3 Keyes 620 | NY | 1867
By the Court.
[After stating facts].—The question then is, who had the better right, the appellant, who claimed as an attaching judgment creditor, or the respondent, who claimed as an equitable purchaser or assignee, holding the position of Caroline M. Sherman, whose rights he had acquired.
In • point of time, the latter had the priority, for at the decease of the intestate, June 10, 1861, Caroline M. Sherman held the instrument which was the basis of the respondent’s right. The warrant of attachment was not levied until August 6 thereafter.
The question is, therefore, whether the instrument executed to Caroline M. Sherman took effect on the decease of the intestate, either as a legal or equitable transfer of the estate which descended to the heir at law.
It is undoubtedly true that John L. D. Eycleshimer had no vested interest in his father’s estate at the time he executed the instrument, only a bare possibility, which, of course, was not the subject of a grant, nor did the instrument contain a warranty which could be made to operate as an estoppel; and it may, I think, be ass|S88d in ti$i|cas% that the instrument did ; nqt effect an absolute óf the legal title, and yet uphold the respondent’s claim. If it was such an instrument as a
This decision by this court seems directly in point, and is conclusive of the case before us on this appeal.
It may be well, perhaps, here to refer to the decision in Milliman v. Neher, 20 Barb. 37, and the cases there cited. It was there held that a chattel mortgage could only operate upon property in actual existence at the time of its execution. In that case the question arose in regard to the legal title to the property, and the decision should be construed with reference to that fact. Otherwise, the case is in conflict with numerous later decisions, where it has been held that such mortgage would be enforced in equity whenever the property should be obtained or should be brought into existence. .
The instrument under which the respondent claims was evidently intended to be, and by its terms was, more than a mere power of attorney. It was intended to vest in Miss Sherman an interest in the property as a security for the payment of John L. D. Eycleshimer’s debt to her. With other rights conferred on her thereby, she was to receive the proceeds and avails of the property “and of all my interest and estate therein, 'and all my estate, property and effects aforesaid, and apply the same respectively to the payment and discharge of the ” debt which he therein declared he justly owed her. Mow here was a clear appropriation by John L. D. E. of his expectation as heir at law in his father’s estate, in effect a transfer thereof as security, equivalent in all essentials to a mortgage in exact and legal phrase.
It is objected that the consideration of the instrument was a precedent debt, and consequently that Miss Sherman could not have insisted on her equity against the claims of an attaching and judgment creditor.
It is not suggested that the debt was not a just one, nor is it intimated that the instrument was not given in entire good faith. Eegarding the instrument as an equitable security for the satisfaction of a just debt, the consideration was abundant and bona fide. This precise point was considered by Judge Selden in Seymour v. Wilson, 19 N. Y. 417, 421. The learned judge there shows that a transfer directly to a creditor in payment of or as security' for an honest debt, in the absence of meditated fraud, is good against the claims of both existing and future creditors of the vendor. He says: “It is not necessary in such a case, that the vendee, in order to protect himself from a claim by the other creditors, should show any new consideration paid.” He adds: “ There is no doubt that the debt paid or secured by the transfer must, in such case, be regarded as a ‘ valuable consideration’ within the section which saves the rights of bona fide purchasers; so that if the creditor acts in good faith, and for the mere purpose of obtaining satisfaction of his own debt in accepting the transfer, he will acquire a valid title. There being no equity prior to his own to be overcome, the necessity which calls for proof of a new consideration, in other cases, does not exist.” ' The objection that” the instrument is not supported by a valid consideration, is not well taken.
The case then comes to this: that Miss Sherman held, as security for the payment and satisfaction of a debt due her, a yalid equitable claim on the estate of John L. D. Eycleshimer, which came to 'him by descent, on the decease of his father intestate, June 10, 1861, which claim then became a vested right
All the judges concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.