890, it is conceded by the parties that they were given after the disclosure of the fact of the chattel mortgage to Nickerson & Co., and then it was clear that an assignment would have to be made; and it is clear that it was given for the purpose of allowing Provost to obtain a preference. It seems to me, therefore, that unless we are to abrogate the provisions of this statute and destroy the purpose for which it was passed we must hold these chattel mortgages, bills of- sale and > judgments as preferences within the assignment, and that the court was right in decreeing that but one-third of the debtors estate can be paid to the creditors who have thus directly obtained a preference.
I think the provisions of the judgment by which it is adjudged these preferred creditors have no right to claim any portion of the remaining two-thirds of the estate on account of their claims are clearly right. The statute directly provides that but one-third of the assigned estate shall be paid to the preferred creditors, and it necessarily follows that the remaining two-thirds of the estate are to be paid to the unsecured creditors. To allow the preferred creditors to receive one-third of the estate upon their demands, and then to have a portion of the remaining two-thirds applied to the payment of their claims, would enable them to receive more than one-third of the assigned estate. The provision of the judgment, however, that requires creditors, coming in to prove
I think, therefore, that the judgment should be modified by striking out all provisions limiting the right of the creditors to prove their claims before the referee to those who had contributed to the costs and expenses of this action, and also the clause that compels them to pay any portion of such costs and expenses before they are allowed to receive any portion of the assigned estate. And as so modified, the judgment should he affirmed, with costs to the respondent against the appellants.
Judgment modified as directed in opinion, and affirmed as modifide, without costs to either party.