Badger v. Sutton

30 A.D. 294, 52 N.Y.S. 16
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 A.D. 294 (Badger v. Sutton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Badger v. Sutton, 30 A.D. 294, 52 N.Y.S. 16 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Cullen, J.:

John W. Young, Albert. J. Young and Irving W. Young were copartners under the name of John W.. Young & Sons, carrying on a lumber, coal and mill business at White Plains, N. Y. In July, 1894, the firm being embarrassed financially, organized a corporation with the name of the John W. Young & Sons Company. The firm conveyed all its real estate to this company and also caused to be conveyed to it certain" other real estate purchased at a sale made by John H. Clapp, referee. In consideration of such conveyance the corporation ifesued to the firm its entire capital stock, consisting of 5,000 shares of $100 each, with the .exception of two shares issued to outside parties to qualify them as directors. At this time a foreign corporation named the Tuckahoe Lumber and Coal Company was carrying on business in the county of Westchester, and was- the owner of certain real estate there. The exact character and nature of the connéction between this corporation and the firm of John'W. Young & Sons does not appear in the record before us, but we may assume that the company was in some manner controlled by the firm. On July 26, 1894, the Tuckahoe Company conveyed its real estate to the new corporation, John W. Young & Sons Company. In August, 1894, the John W. Young & Sons Company executed to the State Trust Company, as trustee, a mortgage of the real estate so conveyed to it, to secure the payment of negotiable bonds to be issued to the aggregate amount of $200,000. Twenty thousand dollars in amount of these bonds were issued to the Tuckahoe Company in payment for the real estate conveyed by that company. On February 20,1895, the firm of John W. Young & Sons transferred all its stock on hand and personal property, except the book accounts, to the new corporation, and in payment therefor-received bonds of the par value of $112,000. On the same day the firm executed a general assignment for the benefit of creditors to Charles T. Sutton, as assignee. On the-19thday of February, 1895, the Tuckahoe Lumber and. Coal Company made a general assignment for the.benefit of creditors to the same Charles T.' Sutton, as assignee. Under these two assignments Sutton as assignee received the shares of the capital stock in the new corporation which had been issued .to the firm, and two lots of the mortgage bonds, one of $112,000) issued in payment of the merchandise stock of the firm, [297]*297and the other of $20,000, paid the Tuckahoe Company for its real estate. The plaintiffs Badger and Winslow, who were creditors .of the firm of John W. Young & Sons, brought this action in aid of the assignment by that firm to Sutton, to have the transfers of the real estate and firm assets to the corporation (as well as certain other conveyances made to individual parties) declared fraudulent and void as against Sutton, assignee, and to require the property to be transferred to the assignee for distribution, pursuant to the terms of the general assignment. In this action Austin B. Fletcher was appointed temporary receiver of all the property described in the complaint. The Tuckahoe Lumber and Coal Company appears not to have been a party to the action at the time it was originally instituted. While the litigation was pending the parties made a stipulation for its determination. This stipulation provided for making the Tuckahoe Company and its assignee parties to the action, and substantially for the entry of a judgment declaring the transfer by that company and by the firm of John W. Young & Sons to the new corporation, fraudulent and void as against the assignee. Judgment was entered in the action to that effect. By the judgment Fletcher was continued as permanent receiver of the assigned property ; he was directed to convert the property, and, after paying the expenses of the litigation, to distribute the proceeds in accordance with the terms of the' general assignment to Sutton. Under this judgment the receiver acquired possession of the property, and on December 11, 1896, filed his petition, praying that he be authorized to sell the property free of liens, and that the court should ascertain and determine the amount and validity of the liens on the property and direct their payment out of the proceeds of the sale. On this petition an order of reference was made. The referee made his. report, which was confirmed by the court at Special Term, and from the order of- confirmation this appeal is taken.

No objection is made as to the regularity of the proceeding instituted by the receiver or the power of the court to determine in the proceeding the rights of the various lienors. We shall, therefore, confine our consideration to the question of whether those rights have been properly determined and adjusted by the order of the Special. Term. At the outset of our inquiry it is necessary to define the character of the receivership created by the judgment. The [298]*298learned referee seems to have been of the opinion that Fletcher was the receiver of the John W. Young & Sons Company. This, is an erroneous view. Fletcher is a common-law receiver of certain specified property, appointed by the court by virtue of its inherent powers as a court of equity. (Keeney v. Home Ins. Co., 71 N. Y. 396.)

The fact that the receiver in certain, papers describes himself as receiver of the John W. Young & Sons Company, and his" belief that he was such receiver, if he had that belief, do not affect the question. The character of the. receivership must be determined by the terms of the judgment and the nature of the action in which it was created. The court had not the power in this action to appoint a receiver of the John W. Young & Sons Company., nor did it assume to make such an appointment. This view disposes of the claim that the judgment recovered by the Loyal Hanna Coal and Coke Company against Austin B. Fletcher, as receiver of the John 'W. Young & Sons Company, constitutes any lien on the land in the hands of the receiver. ■ If the plaintiff in that judgment has any special equity which entitles it to payment by the receiver as an expense of the receivership, it may make its application to the court for that purpose.

The most serious and important question is as to the right of the receiver to hold the bonds received by him as parts of the assigned estate of the firm of John W. Young & Sons, and to share in the mortgage security to the extent of those bonds. If the mortgage property was worth as much or more than the amount of the. mortgage bonds the question would be of no practical consequence. While the property has not as yet been sold, still all parties seem to assume that there is little prospect of the sale realizing any such amount. If a trust mortgage of the character of the one before us is to be considered as giving to the holder of each bond as security for its payment only an aliquot share of the mortgaged property equal ■ to the proportion that his bond bears to the whole issue authorized by the mortgage, the question would be one easy of solution. But I know of no authority for such a proposition. The universal practice has been, to the contrary. If in fact but part of the bonds authorized by a mortgage have been issued, the holders of those bonds are entitled to the whole proceeds of the mortgaged property, so far as may be necessary tp satisfy their claims. Therefore, while [299]

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Bluebook (online)
30 A.D. 294, 52 N.Y.S. 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/badger-v-sutton-nyappdiv-1898.