8 N.Y.S. 407 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
By the judgment which has been recovered, a general assignment made by the defendants William H. Payne and Frederick D. Steck, as partners in business, for the benefit of their creditors, has been set aside as fraudulent. This assignment was made to the defendant Arthur H. Smith. It was executed by the assignors on the 28th of December, 1887, and accepted by the assignee on the following day. He was afterwards removed from his position as assignee, but for no fault of himself, and a trustee appointed in his place, under the assignment. The assignors were
The plaintiffs were creditors of the firm at the time when these moneys were drawn out by the defendant Payne, and when.the assignment was executed. They afterwards recovered a judgment upon their debt, and issued an execution against the property of the debtors, which was returned wholly unsatisfied. The defendants have objected that the action cannot be maintained to set aside the assignment, for the reason that the execution was in fact returned. But this objection is directly in conflict with section 1871 of the Code of Civil Procedure, authorizing, as the law preceding it did, the judgment creditors, after the return of the execution, to maintain an action against the debtors, and any other person, to compel the discovery of anything in action, or other property belonging to the judgment debtors, or of any money, thing in action, or other property due to them, or held in trust for them, and to prevent the transfer thereof, or the payment or delivery thereof, to any other person, and to procure satisfaction of the plaintiffs’ demand, as prescribed by section 1878 of the same Code. And that has provided that the judgment in the action may direct and provide for the satisfaction of the sum due to the plaintiff out of any money, thing in action, or other personal property, belonging to or due to the judgment debtor, or held in trust for him, which is discovered in the action, whether the same might or might not have been originally taken by virtue of an execution. And section 1877 of this Code has provided for the appointment of a receiver in the action of all the property of the judgment debtors, and for directing them to convey or deliver their property, real or personal, to such receiver. This, as the preceding law did, furnishes ample authority for the maintenance of tills action; and the suit, in the form in which it has been prosecuted, is in no respect in conflict with the cases supporting the principle allowing the judgment creditor to maintain an action to set aside fraudulent transfers of property standing in the way of an execution held by the sheriff for the purpose of collecting a judgment. The law has provided for and sanctioned two remedies: One by the judgment creditors, to set aside unlawful or fraudulent transfers standing in the way of an execution issued to and held by the sheriff; and to maintain such an action it is indispensable that the execution shall be held by the sheriff, certainly, at the time of commencing the suit. The other, which is the action provided for by these sections of the Code, after an execution shall be issued and returned unsatisfied. The judgment creditors have their election as to which proceeding shall be taken. If tangible property can be found, which by the action may be rendered the subject of levy and sale under the execution, an action to set aside fraudulent transfers of that property is legal and proper. But where that may not be the case, and the execution has been returned .unsatisfied, there
At the commencement of the trial the plaintiffs applied for leave to add to their complaint ihe following allegations and statements: “That at the time of the drafting and execution of the said assignment, and as part and parcel •of the same transaction, and with the intent thereby to create a preference to ■an extent of more than one-third of the entire assets of the estate, and to thus avoid the statute in such cases made and provided, the said assignors, William H. Payne and Frederick D. Steck, confessed judgments to Augusta L. Bamber, William Bamber, Louisa Hellis, Alonzo É. Wemple, Frank J. Griffith, Alfred 0. Smith, and May L. Payne, to an amount in the aggregate of about $30,000, and issued executions thereon, which executions were placed in the hands of the sheriff, and levies were caused to be made upon them, prior to the filing of the assignment; and that the amount of the said judgments and executions so confessed was in excess of one-third of the assets of the assignors, and was in fact more than two-thirds of the assets of the assignors; and that property exceeding in value two-thirds of the entire assets of said assignors was sold under said execution by the sheriff of the city and ■county of Hew York.” And the court allowed the addition to be made, to which the defendants’ counsel excepted. This amendment or addition added a statement of further grounds for assailing the assignment as fraudulent; and it was not affirmed on behalf of the defendants that they could or would be misled by the allowance of the amendment. And section 723 of the Code of Civil Procedure has authorized the court at the trial to permit an allegation material to the case to be made, where it does not change substantially the claim or defense. This amendment was within this power, and could have been no possible cause of surprise to either of the defendants. Under the complaint so amended, the plaintiffs proved that seven judgments had been confessed by the judgment debtors on the day when they executed their assignment, and just preceding that event. Executions were issued upon these
Further leave during the trial was made to amend the complaint, but not in any material respect; for, as the plaintiffs had alleged the assignment to-have been actuated by a fraudulent intent, what was in this manner added to-the complaint would probably be admissible as evidence without it, in support of that general allegation.
The schedules and inventory prepared by the assignee under the assignment were legally received in evidence; certainly, so far as be or his successor was a party to the action. They were made under the authority and direction of the statute, and were evidence to prove the amount of property which reached