4 Denio 217 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1847
The plaintiffs’ right to recover de pends on the validity of the assignment to them by C. E. Morris; for, unless that conveyance can be sustained, the defendant was justified in levying upon the property under the execution in his hands. It seems to me that it contains a provision which, upon settled principles, renders it fraudulent and void against all such creditors of Morris as have not assented to it. I take it to be well established, and the doctrine was not controverted on the argument, that a debtor cannot put his property beyond the reach of his creditors, by assigning it to trustees for the payment of his debts, unless at the time he definitively settles their respective rights under the conveyance. (Hyslop v. Clarke, 14 John. 458; Wakeman v. Grover, 4 Paige, 41; S. C. in error, 11 Wend. 187.) When the last mentioned case was under consideration in the court for the correction of errors. Mr. Justice Sutherland declared that it had “ repeatedly been decided that an assignment which does not declare the uses, but reserves to the assignor the power of subsequently doing
It was said on the argument that the provision under consideration could not in the actual circumstances of this case prejudice the creditors provided for in the earlier classes, because those in the fourth and fifth classes could resort to McClure, who was primarily liable, and abundantly responsible, and those creditors could not be injured by a future preference over them in favor of those in the sixth class. If the facts are as the argument assumes, still it cannot change the uestion. It might as well be argued that a general power in
The preference in favor of W. Morris for $1000 presents an objection which I think is also fatal to the assignment. The actual debt due him from the assignor was only $500, though it was shown that the latter was in the daily expectation of receiving from him a further sum of the same amount. Upon what consideration this was to be received does not distinctly appear, but the inference clearly is that it was an advance by way of loan, to be afterwards repaid. If so, in what does it differ from a direct provision, for the future benefit of the assignor, to the amount of $500, at the expense of his creditors 1 The assignment appropriates so much of his property to repay W. Morris for this money, which the assignor was himself to receive. It is insisted by the plaintiff’s counsel that the money from W. Morris, when received, would pass into the hands of the assignees for the purposes of the trust; or that this, at all events, was a question of intent, which had been passed upon by the jury. In my judgment the money thus expected to be received, did not fall within any of the terms contained in the description of the property conveyed in the assignment. It was neither goods, chattels, wares, or merchandize; nor was it notes, accounts, or demands. Was it a “ right?” "most clearly not. It had nothing of the character of a claim. "The assignees could not claim it under the assignment, when received by the assignor; and the effect of the provision was, in my
The court, after laying down in general terms the correct-doctrine in respect to reservations of a right to make future preferences, after an assignment, for the benefit of creditors, has taken effect, submitted to the jury as a question of fact whether
Believing that the court below erred in the particulars to which I have referred, I have, without examining several other questions which have been made, come to the conclusion that the judgment of the common pleas ought to be reversed.
Judgment reversed.