124 N.Y. 552 | NY | 1891
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *554 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *556
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *557 This controversy presents the question whether or not a creditor of an assignor for the benefit of creditors can *558 retain the money paid to him by the assignee pursuant to the direction in the assignment, as against another creditor, who by action subsequently brought succeeds in setting aside the assignment as fraudulent against the creditors of the assignor. It is urged on the part of the plaintiffs that the creditor, receiving payment of his debt from the assignee, takes it subject to the condition that the assignment remains effectual; and that when the assignment falls, the title of the creditor to the money so paid him pursuant to its direction fails; and that, for the purpose of the remedy of the attacking creditors, the money so paid must be treated as part of the estate of the debtor to be accounted for by the creditor receiving it. This proposition is founded upon the assumption that he receives the payment and takes the money through the title vested by the assignment in the assignee, and not otherwise.
It is a familiar rule that a debtor may voluntarily pay such of his creditors as he pleases, and they may take payment to the exclusion of others, and thus exhaust all his property. And at the time the one in question was made, an insolvent debtor might legitimately accomplish the same thing by means of a preferential assignment of his entire property for the benefit of his creditors. Although this necessarily had the effect to withdraw his estate from the ordinary legal process, and thus operated to hinder the creditors in the collection of their debts, it was valid if made in good faith, and did not unnecessarily by its directions delay the appropriation of the assigned property to the payment of creditors in the order provided for by the assignment. When the trust is accepted by the assignee, he may be compelled to execute its directions, and it is irrevocable by the assignor. And the question whether or not an assignment is fraudulent in fact as against the creditors of the assignor, is not important for the purposes of the execution of it by the assignee, unless an attack by action is made upon it by them or some of them. Until then his duty to proceed in its execution continues. And consistently with that duty he is entitled to have allowed to him all payments before then made by him of and upon debts of the assignor in *559
accordance with the instructions given by the terms of the assignment. (Ames v. Blunt, 5 Paige, 15; Collumb v. Read,
All the creditors of the debtor are entitled to payment of their lawful claims against him if his property is sufficient to pay them; and those given a preference by his assignment are entitled to payment by force of the directions contained in it, while the assignee is at liberty to execute them. The title is vested in an assignee for the purpose merely of executing the trust in the manner directed, and essentially so to enable him to do it. And when payment is made by an assignee to the creditor pursuant to such directions, the latter receives the fund from the debtor through the execution of the trust, and his title is supported by the pre-existing debt upon which payment is made pursuant to the right of the debtor to make and the creditor to receive it. By the commencement of an action in equity by a judgment creditor to reach the property of his debtor, he obtains a lien upon the choses in action and equitable interests of the latter, which lien becomes effectual upon the recovery of judgment for the relief sought. (Eameston v. Lyde, 1 Paige, 637; Eager v. Price, 2 id. 333.) This rule is not to the same extent applicable to property subject to levy of execution. (Albany City Bank v. Schermerhorn, Clark, 297; Davenport v.Kelly,
In Hone v. Henriquez (13 Wend. 240) the question had relation to the claim of right by a creditor to set off his debt against the proceeds of property placed by the assignor in his hands to sell. The assignment was adjudged fraudulent and void and it was properly held he could not make the set-off. *563 His was not a case of payment, and he had no claim of title. The question here did not arise in that case. These views lead to the conclusion that payment by the assignee to a creditor of the assignor of the amount of the debt due him pursuant to the directions in the assignment before any lien is obtained upon the fund, is effectual to vest title in such creditor to the money so paid, although the assignment is, in an action subsequently commenced, adjudged fraudulent and void as against the creditors of the assignor.
We have thus far proceeded upon the assumption that the defendant had not in any manner participated in the fraud charged against the assignor.
The allegations in the complaint in the Knower action charging the collusion, after the assignment was made, of the assignors with the defendant and other preferred creditors, resulting in judgments and executions, and finally a sale of the property by the assignee and the return of the executions unsatisfied, would be effectual to support the action if the validity of the defendant's debt against the assignor were challenged by any allegation in the complaint. But in considering the question arising upon the charge referred to, it must still be assumed that such debt was honestly due from the assignor to the defendant. This charge had relation only to transactions after the assignment was made; and was to the effect that the defendant, with knowledge of the fraudulent design of the assignor, was seeking to obtain payment of the debt due to it. The only allegation tending to show a purpose to prejudice other creditors was that the defendant and such other preferred creditors directed the sheriff to seize and hold the assigned property upon the executions, and "thereby secure the same from the just and legal efforts of the unpreferred creditors to secure payment thereout of their just demands against the same, and to enable the said assignee to sell and dispose of the same under said alleged general assignment." No inference necessarily arises from such allegation that the defendant acted with any purpose other than to secure the payment of its own debt; and with that view it was at liberty *564 to procure confession by the assignor of judgment, issue execution and direct the sheriff to levy it on the property. And, as has already been observed, the mere fact of knowledge on the part of a creditor of the intent of his debtor to defraud his creditors by the disposition of his property to pay or in payment of the debt due from him to the former, does not prejudice the right of the creditor to seek and obtain payment. The case ofMackie v. Cairns (5 Cow. 547) has no necessary application to this branch of the present case. There the assignor, after making a general assignment for the benefit of creditors, which by reason of trusts reserved for his benefit was apparently fraudulent as against his creditors, confessed a judgment to the assignees, as such, while the assignment remained valid between the parties to it. The assignment and judgment were held to be fraudulent as against the creditors. The judgment so confessed and taken was intended to be resorted to only in the event the assignment should be adjudged invalid, and in the meantime the purpose of the assignees was to proceed in execution of the assignment. The result of the final determination was that the judgment was infected with the same vice as was the assignment itself. In the present case the confession of judgment was to a creditor and founded upon a valid debt. And it must be assumed that the defendant took it for its own benefit. This it had a right to do.
It is not seen how knowledge of the defendant at the time of the receipt of payment of its debt, that a suit was then pending in behalf of parties other than any of the plaintiffs here to set aside the assignment, can aid the plaintiffs or as against them prejudice the defendant. The other action referred to was in its effect and result available only to the parties plaintiff in it, and for the purpose and to the extent of their claim only, against the assignor would the adjudication in their favor set aside the assignment. (Bostwick v. Menck,
There is no other question requiring consideration.
The judgments should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgments affirmed. *565