Brown v. . Chubb

31 N.E. 1030, 135 N.Y. 174, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 828, 90 Sickels 174, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1605
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 31 N.E. 1030 (Brown v. . Chubb) 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
Brown v. . Chubb, 31 N.E. 1030, 135 N.Y. 174, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 828, 90 Sickels 174, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1605 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

*177 O’Brien, J.

The plaintiffs were judgment creditors of one Joseph H. Townsend, and brought this action to reach and appropriate to the payment of then* judgments certain real estate in Bergen street, in the city of Brooklyn, which was conveyed on December 1,1883, by one Beals to the defendant Ann E. Chubb, who is the daughter of the judgment debtor, who paid to Beals the consideration of the conveyance. It has been found that the judgment debtor procured this conveyance to be made to his daughter, in contemplation of insolvency, and with intent to defraud creditors, and that he furnished the consideration for the purpose of avoiding the payment of his just debts, but that the daughter and grantee of the property was free from all fraud in the transaction. The latter fact is a most significant one, and raises the only question which we think is open to us on this appeal. It has also been found that on January 26, 1884, one Horton recovered a judgment against Townsend for $6,117.83, which was docketed in Kings county on that day, and on the same day an execution was issued on this judgment, and subsequently returned unsatisfied; and that on March 13, 1884, Morton, for a valuable consideration, assigned the judgment to the defendant Mrs. Chubb. This judgment was recovered and execution issued thereon nearly a year before the recovery of the judgments, which the plaintiffs seek to enforce in this action. It appears, therefore, that the judgment debtor never had the title to the real estate in question, but that before the plaintiffs recovered any judgment, or were entitled to proceed against this real estate, the title had become vested in his daughter, who had also become clothed with all the rights of a judgment creditor of her father, without participation in any fraud. Neither the plaintiffs’ judgments nor that recovered by Morton ever became a lien on the real estate conveyed to ' Mrs. Chubb, in the sense that it could be sold upon execution. (Garfield v. Hatmaker, 15 N. Y. 475.) The remedy of Townsend’s creditors as to this land was in equity, under the provisions of the statute that the'title in such cases shall vest in the grantee named in the conveyance, subject to a resulting *178 trust in favor of the creditors of the person paying the com Sideration. (1 R. S. 728, §§ 51, 52.)

The trial court held that by virtue of the commencement of this action the plaintiffs acquired a lien upon the property and the rents thereof in the hands of Mrs. Chubb, and that the Same were equitable assets of the debtor. The judgment directed her to convey the property to a receiver, appointed by the court, and the receiver to sell the same and apply the proceeds to the payment of the liens thereon, in the order of their priority; that the defendant Mrs. Chubb account to and pay over to the receiver the rents received by her, to be applied to the same purpose. The judgment does not indicate very clearly what is meant by the priority of liens, but it necessarily postpones the Morton judgment, in the hands of the person who has the legal title to the property, till after the satisfaction of the plaintiff’s judgment, which, as we haye seen, are subsequent in point of time. The legal effect of the decision is made clearer by reference to certain requests made by the defendant Mrs. Chubb, as follows: 1. That if the real estate was subject to be applied to the payment of Townsend’s debts, then it should be first used for the payment of the Morton judgment. 2. That if the rents were subject to be so applied, they should first be used t© satisfy the same judgment.

The trial court refused to so hold, and counsel for the defendant, Mrs. Chubb, excepted.

The General Term affirmed the judgment with a modification to the effect that she should be credited, in the accounting, with such sums as she had paid since she went into possession of the property, for taxes, interest on incumbrances, repairs, and any other necessary expenses for the preservation and maintenance of the same.

The question is whether, according to the course and practice of equity, the title to this property can be transferred to a receiver in disregard of the rights of Mrs. Chubb as a creditor, for that is practically what the judgment does. The defendant holds the legal title subject to a resulting trust in favor of the creditors of her father. But she is herself one of them, *179 and the oldest in point of time. There is united in her the legal title to the property, and the ownership of the first of the judgments for the payment of which the statute declares the trust. She is both trustee and cestui que trust. Her position as a creditor is not recognized by the judgment in this case, for the receiver is directed, from the proceeds of the sale of the property, to pay to plaintiffs their costs of this action, then the entire amount of their claims with interest, and to deposit the balance, if any, with the county treasurer, subject to the order of the court. The principle at the bottom of this decision must be either that Mrs. Chubb, for some reason, is not entitled to share at all in the proceeds of the sale or that the plaintiffs, by reason of the commencement of this action, have acquired, in equity, a right to the proceeds, prior and superior to that of the person holding both the title to the property and the older judgment. The learned counsel for the plaintiffs on the argument concedes certain rights to the defendant which are not expressed in the finding or judgment under review. He' says that the innocence of the trustee personally of fraud simply avoids a disability as creditor to acquire a preference and enables her, as holder of the Morton judgment to enter the race on equal terms with other creditors, but that her innocence constitutes no affirmative merit for any purpose. This is a concession that, before this action was commenced, the Morton judgment occupied at least as favorable a position, with respect to the equitable assets represented by this property, as any other judgment. While admitting this he argues that these plaintiffs, by the exercise of that superior diligence in bringing this action, which is sometimes recognized in equity as a ground of preference, in the absence of other controlling circumstances, have acquired the prior right to the assets. We think that this contention cannot be sustained. The courts have apparently determined the priority of liens hi this class of cases in accordance with the rule that prevails in analogous cases where the title and conveyance of the property sought to be reached in the action lias proceeded directly from the fraudulent debtor himself. Wood v. Robin *180 son, 22 N. Y. 564; Murphey v. Briggs, 89 id. 452.) In the ease last cited the court, in explaining the judgment in Wood v. Róbmson, said: “ It appears that the plaintiff was a prior judgment creditor, cmd henee he had a prior equity which entitled him to a preference at the time of the conveyance to the wife of real estate paid for by the husband.” In the case of Ocean National Bank v. Olcott (46 N. Y. 12), a judgment creditor sought to reach equitable assets of the debtor of this character, and Church, Ch.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.E. 1030, 135 N.Y. 174, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 828, 90 Sickels 174, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-chubb-ny-1892.