Birdsal, Waite & Perry Manufacturing v. Schwarz

3 A.D. 298, 38 N.Y.S. 368
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 A.D. 298 (Birdsal, Waite & Perry Manufacturing v. Schwarz) 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
Birdsal, Waite & Perry Manufacturing v. Schwarz, 3 A.D. 298, 38 N.Y.S. 368 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Hatch, J.:

The action is in the nature of a creditor’s bill filed by three judgment creditors of George Schwarz and others, composing a firm doing business under the name of Brooklyn Carriage and Harness Company, and seeks as a result to set aside, the general assignment executed by the judgment debtors on October 22, 1894, to the defendant Mayer for the benefit of creditors, and also to set aside a conveyance of real estate executed by the defendant George Schwarz to his wife Barbara on October 19, 1894. Both of these instruments are attacked as being fraudulent and void, in that they were executed for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding the creditors of the said firm, and of the individual members thereof. The assignment was of firm property, and was executed by the members thereof as partners. It. did not on its face purport to assign individual property, and no provision was made therein for the payment of individual debts. The trial .court found that the evidence was not sufficient to justify a finding of fraud in the assignment, and as to it judgment was rendered in favor of the assignee dismissing the complaint upon the merits. As to the conveyance the court held that it could only be attacked by the assignee. The court declined to pass upon the merits in this respect and simply dismissed the complaint, thus leaving the matter, if it was deemed advisable, open to an attack by the assignee, in an action for that purpose. It is now insisted by the appellants that the court erred in both conclusions. The first claim is that fraud in the assignment is apparent upon the undisputed facts, and consists in this, that the defendant George Schwarz did not deliver to the assignee, but retained possession of, six promissory notes, amounting in the aggregate to $3,550, which he held against the firm for money loaned to it. That he withheld $200 in cash which he gave to his wife, stating to her at the time that it was all he had, and that he wished her to use it for the support of the family; also that each of the partners, on the Saturday night before the execution of the assignment, drew fifteen dollars from the firm assets for their individual use.

It is undoubtedly true that it is not necessarily essential, in order to invalidate an assignment for fraud, that fraud in the assignee should be established; it is sufficient if fraud exist on the part of the [300]*300assignors. We are, however, unable to see that fraud is necessarily to be deduced from the acts complained of, or that the court was required to infer its existence from these facts. The retention of the notes in nowise prejudiced the assignee in carrying out the purposes of the trust, nor did it deprive the creditors of the firm of any property applicable to the payment of their debts. We know of no rule of law which would prevent Schwarz from proving them as a claim against the assigned estate. What his position would be in respect to the other creditors in such event is not important, now to consider. It certainly does not appear that he retained possession of the notes with any fraudulent design to defeat the purposes of the trust, and we are unable to see how anybody was prejudiced thereby. The retention of money by an assignor, in contemplation of an assignment, may or may not constitute fraud. It is dependent to a large extent upon the particular circumstances attending the case, in consequence of which each case must, in a large measure and within certain limits, he determined upon its particular' facts, haying regard to the intent of the assignor and the substantial character of the amount retained.

In Coursey v. Morton (132 N. Y. 556), after the assignment had been executed, the assignor withdrew from the bank $963.50 and delivered the same to his wife, who secreted it for about eight months, and it was only, discovered upon a proceeding instituted for that purpose. The assignment in that case was confessedly made for the purpose of gaining time to compromise with creditors, and the stun secreted constituted in a large measure the available assets of the estate. The assignor was conscious at all times that he had no right to withhold the money, and that it belonged to his creditors. The court held that these acts constituted fraud which invalidated the assignment.

In Rothschild v. Salomon (52 Hun, 486) the sum drawn out for household expenses was $4,042. Of this sum $2,300 was delivered to the wife of one of the.assignors and was falsely charged in the books as payment of a loan. Ho money was ever loaned by her, and in fact nothing was due. The court held that this, money was abstracted in anticipation of and in preparation for an assignment, in 'consequence of which the whole transaction was vitiated. The other cases cited by appellant in support of this contention add [301]*301nothing to the strength of those already noted. We do not think they are controlling npon the proof now before us.

The facts of this case correspond quite closely to those appearing in Vietor v. Nichols (13 N. Y. St. Repr. 461). There the partners drew an amount in excess of the sum drawn here, and the whole amount drawn, so far as the report of the case shows, about equalled the sums drawn here by George Schwarz of his individual money and by the members of the firm. The court held that this withdrawal did not necessarily impeach the assignment, as the law authorized a retention of a sum sufficient to meet family wants for a period of sixty days. This holding was affirmed on appeal (114 N. Y. 617). We think that this authority is abundant in support of the acts of the partners in drawing the small sum which each did from the partnership assets, and that fraud should not be inferred therefrom.'

As to the withdrawal from the bank by Schwarz of his individual money, treating it as property which should necessarily have been assigned, we do not think it works out a fraudulent intent. It appears that, of that sum, nearly $100 was expended by him in the discharge of personal debts, and $200 was given to his wife for household expenses. It nowhere appears that this sum was excessive in amount for that purpose, and the case last cited recognized that such disposition of nearly this amount was not the withdrawal of so substantial a sum as to characterize the act per se fraudulent. We recognize the rule that an act standing alone is not the criterion, hut that all the acts which lead up to and culminate in the assignment are to be considered together in order to determine whether a fraudulent scheme existed which was consummated by all that was done. But here the appellant selects the specified acts and asks the court to find from them that they conclusively establish the fraudulent scheme. The court below felt constrained to hold that these acts were not.sufficient for that purpose, and we are not satisfied by the argument of the learned counsel for the appellant that any error was committed therein. The record does not disclose that any act of George Schwarz respecting the disposition of his individual property ivas known to or participated in by his co-partners. If fraudulent design npon his part existed, both the assignee and the co-partriers were evidently innocent of any knowledge or participation ‘ therein. And further, there is no evidence that George Schwarz [302]*302did any act or intended any act which interfered or was calculated to interfere with the entire disposition of the firm’s property, and this was all that the assignment purported to convey.

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51 A.D. 499 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1900)
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27 A.D. 3 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)
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Bluebook (online)
3 A.D. 298, 38 N.Y.S. 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birdsal-waite-perry-manufacturing-v-schwarz-nyappdiv-1896.