Administrator with the Will Annexed of Smith v. Wood

42 N.J. Eq. 563
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 42 N.J. Eq. 563 (Administrator with the Will Annexed of Smith v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Administrator with the Will Annexed of Smith v. Wood, 42 N.J. Eq. 563 (N.J. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

The following statement presents all the material facts on which the complainant rests his right to relief in this case: The ■complainant is a judgment creditor of Abraham T. Wood. The debt on which his judgment is founded was contracted prior to the 18th of September, 1877. He has exhausted his remedy at law, the execution issued on his judgment having been returned tmsatisfied, no property having been found on which a levy could be made. Wood, on the date last named, executed a chattel [564]*564mortgage to his wife ou “ all the stock, crops, poultry, farming implements and utensils ” which were then on a farm belonging to him, situated in the township of Wantage, Sussex county, to secure the payment of $1,800, on the 1st day of April, 1878. Wood was not indebted to his wife, the mortgage executed to her being voluntary and made with intent to defraud - his creditors. Mrs. Wood, on the 5th of June, 1878, and a few days before two judgments were to be entered against her husband in suits brought subsequent to the execution of her mortgage, sold, under a power of sale contained in her mortgage, all the mortgaged chattels at public sale, and jmrchased them herself. On the 18th of June, 1878, Wood made an assignment to Ira I). Hoffman of all his property for the equal benefit of his creditors. Wood’s object in making the assignment, it is alleged, was to-defraud his creditors and to protect and preserve his property to his own use. Hoffman assumed the duties imposed upon him by the assignment and subsequently sold and conveyed the farm, which passed to him under the assignment, to his assignor’s wife. This sale, it is alleged on information and belief, was not made in good faith nor for an adequate or valuable consideration. The assignee had so far proceeded in the execution of his duties-as to file his final account in the orphans court of the county of Sussex, where the same was pending, on exceptions, when the bill in this case was filed. Debts to the amount of $7,365.17 have been exhibited to the assignee under oath. This includes $4,324.05 exhibited by the assignor’s wife, the whole of which the complainant charges to be false and fraudulent. The balance-shown by the assignee’s account to be in his hands for distribution among the creditors who have proved their debts is $61.64. The exceptions taken to the assignee’s account seek to charge him with the value of the chattels which Mrs. Wood claims to have acquired under her mortgage, and also with money, notes and other personal property, of the value of $700. The debt on which the complainant’s judgment is founded was not exhibited to the assignee under oath, nor has the judgment been so exhibited or otherwise. The complainant has procured the farm which Wood owned at the time he made the assignment, to [565]*565be sold under his judgment and to be conveyed to himself. On these facts and allegations the complainant asks that the chattel mortgage made to Mrs. Wood, and the sale made thereunder, be set aside; that the personal property which the mortgage •covered, or any which has been substituted in or procured to supply the place of it,” may be applied in satisfaction of his judgment, and also that the deed of assignment to Hoffman, as well as the deed made by Hoffman to Mrs. Wood, be set aside, and that the title to the land conveyed thereby be declared to be in the complainant, and that the defendants be decreed to deliver the possession thereof to the complainant. The defendants demur for want of equity.

The important question raised by the demurrer is whether the bill states sufficient facts, if undenied or undisputed, to entitle the complainant to a decree nullifying the assignment. If the assignment is valid, there can be no doubt that all the property in controversy, as well that to which the assignor held the title at the time he made the assignment, as that which he had previously conveyed and transferred in fraud of his creditors, passed, by the assignment, to his assignee, and that his assignee is liable to answer for its value to such of his creditors as have made a proper exhibition of their claims. It is now authoritatively settled in this state that an assignee, under our statute regulating assignments for the benefit of creditors, may, in virtue of the power conferred upon him by the assignment, avoid conveyances and transfers made by his assignor in fraud of his creditors, if the property so alienated is required for the payment of debts exhibited to the assignee. As to such debts the principle is established that the assignee stands in the place of the creditors, with all their rights and equities. Pillsbury v. Kingon, 6 Stew. Eq. 287. The possession of this power imposes a duty. The as-signee is bound to exercise it for the benefit of the creditors, or answer for any loss which they may sustain by his neglect of duty. Mr. Justice Potts, in Garretson v. Brown, 2 Dutch. 425, 440, said that any fraudulent disposition which the assignor may have made of his property is liable to be avoided by his assignee. His assignee is but the trustee of creditors, who may compel him [566]*566to perform bis duty. This states the principle which lies at the foundation of the decision in Pillsbury v. Kingon. It is clear, therefore, that if the assignment is valid, the title to the-property in controversy passed under it to the assignee, and that he must, in the proper discharge of his duty, first apply it to the discharge of the debts which have been exhibited to him in conformity to the statute. The rights of the creditors who have made a proper exhibition of their claims are paramount. They must be paid in full before a creditor who has not exhibited his-claim can have anything out of the property accounted for by the assignee. Such is the plain direction of the statute. Rev. p. Jfi § £0. If the assignee realizes, from the property assigned, more than is sufficient to pay in full all the debts proved, a creditor who has not proved his debt has a right to have his debt paid out of the surplus. And so, if a creditor, who has not proved his debt, finds property subsequent to the distribution, for which the assignee has not accounted, he will have a right to participate in the distribution of its proceeds. These-are rights which are conferred by the assignment.

But the complainant in this case does not seek to establish a right to relief through the assignment; on the contrary, he denounces the assignment as a fraud, and asks that it may be set aside, and that relief be administered to him as though it had never been made. The fraud charged against the assignment is expressed as follows:

“ And your orator is informed and believes, and expressly charges the truth to be, that said assignment by said Abraham T. Wood to Ira D. Hoffman, so-far from being for the benefit of the creditors of said Wood, was made with the intent and purpose, on the part of said Wood, of hindering, delaying and defeating his creditors in the collection of their debts, and of protecting and preserving his property to his own use.”

This, it is obvious, is entirely too general. No rule of equity pleading is better settled than that which declares that every material fact which it is necessary for a complainant to prove to . establish his right to the relief he asks must be alleged in the premises of his' bill, with reasonable fullness and particularity. [567]*567Story’s Eq. Pl. § 88 ; Rorback v. Dorsheimer, 10 C. E. Gr. 516.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.J. Eq. 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/administrator-with-the-will-annexed-of-smith-v-wood-njch-1887.