The action is in the nature of a creditor’s bill to set aside the sales made by the firm of Burrows & Lane, and by Burrows to the defendant Potts, upon the charge that they were fraudulent as against the plaintiff, a creditor of the firm.
The trial court found and determined that the allegations of fraud were not supported and dismissed the complaint. The value of.the property of the firm transferred to Potts is not, nor is the amount of its ‘liabilities, found by the court. The evidence on those subjects was mainly that of the. plaintiff, and, in view of his relation to the action, it did not conclusively establish the facts to which he testified. The court was not requested to find on those propositions of fact; and, inasmuch as no finding was made in those respects, no question of the comparative amount in value of the property and of the liabilities of the firm is presented on this review to the prejudice of the result given by the decision of the trial court.
The inquiry, therefore, arises whether the legal effect of the sale of the firm property to Potts, in view of the purpose and consideration, was such as to charge the parties to it with the intent to
In view of the circumstances a fair construction of the agreement makes it in that respect applicable only to those creditors who, by their consent, adopted it. It certainly would not affect or apply to any others. This arrangement was brought about at a meeting of nearly all of the creditors, and made pursuant to their request. They were willing to take forty per cent in satisfaction of their claims. It was in view of the arrangement by and with them that the sale' and purchase were made. And Burrows was probably induced to make the transfer by reason of the understanding thus made with such creditors, so far as they could do it, that the firm property should go in satisfaction of the partnership liabilities. The title passed to Potts, and he assumed the obligation to pay for it by paying to all the creditors pro rata, a sum equal to such percentage of their debts against the firm. This would seem to give to the plaintiff the right to the stipulated rate to apply on his claim without any undertaking on his part to discharge the residue of his demand.
The expectation (if it existed) of Burrows that the discharge of all the debts could be produced by such payments, and the arrangement in that respect in the agreement of sale, could not affect the liability of Potts to make the payments which he undertook to make.
The evidence tends to prove that the creditors or some of them, who received such amount, assigned their claims to Potts. This evidently was done to carry out such arrangement to discharge the debts. The defendant Potts was not a trustee, and the payments required of him were not m&de in the execution of a power, but in the performance of an original obligation to pay his own debt created by his purchase. This liability of Potts was property within the reach of the several creditors to the extent of their rights, respectively, to appropriate it to the payment of their claims, and is distinguished from a power arising out of a trust, in its legal effect as against the creditors of the' vendor, if free from fraud in fact. The finding of the trial court that the sale and purchase of the firm property, and the conveyance by Burrows to Potts of the
The complaint contains allegations which would have permitted the Special Term to treat the case as within the statute providing for creditors’ actions not resting in fraudulent disposition of property as well as the common law creditors’ action founded upon the latter, and the court may have given such relief. (Code Civil Pro., § 1871.) This has taken the place of 2 Revised Statutes (173, § 38), and it is very likely that this relief would have been given if the attention of the court had- been specifically called to it, which the record does not show was in any manner done.
The judgment should be so modified as to direct the payment by the defendant Potts to the plaintiff of the portion of the purchase-price of the firm property which he undertook to pay on account of the debt due to the plaintiff, that is to say, forty per cent of such debt, to be applied in abatement thereof to the extent only of such payment, and as so modified affirmed, without costs to any party.
Judgment modified so as to direct the payment by the defendant Potts to the plaintiff of the portion of the purchase-price of the firm property which he undertook to pay on account of the debt due the plaintiff, that is, forty per cent of such debt, to be applied in abatement of such debt to the extent of such payment only, and
