16 Barb. 541 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1853
The defendants, not having objected to the want of parties, or to the form of the action that it is in behalf of the plaintiff alone and notin behalf of all
The code (§ 145) provides that the demurrer shall distinctly specify the grounds of objection to the complaint, and that unless it do so it may be disregarded. Under this provision it seems to me that it is not in all cases sufficient to specify to which of the several classes of objections for which demurrers will lie the demurrer interposed is to be referred. There may be cases in which a defendant may not be able to point out in what the defect consists, without preparing the substance of a new complaint; or the case may be of that character that the complaint cannot, if the objection taken to it is valid, be made good; that is, one in which the objection that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, goes to the ability of the plaintiff to maintain an action at all,-and not to a formal defect, or the omission to state some fact which is necessary to complete the plaintiff’s title to sue, and the' omission to state which renders the pleading defective. In this case most of the objections pressed upon the argument were to the omission to allege certain facts necessary to give the plaintiff a right of action; as that he had proceeded to judgment upon his claim, and had exhausted his remedy at law, and other circumstances of a like character, and which we cannot say might not have been averred in an amended complaint, had the objection been specifically taken. There is a diversity of opinion among judges as to the form and sufficiency of demurrers, and the requirements of the code in this respect. (See cases cited under § 145 of McCall’s edition of the Code.) And as I deem the case entirely free from doubt, upon the merits, I will not attempt to pass upon the sufficiency of the demurrer. The defendants by their demurrer admit that Eleazer Loomis, the deceased, became indebted to the plaintiff in a large amount of money, for which he gave his promissory note, which was not due at the time of his death; that he was the owner of a valuable real es
1. It is not claimed that by any act of his own his right of action is defeated.
2. He could not have proceeded to judgment at law upon his claim against the debtor, in his lifetime, for the reason that the debt was not due tit the time of the decease of the debtor.
3. An action against the administrator would have been a vain thing. Lex neminem, cogit ad vana sen inutilia. The law will not enforce a man to dp a thing which will be vain and fruitless. (Co. Litt. 197 6.) (1.) A judgment against the administrator could not have been collected, as there were no assets in his hands, and no goods, chattels or credits of which he could avail himself for the payment of debts. (2.) A judgment recovered against the administrator would not be evidence for any purpose against the defendants in this action. It would not be prima facie evidence of the plaintiff’s debt, and after judgment against the administrators, as well as before, the action of the plaintiff would necessarily be upon the original debt and could not be based upon the judgment; neither could the costs of the judgment be recovered. (Osgood v. Manhattan Co., 3 Cowen, 612.) Then why shall the plaintiff be compelled to do the vain thing of suing the administrators ? The administrator
4. Proceedings in behalf of the administrator to sell the real estate fraudulently conveyed by the intestate in his lifetime would be unavailing. The surrogate can only order the real estate of which the testator or intestate died seised, to be sold or leased for the payment of debts. This is quite evident from the whole tenor of the act. (2 R. S. 4th ed. 285 et seq.) It follows that an application by the creditor to compel the administrator to proceed to sell the real estate in question would have been entirely nugatory. But if the surrogate could direct the sale, and should do so, it would not advance the creditors in the collection of their debts. On the contrary it might tend to defeat them entirely. (1.) The, property would not sell for its value, with the cloud created by the fraudulent deed resting upon it. (2.) The purchaser would be compelled to resort to the equitable powers of this court to avoid and set aside the fraudulent deed ; the surrogate’s court not being vested with adequate powers to that end. There is no good reason, therefore, why the party if he could do so, should be compelled to go through the unnecessary and unavailing form of a sale by the administrator, under the order of the surrogate.
5. An action against the heirs would have been entirely nugatory. The averments of the complaint being taken to be true, as they must be under this demurrer, upon an issue of Hens per descent the verdict and judgment must have been for the heirs. Heirs are only liable to creditors to the extent of the estate,
Gridley, W. F. Allen, Hubbard and Pratt, Justices.]
6. If it should be conceded that in ordinary cases an action of this kind would not lie at the suit of the creditor against the fraudulent grantee, the circumstances of this case would take it out of the general rule and give the court jurisdiction. The complaint alleges collusion and fraudulent combination on the part of the defendants to put the property, by means of a judicial sale, beyond the reach of creditors, and details circumstances and acts of the parties, showing manifestly that unless the equitable powers of the court are exerted for the protection of the creditors, the fraud will be consummated, and the property lost to those honestly entitled to it. (See Story’s Eq. Pl. § 514; Alsager v. Rowley, 6 Ves. 748; Doran v. Simpson, 4 Id. 651.)
The reasons assigned by the justice for his judgment at special term are satisfactory, and need not be repeated. The fraudulent deed obstructs the remedy of the creditor. It meets him at the first step in his attempt to collect his debt, and he may at once resort to an action to remove that obstruction. (Beck v. Burdett, 1 Paige, 305.)
The judgment must be affirmed with costs.