79 N.Y.S. 161 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1902
As now presented to the court, this is a motion for the confirmation of the report of a referee, ascertaining and stating the unsatisfied liens and claims upon the undivided shares of the defendant George H. Tilden both in the proceeds of the real property sold in the first above-entitled action of partition and of the personal property affected by the second above-entitled action for the construction of the will by which those funds of personal property were created and for an accounting therefor. The report further, in accordance with the directions of the order of reference, declares the rights, priorities, and equities of the owners of said unsatisfied liens and claims, as between themselves, and as against the above-named defendants, and determines the validity of the various claims and assignments existing against the interests of all of said defendants and the rights, priorities, and equities created by and arising under said claims and assignments. There remained on deposit in this court, subject to its further order in the proceeding in which the said report was made, the sum of $26,175.05, as the amount of the share of the defendant George H. Tilden, of the proceeds of the sale of said real property, and the further sum of $11,563.77 as his share of the said funds of personal property. Against the former many liens evidenced by judgments, much greater than the amount of said share, were asserted; against the latter, also, many claims by way of assignment and otherwise, much greater than the amount of said share, were sought to be enforced. The rights and equities arising from and the priorities of said liens and claims were considered and found by the referee, and an application of the said shares to the payment thereof was made by him accordingly. To these reported findings and application many detailed exceptions were filed by different claimants, which created the issues now presented to the court for determination and which will hereinafter be briefly treated.
The first question presented by the report and the exceptions thereto is that of the correctness, in law, of the apportionment by the referee of the payment of the undisputed and admittedly prior claim of the Tilden trust for $13,540 equally by and between and against the said shares of said realty and personalty, one-half of said claim being chargeable against and payable from and out of each share. The said claim being secured both by mortgage upon the interest of said defendant in the said realty, and by an assignment of his interest in the said personalty and the claimant, there
The exception most vigorously urged to’the findings of the report establishing the validity and declaring the priority and equity of the lien of Slocum as the trustee of the sisters of said defendant against the proceeds of his share of the real estate, arising under the assignment to said trustee-of a judgment recovered by Samuel. J. Tilden against said defendant, and entered and docketed May 18, 1895, because this lien is admittedly prior in time to all others and because its allowance by the referee entirely exhausts the said share of the proceeds of the sale of the .realty now on deposit. The original judgment was recovered prior to the acquisition of the liens of the contesting creditors after a sharply-contested litigation and, with the costs and interest, amounted to forty thousand six hundred and fifty-one dollars and seventy-five cents ($40,651.75) ; and it was duly docketed in the counties in which the real property was situated, the proceeds of which formed one of the funds in this action. Neither this judgment nor the lien thereof, as it existed June 7, 1897, for the amount actually due thereon, was attacked before the referee. Many years before the entry of this judgment, before the accrual of the claim upon which it is founded, and before the acquisition of any claim by any other creditor, the judgment creditor had entered into an agreement with his sisters for the manufacture and sale of certain medicinal preparations of which they were the owners; and for the enforcement of their rights and the collection of their royalties thereunder, the sisters then appointed one Slocum as their agent and trustee. Immediately previous to or about the time of the assignment of the judgment in question and of the adjustment of the rights of the said defendants and their sisters, there was owing to the latter from tb,e said judgment creditor for accrued and unpaid royalties the sum of ten thousand five hundred and forty-two dollars and ninety-five cents ($10,542.95) ; the royalties for the balance of the term of the agreement, estimated on the basis of those already accrued, and discounted as of June 9, 1897, were valued by the parties at
It is clearly obvious from a consideration of the testimony and of all the circumstances surrounding the parties, that, whatever the legal effect, it was not. the intention of the agent and trustees of the sisters, or of the sisters themselves, that the judgment, which was purchased and assigned, should be merged in the real estate covered by the deed of trust or assignment which had previously been made by the judgment debtor to his trustees, one of whom was the agent or trustee for the sisters. It is difficult to see how the contention that, as a matter of fact, the said judgment was intended to be merged in the fee, could be seriously made and maintained unless it should be based upon the hopes, wishes and intentions of the parties to all of the transactions, that by some use to be made of the judgment it should help to extricate from his financial difficulties the judgment debtor who had previously made conveyances of all of his estate. That there was no intention that the payment, satisfaction or discharge of the judgment was sought to be affected by its assignment is apparent from the evidence that it was not satisfied of record, that no satisfaction piece was requested, 'that an assignment of the exact sum due thereon was taken, that the legal effect of the transaction was carefully stated, that the amount due thereon and the circumstances of the assignment thereof were precisely recited in a declaration of trust executed by the agent and delivered to the beneficial owners of the judgment, namely, the sisters of the judgment debtor. In the declaration of trust the agent or trustee of the sisters specifically promises that he will use every effort to enforce and collect the judgment and pay the proceeds thereof to the parties entitled thereto; and, consistent with that intention, he has, throughout the entire litigation in this proceeding, insisted upon the payment of the amount due on said judgment from the proceeds of the sale of the land upon which it was a lien. Again, the assignment of the judgment was promptly recorded in the various counties in which
With reference to the claim of the trustees of the judgment debtor against the personal estate under the trust deed or assignment to them, of all his real and personal property, it is evident from the authorities that the referee properly assumed and exercised jurisdiction over the matter. The said trustees having, by agreement dated and acknowledged upon the day upon which the deed of trust was made, covenanted to reconvey to their assignor the entire estate, free from all trusts, upon the written request of the judgment debtor and his wife, and the deed of trust itself providing for the payment of income from the property and the proceeds of sales thereof to the use and benefit, the support and maintenance of the assignor and his family, and for the payment of the indebtedness of the former, the referee properly held that the trust deed was in contravention of the statutes of this State in reference to assignments, and was void at law. He held, however, that'the said trustees were entitled to protection in equity for the amount actually paid by them in good faith to the creditors of the assignors out of the moneys raised'by them personally upon their note indorsed by the sisters in reliance upon the assignment; that they were thus equitably subrogated as against the personalty thus assigned, to the claims of the creditors, existing at the time, and paid by them, and that they were also entitled to reimbursement of the amounts paid out by them in preserving and maintaining the trust estate assigned to them such as for taxes and assessments levied against the real property. Under the circumstances
Other claims were presented to the referee, some of which have been partially allowed without any full and explicit statement .or computation of the amount in- which they should be permitted to share, because of the fact that the allowance of the claims of Slocum, as trustee for the sisters against the realty, and of the equitable rights to subrogation of Slocum and Whittlesey, as trustees, the entire Tunds now on deposit are exhausted. The claims of the Rational Hudson River Bank were subsequent to the assignment to Whittlesey and Slocum, and their security therefor were junior and subordinate to the equitable rights acquired by the acts done under that assignment. But the funds being exhausted, it is not necessary for the court to determine the legal effect of the sale by the said bank and its purchase and application upon the original debt of the securities pledged and
Ordered accordingly.