120 N.Y.S. 142 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
The record and briefs in this case are very voluminous, but I think that a single question is decisive of _ the appeal, and shall undertake merely to state sucli salient facts as are necessary to the solution of that question.
On the ,18th of September, 1894, Samuel Webber Parker was indebted to the American Exchange ¡National Bank in the sum of $217,000. Prior to that date he had caused to be conveyed to the defendant Edward Burns several parcels of land aggregating 725 acres, at Mamaroneck, Westchester county, which, together with certain other property not necessary to refer to, said Burns held as
It is impossible to see how the plaintiff is in a better position than his assignor. The record is barren of evidence to show that the various proceedings hereinbefore referred to were collusively or fraudulently conducted for the purpose of defeating the rights of creditors. I shall assume, for the purpose of this discussion, that the plaintiff in the foreclosure action had a lien on the homestead tract for the sum of only $50,000, and that the attorneys for the defendants in that action had no authority to make the stipulations upon which the judgment was entered, although I think that there was ample evidence to support the findings of the trial court to the effect that said stipulations were made with the authority of the corporation and its stockholders. The surrounding circumstances all point to the conclusion that the Coloration was striving for delay to enable it to make the necessary financial arrangements to prevent foreclosure or to purchase the property on the sale; that when the effort to finance, the proposition failed the claim was first advanced that the eighty-acre tract should be sold separately to satisfy a lien for only $50,0003 and that the present action is but an attempt by those interested in the corporation to secure relief which they failed to obtain in a direct proceeding in the foreclosure action. But be that as it may, the judgment in the foreclosure action cannot be collaterally attacked except for fraud, and there is no evidence whatever tending to show that any fraud was practiced by the plaintiff in that •action. The court had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter. It had before it the testimony of one witness, the stipulations signed by the attorneys, and the pleadings which set forth the various agreements. It doubtless is the fact that the court gave judgment perforce of the stipulations, but it had jurisdiction to render the judgment, and its act was a judicial act. If, in the
The judgment should he affirmed.
Hirschberg, P. J., Woodward, Jenks and Thomas, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.