100 N.Y.S. 1037 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
One Kinsley Magoun was a creditor of George B. Magoun, deceased, in an amount exceeding $100. The action is brought by the administrators de bonis non of said creditor against the executrix of said debtor and others to set aside as fraudulent a transfer by the executrix of the membership of the debtor in the New York
It was alleged and proved that the deceased debtor was insolvent. No question appears to have been raised upon the trial or upon the appeal as to the right of the plaintiff to maintain the action, but the question suggested itself to the court upon the argument of the appeal, and the qumre was propounded to counsel for appellants with a view to receiving the benefit of any argument he might be able to present to sustain the action. It is manifest that such an action would not lie at common law. Since the executrix is accountable in the probate court for all personal property of the estate received by her, it would seem that clear warrant for an independent action by a creditor to review a transfer of personal property made by her should he found in the statute, or such an action should not be sustained. Notwithstanding the fact that the objection has not
The reasonable and fair construction of the statute quoted, standing alone, does not authorize such an action, and when the history of the legislation is examined I deem it quite clear that the Legislature only intended to authorize the action to set aside a transfer made by the insolvent debtor. The Legislature, by chapter 314 of the Laws of 1858, among other things, authorized the executor or administrator of an estate, in the interest of the creditors thereof, to disaffirm a transfer in fraud of the rights of any creditor, and gave a right of action to recover the property or its value; and for damages. That statute conferred no right of action on a creditor individually. The scope of the statute is not expressly confined to . transfers by the decedent, but it is evident that such was the intention, for otherwise the representative of the estate would be disaffirming 1ns own acts and suing to recover for his own fra'ud. The statute was amended by chapter 487 of the Laws of 1889, by adding the following at the end.of section 1, to wit: “ And any creditor of a deceased insolvent debtor having a claim or demand ¿gainst the estate of such deceased debtor exceeding in.amount the sum of one hundred dollars, may in like manner for the benefit of . himself and other creditors interested in the estate or property of such deceased debtor, disaffirm, treat as void, and resist all acts done, and conveyances, transfers and agreements made, in fraud of the right of any creditor or creditors, by such deceased debtor, and for that purpose may maintain any necessary action to set aside such acts, conveyances, transfers or agreements, and for the purpose of maintaining such action it shall not be necessary for such creditor to have obtained a judgment upon his claim or demand, but such claim or demand, if disputed, may b.e proved and established upon the trial of such action.”
It thus appears that when the cause of action was first conferred upon creditors it was expressly confined to transfers made by the deceased debtor. The first section was again amended by chapter 740 of the Laws of 1894 by adding a provision with respect to a
Under section 7 they cite the laws from which it was compiled, and then add the following: “ Unchanged in substance, so far as relates to personal property.” (See Assem. Doc. 1897, vol. 22, No. 80, p. 368 ; Fowler Pers. Prop. Law of N. Y. 139.) The reasonable inference is that in this case, as in many others, shown .by many of their reports to the Legislature, they deemed the words which they omitted superfluous, and were of opinion that the statute as they recommended it, meant precisely the same as the former statute. However that may be, in these circumstances there is nothing to indicate that the Legislature intended to change the law, and authorize a new and unheard of practice of permitting a creditor to review by action every sale or transfer of property of an
It would seem, therefore, that the statute should not be given a construction that will authorize the maintenance of such an action, -unless it be imperatively required by the language employed. I am convinced that it is not so required. -It is plain that the Legislature merely intended to authorize a creditor to institute an action in those cases in .which by the preceding part of the section the personal representative is authorized to do so. It was contemplated that an executor or administrator might deem it unwise to bring the action, and that, information might be available to the creditor - which would give him confidence to proceed.
I think, therefore, that we should refrain from expressing'any opinion on the facts which received extended consideration by the learned trial judge, and that the judgment should be affirmed, witli costs.
O’Brien, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and Clarke, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.