36 Barb. 298 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1862
By the Court,
The plaintiff seeks .to have an assignment for the benefit of creditors declared fraudulent and void; first, for the reason that the provisions of the instrument itself are illegal, and second, on account of the fraudulent intent of the assignors, as matter of fact, appearing from the paroi evidence taken in the action.-
There are two provisions which the plaintiffs allege to be objectionable: 1st. A trust to pay the legal and necessary expenses of the assignees, with a salary to each of them at the rate of two thousand dollars per year while actually engaged in executing the trust, if that compensation do not exceed what the laws of the state allow to executors or administrators ; if it should exceed that amount, then at the rate so prescribed for executors and administrators. 2d. The fourth trust, whereby the assignees are directed, after having satisfied the preceding trusts, to pay all persons who had theretofore become bail or surety for L. 0. Wilson & Co. (the assignors) such sums as they may have paid, and as may be legally chargeable to L. 0. Wilson & Co., by reason of the
The next provision directs the payments of all other creditors in full, if the estate is sufficient; if not, then they are to be paid pro rata.
The referee has found adversely to the plaintiff, both as to the questions of law involved from the provisions of the assignment, and as to the facts arising on the evidence of alleged fraud, not apparent from the face of the instrument. In this respect we entirely concur with the referee, for the reasons assigned by him.
The provision in respect to the compensation of the assignees is a limitation, and not an enlargement of their legal claims. The liability of bail or sureties is one eminently of a confidential character, and the right of the assignors to prefer any legal obligation is undoubted.
The question of fact, arising from the evidence showing an intent on the part of the assignors to hinder and delay creditors, by the intervention of the assignment, and the provision therein for the payment and indemnity of persons who have- become bail or surety for the assignors, gives rise to very serious doubts as to the bona fides of the assignment. After a careful consideration of the evidence, my mind is irresistibly drawn to the conclusion that the intention of the assignors was fraudulent in the respect indicated. ¡¡Neither the assignors nor the assignees knew who were the persons preferred, or the extent of the liability, at the time the assignment was executed; nor had they ascertained at the time of the trial. The assignors were urgently pressed by their creditors with suits to recover their debts, but up to the day the assignment was executed they were opposed to the measure. The resort to an assignment, with the preference in favor of bail and sureties, was made at the suggestion of a third party, on account of the rough urgency of creditors, for the declared object of effecting a delay of several years
I think the advice of counsel cannot prevent the natural effect of the previous evidence, that the assignment was made to prevent creditors from getting their pay until they would accept the debtor’s terms of compromise, and not for the sole purpose of providing for the payment of creditors.
An insolvent is permitted by law to create a trust for the payment of his creditors, and to prefer any of his legal liabilities in the order of payment; but it must be made honestly, for the sole object of providing for the payment of his debts. The debtor is expressly forbidden to make transfers of his property to hinder or delay his creditors, and every such transfer is declared by law to be fraudulent and void. In opposition to these considerations, we have not failed to observe that the facts found by a referee are not to be disturbed where there is any doubt, or where there is a conflict of evidence. We know, also, that courts are astute to sustain the verdicts of juries and the reports of referees in their conclusions of fact from the evidence.
In the present case there is no suspicion of any collusion by the witness (one of the assignors) with the creditors, or to his entertaining feelings or objects adverse to the assignees. It appears to me that there is a plain confession by the wit-?
Ingraham, Leonm-d and Gierke, Justices.]
I think the referee erred in finding that the assignment was not made to hinder, delay or defraud creditors, and in his conclusion that it was not void as against the plaintiff and other creditors of the assignors.
The judgment should he reversed, the report set aside and the case sent hack to the referee for a new trial, with costs to abide the event.