30 Conn. 15 | Conn. | 1861
The validity of the mortgage for five hundred dollars is not denied.
As to the mortgage for one thousand dollars, it is found by the committee that the petitioner, having unsecured debts against Roath of about that amount, and believing that Roath was in failing circumstances, and fearing that he might be driven into insolvency, sold his unsecured claims and loaned the money received for them to Roath, taking for it the note and mortgage now in question; the petitioner’s purpose in this transaction being, to obtain a security which would afford him protection against the operation of the act of 1853, entitled “ an act for the relief of insolvent debtors and the more equal distribution of their effects among their creditors.” These respondents, Wiley, Newhall & Co., had obtained a judgment against Roath, which was then unsatisfied, and Roath intended, by this arrangement with the petitioner, to prevent the collection of that judgment. Roath was in fact insolvent, but the committee finds that although the petitioner knew that Wiley, Newhall & Co. had made a claim on Roath, and had had a lawsuit with him to determine its validity, yet he did not know of the judgment, and it is not found that he was in any manner privy to Roath’s fraudulent purpose or intent to prevent the collection of that judgment.
The act of 1855, chap. 68, sec. 1, provides that' no conveyance or transfer of property, otherwise valid, shall be made void by any thing contained in the first section of the act of 1853, (the insolvent act above mentioned,) unless within sixty days after such conveyance or transfer shall have been made, proceedings shall be instituted for the purpose of carrying the estate of the party making such conveyance or transfer into settlement as an insolvent estate,” &c. And it does not appear that such proceedings have ever been instituted • in the case before us, so that this case is unaffected by the act of 1853, and stands upon the principles of our common law.
We understand the settled rule to be, that a purchaser’s or mortgagee’s title will not be set aside as fraudulent, merely because at the time of its acquisition he knew that his grantor was insolvent, and had debts by judgment or otherwise outstanding against him. In the language of the court in the case of Beals v. Guernsey, 8 Johns., 451, “The modern doctrinéis not merely that the purchaser must know of the judgment;, that fact will not of itself defeat a bona fide sale or make it in judgment of law fraudulent. If that was the rule it would put a most inconvenient check to the circulation of personal property. The rule is that the purchaser, knowing of the judgment, must purchase with a view and purpose to defeat the creditor’s execution. And if he does it with that purpose, it is iniquitous and fraudulent, notwithstanding he may give a full price. The question of fraud depends upon the motive.” “ Nor can the estate of the grantee be defeated,” says Shaw, Ch. J., in Foster v. Hall, 12 Pick., 99, “ by showing a fraudulent purpose in the grantor, unless it be also shown that the grantee participated in it, and by his concurrence prom.’'. .
These decisions are on this point entirely in accordance with our own. Partelo v. Harris, 26 Conn., 480. Beach v. Catlin, 4 Day, 284. Barrett v. French, 1 Conn., 354. Pettibone v. Phelps, 13 id., 445.
The superior court is therefore advised to grant the prayer of the petition.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.