3 Barb. 554 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
By the Court,
It is indispensable to the plaintiff’s right to recover that he should establish in himself a legal title to the premises in question at the time when this suit was commenced. The title under which he claims is derived under a sheriff’s deed, executed upon a sale under a judgment, obtained in a suit commenced against the Towanda Bank, as a foreign corporation, wherein the attachment was served by a levy on the premises, on the 26th day of June, 1843. If then, the Towanda Bank held the legal title to the premises on that day, the plaintiff’s right to recover is probably made out. (6 Hill, 362.)
To establish this fact, the plaintiff proved a judgment in favor of the bank, against one Eben J. Dennis, the common and admitted source of title of both parties, and a sale under the judgment, with a sheriff’s certificate, executed to the bank as the purchaser, bearing date June 6th, 1838. In addition to this, the plaintiff gave in evidence a sheriff’s deed, reciting the sale to the bank, and dated on the 16th of December, 1845. If this deed is an available instrument for the plaintiff, conveying the title of Dennis to the bank, then, notwithstanding its recent date, it would probably be good by relation: and for all the purposes of this suit, would prove the legal title to have been in the bank, when the premises were levied on by the plaintiff’s attachment. But the validity of this deed, as an operative instrument, is disputed by the defendant on two grounds.
1st. It is said that there is no proof of a delivery of it to the bank, or to any person having authority to accept it on behalf of the bank. The deed bears date since the commencement of this suit, and is produced by the plaintiff, a creditor who is seeking to collect a debt against the bank by a hostile proceeding.
The conclusion to which I have cqme on this branch of the case renders it necessary to inquire whether the plaintiff has acquired the title that was conveyed by Dennis to Dana by the deed of December 4th, 1839 ; and whether the title so acquired (if he in fact acquired any,) was a legal estate. In conducting this inquiry, the first question which arises, is what estate was conveyed to Dana under the deed of Dennis ? The counsel of the plaintiff has argued that by virtue of the 47th and 49th section of the act entitled “ of uses and trusts,” (1 R. S. 728,) the bank took the whole estate, as though the conveyance had been made directly to the bank, and therefore that the service of the attachment created a lien on the legal estate in the premises, which was consummated in the plaintiff when he finally received his deed from the sheriff founded upon a sale of the premises under a judgment obtained in the attachment suit, and bearing date August 30, 1845. Those sections how
I. It will follow, therefore, that to entitle the plaintiff to recover, he must bring himself within the provisions of that section, which reads as follows : “ Every such conveyance shall be presumed fraudulent as against creditors, at that time, of the person paying the .consideration; and where a fraudulent intent is not disproved, a trust shall result in favor of such creditors to the extent that may be necessary to satisfy their just demandsIt is apparent that the plaintiff, in the attempt to bring the case within this section, is met by several grave difficulties. (1.) There is no satisfactory proof that the plaintiff Was a creditor of the bank on the 4th of December, 1839. The only evidence of that fact is that his claim was founded on bank notes of all denominations bearing various dates from 1835 to 1841. Now it nowhere appears, when the plaintiff received any one of these notes ; nor when they were put forth by the bank. Their dates furnish no satisfactory evidence of this fact; for, judging by the well known practice of banking institutions, it is quite as probable as otherwise, that all the bills bearing date before the execution of the deed, had been, after their first issue, returned to the bank and re-issued to customers, in the ordinary Course of banking business, after the 4th of December, 1839. If, therefore, it be assumed that the rights of the numerous former holders of these bank notes, as creditors, under the section in question, have been transmitted to the plaintiff, the case is still Without adequate proof that any one of these notes was actually issued and outstanding on the 4th of December, 1839. (2.) Again, if this difficulty were obviated, we have no evidence to show how large a portion of the indebtedness which constituted the plaintiff’s judgment arose upon notes bearing 'date before the execution of the deed. It is a part of the case that some bore date in the years 1840 and 1841. Now, confessedly, as to that part of the judgment founded on notes of this description, the statute gives the plaintiff no lien upon, nor rights against, the land conveyed to Dana. It is therefore entirely uncertain whether the trust which results to the plaintiff attaches
II. Suppose, however, that I am mistaken in regarding the entire estate in the premises, both legal and equitable, vested in Dana under the deed from Dennis, by virtue of the 51st section of the statute before cited. Admitting that the plaintiff is es-topped by the tripartite deed of August, 1843, from denying that the bank held a beneficial interest in the premises — still it was a beneficial interest only. It -was not the legal estate ; for this, the same instrument which is made the foundation of the supposed estoppel, expressly declares. Nor is this at all
III. I have thus far regarded the plaintiff as having proceeded under the provisions of the revised statutes in seizing and selling the premises in question as the legal estate of the Bank of Towanda. By the act of 1842, however, (Sess. Laws of 1842, p. 227,) provision was made for seizing trust property, real and personal, in proceedings by attachment against foreign corporations. But it is provided in the 2d section of this act that when a party seeks to attach trust property, he must execute the attachment by “ leaving a true and attested copy of the writ with the trustee.” This mode of service is prescribed by the statute, for the best of reasons. The trustee being within the jurisdiction of the state can be reached by personal ser
But suppose this conclusion to be erroneous, and that the plaintiff did obtain a lien, by the service of his attachment, upon the equitable interests of the bank in the premises ; and that he acquired by purchase, at the sale upon his execution, the precise interest which the bank held when the attachment was served; yet by the very terms of the act (see 2d subdivision of § 4 of the act of 1842,) the sheriff could .convey to him only an equitable interest; the precise interest which the bank itself possessed when the process was served. He, therefore, has not yet acquired the legal estate ; and without that, lje cannot succeed in this action.
We have not examined the questions arising upon the assignment of the mortgage mentioned in the case, believing, that for the reasons already given, the defendant is entitled to judgment.
Judgment for the defendant.