Bulger v. . Rosa

24 N.E. 853, 119 N.Y. 459, 29 N.Y. St. Rep. 678, 74 Sickels 459, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1107
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 25, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 24 N.E. 853 (Bulger v. . Rosa) 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
Bulger v. . Rosa, 24 N.E. 853, 119 N.Y. 459, 29 N.Y. St. Rep. 678, 74 Sickels 459, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1107 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The trial judge directed a verdict for the defendant, and the General Term has granted a new trial on the ground that the question of fraud in the sale from John Bulger to the plaintiff, of the goods, personal property and real estate, which formerly belonged to the firm of Bulger & Sherlock, should have been submitted to the jury. The *464 general rule is well settled, that in a jury case the direction of a verdict is only justified where the evidence conclusively establishes the right of the party in whose favor the direction is given. The test of the right to direct a verdict is whether the court would be bound to set a verdict aside as against evidence, if rendered against the party in whose favor it was directed. If this would be the duty of the court, the judge need not await the verdict before acting, but in advance may rule the question as one of law. But as verdicts cannot be found on mere conjecture, neither will a shadow or possibility, nor a mere scintilla stand in the way of ruling the case in favor of the party who shows a substantial right, of which there is no substantial contradiction. (Dwight v. Germania Life Ins. Co., 103 N. Y. 341; Bagley v. Bowe, 105 id. 171.) The statute relating to fraudulent transfers and conveyances, which declares that the question of fraudulent intent arising thereunder shall be deemed a question of fact and not of law (2 R. S. 137, § 4), does not, as now interpreted, interfere with the prerogative of the court to direct a verdict, provided the fraudulent intent is conclusively established on the face of the instrument of transfer, or by the uncontradicted verbal evidence. Edgell v. Harrt, 9 N. Y. 213; Ford v. Williams, 24 id. 359.) The defendant’s counsel has presented a very learned and able argument in support of the view that the uncontradicted evidence established that the transactions resulting in the transfer to the plaintiff of the property of the firm of Bulger & Sherlock were fraudulent as against the firm creditors. The point here is, should this question have been submitted to the jury? The alleged fraud consists, as is claimed, in a scheme between the plaintiff and Bulger and Sherlock, by which Sherlock was to transfer his interest in the firm assets to his copartner John Bulger, so as to enable the latter to transfer them to the plaintiff in payment of debts held by the latter against the firm and also against John Bulger individually. It is undisputed that when these transactions took place-both the firm and the individual members were insolvent, and that this was known to all the parties.

*465 There can be no controversy as to the rule of law governing the relations between an insolvent firm and its creditors, and their mutual rights in respect of the firm property-The partnership as such has its own property and its .own creditors, as distinct from the individual property of its members and their individual creditors. The firm creditors are preferentially entitled to be paid out of the firm assets. Whatever may be the true foundation of the equity, it is now an undisputed element in the security of the firm creditors. The insolvent firm cannot apply the firm assets in payment of the individual debts of the partners, nor can the equity of the firm creditors be defeated by an attempted conversion of the assets of the firm into the individual assets of one of the partners through a transfer by one partner of his interest therein to the other. In either of the cases supposed, they would remain, as to the firm creditors, firm assets, which could be followed and taken on execution by the firm creditors, until they had come to the hands of a bona fide purchaser, and where an individual creditor of one of the members of an insolvent firm, knowing of such insolvency, takes a transfer of firm property in payment of his individual debt, his act is not merely a violation of an equitable right of the firm creditors, but it constitutes a fraud under the statute of Elizabeth. The law regards it as a voluntary transfer made to hinder, delay and defraud the firm creditors, and as to them is void. These general principles are established by many cases, but it is sufficient to refer to a few of them. ( Wilson v. Robertson, 21 N. Y. 581; Menagh v. Whitwell, 52 id. 146; Ex parte Mayon, 4 DeG., J. & S. 664.)

The case shows that Sherlock, one of the firm of Bulger & Sherlock, on the 15tli day of June, 1883, by instruments in writing, assigned, transferred and conveyed to his copartner, John Bulger, all of the firm assets, including the stock in the grocery, book accounts, horse, wagon and harness, and the lot and the store thereon, in which the firm business was conducted, and that on the next day (June sixteenth), John Bulger transferred and assigned the same property to the plaintiff, *466 his brother. The plaintiff, at the time of the transfer to him, held debts against the firm to at least the amount of $1,750, and the validity of the debt is not disputed. ' He also held, as assignee of his mother, a debt against John Bulger, individually, of about $1,100. The value of the firm property transferred by Sherlock to John Bulger, and by the latter ■to the plaintiff, is the subject of some conflict and uncertainty in the evidence. There is evidence from which the jury would, we think, have been authorized to find that the value, above incumbrances, did not exceed the firm debt owing to' the plaintiff. There was evidence given on the part of the defendant which would make the value considerably more. The bill of sale of the personal property from Sherlock to John Bulger states that it is “subject to the payment in full of all claims of 'every name and nature now in existence against said firm of Sherlock & Bulger, which said claims and demands the said John Bulger does hereby agree and assume to pay.” The bill of sale from John Bulger to the plaintiff was not juoduced, it having been burned in the burning of the store about two years after the transaction, with other papers of John Bulger. The plaintiff was' examined as to the consideration of the transfer to him by John Bulger of the firm property, and lie testified in substance that it was the cancellation of his debt against the firm and the surrender of John Bulger’s individual notes of $1,100, given to his mother. •

It is insisted that the transfer by Sherlock to John Bulger of his interest in the firm property, was itself fraudulent, first, because it was an attempt to change the character of the property from firm property to the individual property of John Bulger; and, second, because it was a part of the scheme to pay John Bulger’s individual debt to the plaintiff out of the firm assets.- Both of these claims may perhaps be true, but the alleged fraudulent intent on the part of Sherlock is not an inference of law from the evidence, although a jury might be justified in finding the fact. The bill of sale executed by Sherlock does not show on its face an intent to divert the property *467 from the firm creditors. The transfer is expressly made sub-, ject to the firm debts, thereby preserving, instead of defeating the rights of the firm creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.E. 853, 119 N.Y. 459, 29 N.Y. St. Rep. 678, 74 Sickels 459, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bulger-v-rosa-ny-1890.