Brinkerhoff v. Brown

6 Johns. Ch. 139, 1822 N.Y. LEXIS 169, 1822 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 48
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 10, 1822
StatusPublished
Cited by84 cases

This text of 6 Johns. Ch. 139 (Brinkerhoff v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brinkerhoff v. Brown, 6 Johns. Ch. 139, 1822 N.Y. LEXIS 169, 1822 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 48 (N.Y. 1822).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

Several grounds for the demurrer have been assigned, some of which are put upon record, and others are assigned, ore tenus, at the bar, according to the course of the practice.

Causes of ^“"ssignetl ore terns.

I have no doubt, that the bill contains, within itself, sufficient equity to entitle the plaintiffs to relief, if the other objections can be surmounted. The charge of multifariousness is the most difficult to dispose of, and the most perplexing.

In the first place, it is objected, that the plaintiffs are not entitled to join in one suit, in respect to some of the items of their demand. The four first named plaintiffs are joint[150]*150ly interested in the two judgments obtained by B. and B~. against the Genessee Manufacturing Company, and S'., the last plaintiff, is interested in the surplus of those judgments, after the debts of the other plaintiffs, for which those judgments are held as a collateral security, shall have been satisfied. All the plaintiffs appear, also, to be jointly interested in the mortgage given by the Genessee Company to Muwford, and by him assigned to B. and B. So far they were all, doubtless, properly united as plaintiffs. But it appears, that the plaintiff, S., has obtained two judgments'against the Genessee Manufacturing Company, which he holds in trust for certain creditors of Russell Smith, residing in Massachusetts, and the other plaintiffs do not appear to have any interest in those two last judgments. Here, then, is the case of joint and several demands united in the same bill, and the question is, whether it can be permitted.

In Harison v. Hogg, (2 Vesey, jr. 323.) joint and several demands, in the same bill, by two plaintiffs, was held bad upon demurrer. The two plaintiffs were jointly concerned in one of the charges in the bill, and one of the-plaintiffs was solely interested in the other two charges. The bill was for an account of the sales of certain prints and engravings, belonging to both the plaintiffs, in respect to one work, and to one of the plaintiffs only in respect to two others; and one cause of the demurrer was, the joining of those distinct causes of action in the same bill. The Master of the Rolls held the objection to be insuperable, and that, upon the principle of the bill, if ten men were in partnership, and had a joint demand, each might set up a separate demand. The consequences would be absurd. The death of a co-plaintiff does not abate the suit; and is the defendant to answer all that relates to the dead man ?

This ease is not analogous, in its circumstances, to the one before me, and it may be questionable, whether the principle applies. It was a case in which separate unli[151]*151quidated accounts were called for, and in which the defendant was to account to the plaintiffs, jointly, for the sales of their joint work, and to one of the plaintiffs only for the sales of his two separate works. Here, the plaintiffs are judgment creditors, at law, seeking the aid of this Court to render their judgments and executions available, against certain fraudulent acts, equally affecting all of them. The question is, whether judgment creditors, whose rights are established, and their hens fixed, at law, may not unite m a bill to' remove impediments to the remedy, created by the fraud of the opposite party. It is an ordinary case in this Court, for creditors to unite, or for one or more, on behalf of themselves and the rest, to sue the representative of their debtor, in possession of the assets, and to seek an account of the estate. This is done to prevent multiplicity of suits, a very favourite object with this Court j and this principle so far controls the other rule, which preserves, in some degree, an analogy between pleadings in Chancery, and the simplicity of declarations at common law. There is no sound reason for requiring the judgment creditors to separate in their suits, when they have one common object in view, which, in fact, governs the whole case. There is no particular matter in litigation peculiar to each plaintiff, and if they were obliged to sue separately, it may be pertinently ásked, cut bono ? Their rights are already established, and the subject in dispute may be said to be joint, as between the plaintiffs, on the one hand, and the defendants, on the other, charged with a combination to delay, hinder, and defraud their creditors. If each judgment creditor was to be obliged to file his separate bill, it would be bringing the same question of fraud into repeated discussion, which would exhaust the fund, and be productive of all the mischief and oppression attending a multiplicity of suits. It appears to me, therefore, that the judgment creditors, in cases of fraud in the original debtor, have a right to unite in one bill, to detect and suppress [152]*152that fraud, .and to have the debtor’s fund distributed according to the priority of their respective liens, or rateably, as the case may be, equally as well as they may now, ™ ordinary practice, unite in one bill against the legal representatives of the debtor.

[151]*151judgment^c-te-1^.*°r.sn cnTbrn against their common debt-0r; the object of th®¡^ same, for the court to enatiaw.^

[152]*152Lord Kenyon, who was a great master of equity practice, observed, that, generally speaking, a Court of equity would not take cognizance of distinct and separate claims of different persons in one suit, though standing in the same relative situation. He held, that where an estate had been contracted to be sold' in parcels, to many different persons, a bill could not be filed in the name of all of them, to compel a specific performance ; and the reason was, that each party’s case would be distinct, and would depend upon its own peculiar circumstances. There must be a distinct bill on each contract. (Rayner v. Julian, Dickens, 677. 1 East, 226, 227.) He admitted, there were excepted cases to this general rule, and mentioned that of creditors calling for an account of the estate of the deceased debtor; and there is nothing in the principle of his decision, to prevent another exception in a case like the present. It was agreed by the Chief Baron, in Ward v. The Duke of Northumberland, (2 Anst. 469.) that unconnected parties might be joined in one suit, where there was a common interest among them all, centering in the point in issue in the cause ; and, if I am not mistaken, it is the case in the present suit, as respects the plaintiffs. The gravamen of the bill is fraud, equally injurious to all the plaintiffs, and their interests all centre on that point.

But it is urged, that the bill is multifarious, in uniting all the defendants in one bill, upon totally distinct and unconnected matters.

There is a charge of fraud against the five defendants, who were trustees when the debts with the plaintiffs were contracted, and who are charged with an intent to defraud them. The fraud consists in confessing judgment to I?. [153]*153ton, and in causing the personal estate of the Genessee Company to be sold under it, and purchased in by two of these trustees5 and in confessing another judgment in favour of one of these trustees, and two other defendants, and in causing the real estate of the company to be sold under it, and purchased in by themselves.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Johns. Ch. 139, 1822 N.Y. LEXIS 169, 1822 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinkerhoff-v-brown-nychanct-1822.