44 Barb. 192 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1865
It'is provided by section 4, title 3, of the chapter of the revised statutes, entitled “Of fraudulent conveyances and contracts relative to real and personal property,” that the question of fraudulent intent, in all cases arising under the provisions of that chapter, shall be deemed a question of fact, and not of law. (2 R. S. 137, § 4.) In pursuance of that provision it has been held, repeatedly, that where an assignment by an insolvent debtor contains provisions which are calculated, per se, to hinder, delay or defraud creditors, the fraud must be passed upon as a question of fact. (Vance v. Phillips, 6 Hill, 433. Goodrich v. Downs, Id. 438. Dunham v. Waterman, 17 N. Y. Rep. 9, per Selden, J. p. 21. Babcock v. Eckler, 24 id. 623, per Sutherland, J. pp. 631, 632.) The decision of the circuit judge on the trial of the case before us, overruling the defendant’s motion for a nonsuit, was therefore correct.
• But the cases above cited also hold that if the necessary consequence of a conceded transaction is defrauding another, the transaction itself is conclusive evidence of a fraudulent intent, as a party must be presumed to have intended the necessary consequences of his own act; and if in such a case, against such evidence, a jury or referee should find'that there was no fraud, it would become the duty of the court to set aside the finding. And where an assignment on its face shows that it must necessarily have the effect of defrauding
In considering- the question whether the evidence of fraud in this case is conclusive, it is proper to advert to the nature of the principal testimony introduced by the defendant to show that the debts were over stated in the assignment. The defendant gave in evidence, the inventory which the assignor made and delivered to the county judge, within twenty days after the date of his assignment, for the purpose of completing that instrument, as required by the act of I860. (Laws of 1860, ch. 348, p. 594.) The act provides that the inventory thereby required, shall contain, among other things, “ the sum owing to each creditor, and the nature of each debt or demand, whether arising' on written security, account or otherwise.” In compliance with this ¡provision, the inventory made by Gralen, the assignor, stated the sum owing by him to each creditor, including those who were preferred, and in several instances it stated the debts at less sums than they were stated to be in the assignment. The defendant concedes, and indeed assumes, that the statement in the inventory is truthful, for he relies upon it as evidence that the amounts stated in the assignment are untrue. The very fact that the assignor, shqrtly after making the assignment, thus stated the true amount of his debts in an instrument which he was required by law to make, and which was necessary to the validity of the assignment, and which was moreover required by law to be filed in the same public office in which the assignment was to be recorded, is- some evidence, taken in connection with the other circumstances testified to on the part of the plaintiffs, tending to disprove a fraudulent intent in respect to the overstatement of the amount of the debts. As this evidence is introduced by the defendant, it is not liable to the objection on his part that it is a mere declaration.
Nor is there any valid ground of exception to the charge of the judge in submitting the question of intent to the jury. They were instructed that the preference of a debt of 800 dollars to Joseph Galen when only 225 dollars were due, prima facie made the assignment void; and that unless they could see clearly, in the facts and circumstances shown by the evidence, that there was no intention to prefer Joseph for more than was actually due, but that it was simply a mistake, the validity of the assignment was not established, as against creditors. This instruction was clearly right.
The requests to charge were fully covered by the charge' as delivered.
The only other questions in the case relate to the admission or rejection of testimony. I have attentively considered them,
The order of the special term denying a new trial should be affirmed.
Order affirmed.
Johnson, J. C. Smith and K Darwin Smith, Justices.]