Auburn Exchange Bank v. Fitch

48 Barb. 344, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 28
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 48 Barb. 344 (Auburn Exchange Bank v. Fitch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Auburn Exchange Bank v. Fitch, 48 Barb. 344, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 28 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1867).

Opinion

By the Court, E. Darwin Smith, J.

The judgment rendered at special term, adjudging that the several conveyances and transfers therein mentioned from the defendant Morell S. Fitch to the defendants Eiorsey S. Masters, Laura Fitch and John P. Pingree, including the chattel mortgage also therein mentioned, were fraudulent and void, and directing that the same be set aside, vacated and annulled, was based [348]*348upon an express finding of fact in which the learned judge finds “that the said several conveyances and transfers were executed by the said Fitch with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of the firm, of Hemingway & Fitch, (of which the said Fitch was a member,) in the collection of their debts, and were accepted by the said Elorsey S. Masters, Laura Fitch and John P. Pingree, with the like intent.”

The legal conclusion drawn by the learned judge from the facts he found was clearly correct, and we are therefore called upon to examine the evidence in the case and see if the said findings upon the facts, as contained in the decision at special term, were authorized or warranted by such evidence.

The several conveyances and transfers thus set aside by the judgment, at special term, were all professedly made in consideration and satisfaction of debts claimed to be justly due and owing to the said respective grantees or vendees of the property, from the said Morell'S. Fitch.

In the decision at special term nothing is said about these debts, but in the opinion of the learned judge he says that he had not thought it necessary to decide whether the claim of Mrs. Masters was an honest and valid debt for its full amount, at the time of the transfer. He thought it probable that she had a valid debt originally, but that there was much evidence tending to show that a large portion of it had been paid.

If the learned judge had considered the evidence relating to the. validity and justness of these several debts in payment of which the property in question was conveyed or transferred to the several grantees or vendees thereof, and had found, as a matter of fact, that such debts in whole or in part, or any or either of them, were fictitious or trumped up for the occasion, his finding that the said transfers to pay such debts were fraudulent would have been well founded and most incontestible.

But in the absence of any such finding, and upon the concession or assumption that said debts are valid and justly [349]*349due and owing to the several parties as claimed and asserted by them, very different rules and principles apply in the review of the question of fraud asserted in such decision. Upon the facts, as they appear in evidence, it seems to me that the debts to Mrs. Masters, to Mrs. Fitch and to Pingree, and to each and every one of them, are clearly established to be "honest, just and valid for-the full amount thereof, respectively claimed by them. The proof is clear and explicit on this subject, and I do not think it could be found or held otherwise with any degree of fairness.

The existence and validity of the debt of Mrs. Masters is fully proved by herself, by her husband and by Fitch, and there is no evidence in the case to impeach their testimony on this subject, or their credit as witnesses. The debt of Mrs. Fitch is also conclusively proved to have been hers, and to have arisen from her separate property; and the debt of Pingree for professional services and expenses clearly exceeded the securities received by him from Fitch.

Assuming that the said deeds and transfers to Mrs. Masters, Mrs. Fitch and to Pingree were thus given for honest and valid "debts, they may nevertheless be held fraudulent and void, and the question of fraud is one of fact; but as, in this view, they are deeds to purchasers for a valuable consideration, the statute declares that they shall not be affected or impaired for any fraud of the grantor or vendor, unless it shall appear that such purchaser had previous notice of the fraudulent intent of his immediate grantor, or of the fraud rendering void the title of such grantee. (2 R. 8. p. 137, § 5, title 3, eh. 8. 21 N. Y. Rep. 168. 17 id. 28.)

We see, then, that the import of the finding at special term is that these deeds and transfers were made to hinder and defraud creditors, and that the grantees were privy to such fraud. In this view of the force and effect of the findings upon the facts at special term, that these deeds and transfers were made and executed with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of the firm of Hemingway & [350]*350Fitch, I think it cannot he sustained, and is not warranted by the evidence.

Morell S. Fitch, at the time of making these conveyances and transfers, was confessedly in embarrassed circumstances, and, as the result shows, clearly insolvent. He owned and had in his possession a large amount of property. The firm of Hemingway & Fitch was greatly extended, and in desperate circumstances, and it was through the losses and embarrassments of this firm that Fitch was straightened, and not from any difficulty in his private affairs. Seeing that the firm of Hemingway & Fitch must probably fail, Fitch, early in the spring of 1862, evidently began to prepare for that event, and determined, it seems, to appropriate his private property to the payment, .primarily, of his private debts in preference to the partnership debts. With this view and intent, he made the conveyances and transfers in question, conveying his property to his private creditors in payment of these honest debts. He made and delivered the deeds and transfers on the 8fch of April, 1862, and apparently remained in possession of the real estate and household furniture for several months after-wards. It appears that the firm of Hemingway & Fitch floundered along during these several months, when they finally failed, and that during this period Fitch had more or less the hope and expectation that the firm would recover .from its embarrassments and sustain itself and go on, and spoke of it and of his own affairs, on some occasions, as though he was the owner of all his private property. ■ So far as Fitch is himself concerned, these facts present about all there is in the case tending to show that he had any fraudulent purpose in disposing of the property. But so far as relates to the grantees in these several conveyances and transfers, there is nothing to impeach their good faith; really nothing, fairly considered, tending to show that they were privy to any concealment or fraudulent intent or purpose on the part of Fitch in disposing of his property.

The deeds to Mrs. Masters were executed and delivered on [351]*351the 8 th of April, and she testified that she then put them in her safe, and that they remained there till about the first or second of September afterwards, without any design or concert for that purpose, but by mere heedlessness and accident. She let her son remain in her house because he was her son, and had nowhere else to live. She had a perfect right so to do. The law is not so unjust as to forbid a son from paying an honest debt to his mother by a conveyance to her of his family residence; nor is it so unreasonable as to require her to turn him into the street, at the peril of losing the estate. In respect to the gas and telegraph stock transferred to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
48 Barb. 344, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/auburn-exchange-bank-v-fitch-nysupct-1867.