This suit in equity was brought by the administratrix of the estate of Charles O’Gasapian to establish debts of the defendants Danielson and Barsam to the intestate and to reach and apply in payment thereof certain property including real estate standing in the name of the defendant Vartanian and a note secured by mortgage of real estate described in the third paragraph of the bill of complaint. (See G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 214, § 3 [7].) This paragraph alleges that "Carl M. T. Anderson and Ida M. Anderson are husband and wife residing in Boston and that they are the owners of certain real estate #22 Worcester Square in Boston . . . and that on September 2, 1930, they executed a promissory note secured by a first mortgage on the said real estate in the sum of $5,000 to the defendant Jean M. Danielson, which mortgage is still held and owned by the said Danielson.” A motion of one Sookikian, hereinafter referred to as the intervener, "that he be allowed to intervene ... by being joined as party defendant” was allowed. No question is raised as to the propriety of the allowance of this motion. The intervener answered alleging his ownership of the note and mortgage referred to in the third paragraph of the bill, and praying that they “be released from further attachment in this suit and be adjudged and decreed to be the property of the defendant,” the intervener. The trial judge made find
The rulings and findings of the trial judge in regard to the note and mortgage referred to in the third paragraph of the bill of complaint are as follows: “With respect to the allegations of paragraph 3 of the bill of complaint I find that the defendant Danielson is the record holder of the mortgage therein referred to. I find that for several years prior to the date of said mortgage, the intervener, Sookikian, was the real owner of said property and that title thereto" was in the name of his wife. In September, 1930, Sookikian sold the property to the Andersons referred to in the bill of complaint and by the terms of the sale a mortgage in the sum of $5,000 was to be given to Sookikian to secure the purchase price. Sookikian caused the mortgage and the note which secured it to be taken in the name of the defendant Danielson, and the mortgage was duly recorded. Danielson furnished no part of the consideration for the note but there were two claims pending against Sookikian at the time and he caused the note and mortgage to be taken in the name of Danielson in order to place this property beyond reach of his creditors. Danielson knew of these circumstances. Danielson, at the time of taking the mortgage, gave Sookikian an assignment thereof duly executed and acknowledged in the form introduced in evidence as Exhibit 28 [This assignment was under seal, signed by the defendant, and purported to “assign said mortgage and the note and claim secured thereby” to the intervener.] but the assignment has never been recorded, because to record it would defeat Sookikian’s purpose in taking title in the name of Danielson. In other words, Sookikian has deliberately kept his assignment off the record in order to
The plaintiff is not entitled to reach and apply to the payment of the defendant’s debts the note or the mortgage in question.
The case of Weinberg v. Brother,
The plaintiff, however, contends that the present case is distinguishable from Weinberg v. Brother for the reasons that here the note was not assigned by the defendant to the intervener and the transaction between the defendant and the intervener was a fraud upon the creditors of the intervener participated in by the defendant.
1. The findings do not bear out the contention that the defendant’s interest in the note was not assigned by him to the intervener. The assignment was in statutory form (G. L. [Ter. EdJ c. 183, Appendix [93), was under seal and purported to assign the note as well as the mortgage. See Merritt v. Harris,
Since the assignment of the note to the intervener was prior to the plaintiff’s equitable attachment, the intervener had the superior right. The underlying principle is that “an attaching creditor cannot stand on a better footing than his debtor, (if the assignment be not fraudulent as to creditors,) and if he attaches any property of his debtor, it must be attached subject to all lawfully existing liens created by his debtor. And, consequently, if his debtor have no equitable interest in a chose in action, the creditor cannot acquire any by his attachment.” Dix v. Cobb,
The present case cannot be distinguished from Weinberg v. Brother by reason of the retention by the defendant here of the note in which he had no interest. In this connection we assume in favor of the plaintiff, though without so deciding, that the defendant retained possession of the note. This note, on the findings, was payable to the defendant. It does not appear clearly that it was negotiable. In any event the note was not indorsed by the defendant. If it was not negotiable the plaintiff could not reach it unless the intervener was estopped from asserting his title thereto by his conduct in permitting the defendant to retain possession and apparent ownership. Herman v. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co.
A “court of equity will not lend its aid to relieve a party from the consequences of his fraud but will leave him where his fraudulent undertaking has placed him.” Caines v. Sawyer,
On the other hand, the plaintiff cannot establish her case by proof of the fraudulent elements in the transaction. Her intestate was not defrauded by the intervener, and she does not represent the defrauded creditors of the intervener. Furthermore, as already pointed out, the plaintiff has no greater rights in the note and mortgage than her debtor, the defendant, and the defendant could not deprive the intervener of his beneficial ownership thereof “on the ground that an inducement to the particular transaction was a purpose thereby to defraud a third person.” Lufkin v. Jakeman,
Decree affirmed.
