Babcock v. . Eckler

24 N.Y. 623
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 24 N.Y. 623 (Babcock v. . Eckler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Babcock v. . Eckler, 24 N.Y. 623 (N.Y. 1862).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 625 In the examination of this case it is only necessary, in our opinion, to ascertain whether the conveyance of the Brockport property and the transfer of the stock and bond to Mrs. Eckler in November, 1855, were or not valid and effectual to vest the same absolutely in her. For if we come to the conclusion that she was then the legal owner of the property thus conveyed and transferred, it follows as a necessary consequence that she is also the legal owner of the Phelps farm, which was subsequently purchased with a portion of the proceeds of this property.

There can be no question that, since the passage of the acts of 1848 and 1849, Mrs. Eckler was the absolute owner of the property inherited from her sister in 1850, the same as if she were afeme sole, and that, although her husband had reduced to possession the $2,000 received on the sale of land inherited *Page 626 from her father, a court of equity would protect her rights therein, and make a just and proper settlement thereof on her. If her statement of the agreement between her and her husband is to be regarded as evidence, then in addition to these sums she was entitled to receive, absolutely in her own right, one-half of all the property acquired by them during marriage, and the total amount thus transferred to her in November, 1855, does not greatly exceed the sums confessedly due to her, and such half thus acquired. The conveyance and transfer, therefore, made in 1855, cannot be said to be voluntary. They were made to satisfy, in part, a just and conceded debt due to Mrs. Eckler, and to vest in her her share of the acquired property during marriage. They were made by a solvent man, who did not then know he was indebted to the plaintiff at all, and it is found, as a matter of fact, that at that time he owed no other debt whatever. If he had supposed that he was indebted at all to the plaintiff, and then knew the exact amount of his share of the losses on the corn adventure, that sum was then only about $900, and he retained to himself property valued over $10,000. It is very difficult to perceive upon what basis the allegation of an intent to defraud the plaintiff by such conveyance and transfer can be predicated upon these facts.

John Eckler was undeniably indebted to his wife in at least the sum of $3,500, and conceding he owed the plaintiffs in 1855 $900, he retained in his possession of his whole property more in proportion to pay that debt than he conveyed and transferred to her in satisfaction of what was due to her. From these circumstances, it is impossible to say that there could have been any intent, in fact, to defraud the plaintiff. Does the law impute such fraudulent intent from the sole fact of such indebtedness of Eckler, conceding that he then knew such indebtedness to exist? It certainly cannot be argued that he can have disposed of his estate with intent to defraud the plaintiff, his creditor, unless he knew or had reason to suppose that he was such creditor. This subject has received the most careful and elaborate discussion in this State, and the *Page 627 principles which have been settled should be adhered to. The leading case relied on to avoid a conveyance, transfer, or settlement purely voluntary, is that of Reade v. Livingston (3 Johns. Ch., 481). In that case the conveyance was to a trustee for the benefit of the grantor's wife, and was voluntary, without any consideration or any prior indebtedness to her. It was urged, to uphold it, that the husband previous to the marriage had made a parol promise to settle $30,000 on his wife. The Chancellor regarded it as a voluntary settlement, unconnected with any ante-nuptial agreement, and he states the question to be, whether such a voluntary settlement after marriage, by a party indebted at the time it is made, be not, as against such creditors, absolutely fraudulent and void, and he was of the opinion that that question could be most satisfactorily answered in the affirmative.

Jackson v. Seward (5 Cow., 67) was an action of ejectment, and the defendant claimed under a deed from his father to him, made when the father was indebted to the plaintiff's lessor. The deed, on its face, was for the consideration of $10,000; but the true consideration was certain bonds of the defendant, one to a sister for $2,277.50; one to another sister for $2,175, both bearing even date with the deed, and payable six months after the death of his father; and a bond in the penalty of $10,000 to his father, of the same date, conditioned to pay him an annuity of $500 in half-yearly payments, on which were indorsed, in the father's handwriting, the payment of these annuities in April of the years 1819, '20, '21, '22, and the only question made was whether the deed to the son was fraudulent in law. The Supreme Court held that it was, and that the conveyance was voluntary, being a deed of gift by the grantor to his children, and so intended by him; and the ruling of Chancellor KENT, in Reade v.Livingston, is quoted with approbation, that, "if the party be indebted at the time of a voluntary settlement, it is presumed to be fraudulent in respect to such debts, and no circumstances will permit those debts to be affected by the settlement or repel the legal presumption of fraud." A writ of error was brought, *Page 628 and the case was heard in the Court of Errors, and is reported in 8 Cowen, 406. The judgment of the Supreme Court was reversed, only one Senator dissenting, and the following points, may be regarded as ruled by the court in that case: 1. That, to make a deed voluntary, it must be without any the least valuable consideration. 2. That the deed in that case was not voluntary. 3. When a conveyance of land is upon any the least valuable consideration, the question whether it be fraudulent as to creditors belongs exclusively to the jury as a question of fact. 4. That a conveyance from a parent to a child, in consideration of love and affection, in other words voluntary, is not absolutely void even as to existing creditors, but the presumption that it is fraudulent may be repelled by circumstances; and this last proposition seems to be fully sustained after an elaborate review of all the English and American authorities on the point by ALLEN, Senator.

In 1832, questions upon this conveyance and the gifts of the bonds to William Seward's children arose in the Court of Chancery, on a bill filed by Van Wyck to set them aside. The Vice-Chancellor held himself precluded, by the decision of the Court of Errors and the verdict of the jury in that case that there was no fraud in fact, from inquiring into the validity of the deed from William to his son; and he says, if it was an open question whether that deed was a voluntary conveyance and to be deemed constructively fraudulent, and whether the evidence in that case made out a case of actual and intentional fraud, he should have great difficulty in answering those questions affirmatively. But I think he distinctly affirms the rule of the Court of Errors, when, speaking of the gifts of the bonds by the father to his children, received from his son on the execution of the deed to him, he says, "If the donor is indebted at the time, such a thing may be prima facie evidence of fraud against a creditor, but this presumption may be repelled by proof or circumstances." The decree of the Vice-Chancellor was affirmed by the Chancellor (6 Paige, 62), not on the ground upon which the decision of the former was placed, that the judgment in the ejectment *Page 629

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.Y. 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/babcock-v-eckler-ny-1862.