Dawley v. Brown

65 Barb. 107, 1873 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 38
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 65 Barb. 107 (Dawley v. Brown) 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
Dawley v. Brown, 65 Barb. 107, 1873 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 38 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1873).

Opinion

By the Court, Mtjllin, P. J.

The court of chancery in England has, by decree, directed the sale of land by its masters, and vested title in the purchaser by the master’s deed. (See cases cited by Mr. Noyes in the case of The Chautauqua Co. Bank v. White, 2 Seld. 236; Edmeston v. Lyde, 1 Paige, 637; The Bank of U. S. v. Hauseman, 6 Peters, 536.) These were actions by creditors, to set aside fraudulent conveyances by them debtors, and for a sale of the land fraudulently conveyed ; and the court held the conveyances fraudulent, and directed sales and conveyances by the master. It does not appear by the cases that there was any direction for the debtors to unite in the deeds.

It is probable that such.a provision was contained in the decree ; as the chancellor, in Jackson v. Edwards, (7 Paige, 404,) says the ordinary mode in which courts of equity transfer the legal title, upon sale under a decree, is by operating on the parties themselves, and compelling them to join in the conveyance to the pur[119]*119chaser, so as to transfer their legal titles in connection with the equitable interest of any of the other parties ; which equitable interest would be bound by the decree, by estoppel, and would pass by the master’s deed without any formal conveyance by the parties having an equitable interest only. * * *

Independent of any statutory provisions, the court was not wanting in power to make a decree which would protect the purchaser at the master’s sale, when all persons having a legal or equitable title to the land, that was capable of being released or transferred to the purchaser, were made parties, and when they were within the jurisdiction of the court, so that its process could be made effectual against them, although the parties having the legal title or interest in the lands were infants, or femes covert. He proceeds to say, that in the case of married women, the court would compel them to unite with their husbands in transferring the title, by levying a fine, or in some other way by which the same end could be attained, and in case of infants by directing them to convey when they came o'f age, and when necessary, by injunction, and by not permitting the infant, on coming of age, to question the purchaser’s title.

It cannot be supposed that the chancellor, in 7 Paige, ascertained for the first time the extent of the power of his court to sell and convey lands, and we must assume that the sales ordered in the cases in 1 and 6 Paige were directed to be made in conformity to the views contained in 7 Paige; and if so, those cases are not introductory of a new rule, but applications of the weE settled rules which govern courts of equity in selling real estate.

If these are cases in which a court of equity may decree a sale and conveyance by a master, of land, without requiring the owner of the legal estate to unite in the conveyance to the purchaser, or to convey to a receiver, the case of a sale-of land fraudulently conveyed by a judgment debtor, and which has been set aside by rea[120]*120son of the fraud, is not one of them. (The Chautauqua Co. Bank v. White, 2 Seld. 236. Same v. Risley, 19 N. Y. 369. Walker v. White, 36 Barb. 592.)

It was held in these cases, and in others which might he cited, that a creditor who has proceeded to judgment against his debtor, and who finds that the debtor, before judgment, has made a fraudulent conveyance of his land, has three modes in which to obtain satisfaction of-his judgment out of said land, viz:

First. To obtain a judgment of a court of equity declaring the conveyance fraudulent, and setting it aside, and then proceeding and selling the land by virtue of his first judgment.

Second. By obtaining in the equitable action, in addition to the provision in the judgment, that the convey-' anee of the debtor was void, a further provision that a referee be appointed, with authority to sell at public auction, and that he convey, and that the debtor unite in such conveyance; or that a receiver be appointed, and that the debtor assign his interest in the land to him, and that he sell and convey.

Third. He may sell the land on his execution, and the purchaser may then set up the fraud in the conveyance of the debtor, and if established, obtain a judgment entitling him to the possession of the land.

In these cases, the title is not transferred to the purchaser by the conveyance of the master, referee or receiver, but by the conveyance of the owner of the legal estate, either directly to the purchaser or to the receiver, under the order of the court.

The conveyance by the master is necessary to convey the interest of any parties to the action who may have equitable interests in the land which is the subject of the action. (Jackson v. Edwards, supra. Walker v. White, 36 Barb. 592.)

I have referred to some of the cases in which it would seem that the court of chancery had held a different [121]*121doctrine, and I have given what seemed to me the explanation why those cases appeared to upset the power of a court of equity to transfer the title to real estate by virtue of its own inherent power, and not by virtue of any conveyance of the party whose land is sold.

There are several other cases, which it may be proper to notice, which seem to proceed upon the same view of the law as the appellant’s counsel supposes were intended to be put forward in 1 and 6 Paige, (supra.)

In Sands v. Codwise, (4 John. 536,) the bill was.filed by creditors at large to set aside fraudulent conveyances, and for a sale of the land and satisfaction of the judgment out of the proceeds. The chancellor held the conveyance fraudulent, and ordered the debtors to ' convey to the master, and the master to sell. The court of errors reversed so much of the decree as directed a sale by the master, so that the decree as finally entered, left the creditors to proceed on his execution.

This ■ is in conformity to the views of the Court of Appeals in 2 Selden and 19 N. Y. (supra,) and is no authority in support of the proposition that the court has power to convey, proprio vigore.

In Reade v. Livingston, (3 John. Ch. 481,) the decree directed the fraudulent debtor to unite in the deed to the purchaser.

In Scouton v. Bender, (3 How. Pr. 185,) the plaintiff having recovered judgment for a debt against the defendant, filed a creditor’s bill, charging, among other things, that a conveyance by the debtor of real estate was fraudulent, praying that it be set aside, the land sold, and the judgment be paid out of the proceeds. The court adjudged the conveyance by the debtor fraud-lent, ordered the debtor to assign to the receiver, and the receiver was ordered to sell and appropriate the proceeds among the parties entitled. In that case there was no deed of the land ; if it passed to the receiver at all it was by virtue of the ordinary assignment of [122]*122the real and personal property of the debtor. It was held that the real estate passed under the assignment, and the receiver could convey the legal title to the purchaser at his sale.

The case of The Chautauqua Co. Bank v. White,

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Related

Federal Reserve Bank v. Weeks
171 Misc. 404 (New York Supreme Court, 1939)
Dawley v. Brown
4 N.Y. St. Rep. 406 (New York Supreme Court, 1887)
Wing v. Disse
22 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 190 (New York Supreme Court, 1878)
Harrington v. Libby
6 Daly 259 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1875)

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65 Barb. 107, 1873 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawley-v-brown-nysupct-1873.