Campbell v. Erie Railway Co.

46 Barb. 540, 1866 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 51
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 46 Barb. 540 (Campbell v. Erie Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. Erie Railway Co., 46 Barb. 540, 1866 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 51 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1866).

Opinions

John'son, J.

• The action was brought by the plaintiff to recover the price and value of a quantity of timber and lumber sold and delivered by him to the defendant. The only question in the case is whether the matters offered in evidence on the part of the defendant were material, and constituted any valid defense to the. action. The offer was, in substance, to prove that the defendant had paid the amount to the sheriff to apply in satisfaction of an execution in his hands, issued upon a judgment in favor of Field & Havens, against Stevens & White, upon being indemnified by Field & Havens against the claims of the plaintiff. There is no pretense that the defendant did not purchase the property of the plaintiff, nor that it did not acquire a perfect undisputed title thereto as against all the world; nor that the pjlaintiff did not sell in his own right, upon the defendant’s [548]*548request and promise to pay him, and not as the agent of Stevens & White. Of course paying and satifying an execution in favor of third persons against strangers to the bargain and sale of the timber could not, prima facie, satisfy the plaintiff’s demand against the defendant. But the defendant further offered to prove that in the action of Field & Havens against Stevens & White, an attachment was issued and a copy thereof served upon the defendant by the sheriff, who claimed to have attached the debt due from the defendant to the plaintiff in the defendant’s hands. And it was further proposed to prove that the plaintiff bought the property sold to th.e defendant, of Stevens .& White, and that the transaction between them was entered into for the purpose of defrauding the creditors of Stevens & White, and that Field & Havens were then- creditors at the time the plaintiff purchased. This was all excluded, upon the ground, amongst others, that the defendant had no standing in court which would enable it to litigate the question of fraud in the sale from Stevens & White to the plaintiff, being no creditor of the plaintiff’s vendors, and standing in no legal relations either with them,. or their creditors Field & Havens, but simply a debtor of the plaintiff upon a bargain and sale which no person could assail as in any respect invalid.

It must be admitted, for the purpose of determining this question, that the purchase by the plaintiff was in fact fraudulent and void as respects the creditors of Stevens & White. But the defendant was not their creditor; nor did it become, in' any sense, by its purchase of the plaintiff, the debtor of Field & Havens, legally or equitably. It comes here as a simple volunteer, to litigate a question in which it has, and can have no possible interest, having first taken security against the consequences of its free encounter. The defendant has no assignment, .even, of Field & Haven’s judgment, and nothing to base their claim to a defense upon, other than the mere voluntary payment of the debt to the sheriff, which Stevens & White owed to Field & Havens.

[549]*549It is impossible to maintain, successfully, the position assumed by the defendant, that by the service of the attachment, Field & Havens acquired any lien upon, or interest in, this demand due from the defendant to the plaintiff. Their action was an action at law, and the attachment could only be levied upon or attached- to property or things in action which belonged to the defendant in that action. Such are the terms of the warrant of attachment. By it the sheriff is required “ to attach and safely keep all the property of such defendant within his county, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to satisfy the plaintiff's demand,” &c. (Code, § 231.) This debt was in no sense the property of the defendant in that action, legally or equitably. The purchase by the plaintiff having been void as to the creditors of his vendor, the property might, I suppose, have been attached while it remained in his hands, and enough of it sold upon the execution to have satisfied the judgment, but the residue, had any remained, the sheriff would have been bound to restore to the plaintiff. (Waterbury v. Westervelt, 9 N. Y. Rep. 598.)

' The reason of this is that the statute only makes the sale void, in such a case, as to the creditors of the vendor, leaving it perfectly valid and effectual as between the parties. The sale being void as to creditors, the property may be seized by process of attachment or execution in a legal action in the hands of the fraudulent purchasers) at the suit of such creditors, the same as though no sale had ever been made. The rule is different in regard to' real estate, especially where the purchase money is furnished by the debtor and the title taken in the name of another. There a creditor can only proceed in an equitable action after having exhausted his remedy at law. 'He can not, as in the case of a fraudulent transfer of personal property, seize and sell the land upon execution, or attach it in a legal action. (McCartney v. Bostwick, 31 Barb. 390. Garfield v. Hatmaker, 15 N. Y. Rep. 475. Wood v. Robinson, 22 id. 564.) The case of Wait v. Day, [550]*550(4 Denio, 489,) which held that a judgment attached as á lien, and the land might be sold on execution in favor of creditors in the hands of the fraudulent grantee, was distinctly overruled by the Court of Appeals, in Garfield v. Hatmaker, (supra.) In the latter case Comstock, J. says “ There is no interest, legal or equitable, in the debtor, and therefore nothing to which a judgment and execution can attach; but instead of this, a pure trust in favor of the creditor, which the statute impresses upon the legal estate in the hands of the grantee in the conveyance, and which can be enforced in equity only.”

In the case before us, though the plaintiff's purchase was void as to the creditors of his vendors, and the property might have been seized and sold upon execution in their favor while in that condition, the sale by the plaintiff to the defendant was perfectly valid, and gave the defendant a clear title to the p>rop>erty.- 'There was no offer to show, nor any pretense, that the defendant had any notice of the fraud which rendered void the title of the plaintiff in respect to the creditors of his vendee. Their title was therefore unimpeachable. (2 B. 8. 137, § 5.) Stevens & White had then no interest in the property transferred, and no interest whatever in the transaction, or in the demand created by the transfer and sale, legal or equitable, and there was nothing in such demand to which, in an action at law, the claims of the creditors of Stevens & White, or any process or judgment in such action, could possibly attach. Here had been a valid sale by a fraudulent purchaser, and there was no right, legal or equitable, remaining in the original owner and debtor, which his creditors could attach. Because, if it be granted that an attachment, as a provisional remedy in an action at law, may take and attach to things which, could not be seized and sold by virtue of an execution, still it must be something which belongs to the defendant in the action. It must be “the property of such defendant.” If the thing attempted to be attached and held be something in which the - debtor [551]

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Bluebook (online)
46 Barb. 540, 1866 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-erie-railway-co-nysupct-1866.