De Witt v. Van Sickle

29 N.J. Eq. 209
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 29 N.J. Eq. 209 (De Witt v. Van Sickle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Witt v. Van Sickle, 29 N.J. Eq. 209 (N.J. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

The Vice-Chancellor.

The transactions sought to be invalidated in this case stand, in all material respects, between the original parties, identical with those denounced as fraudulent in Owen v. Arvis, 2 Dutch. 22, and that case must rule this. The doctrines of that case most pertinent to this were emphasized by the court of errors and appeals, in National Bank of the Metropolis v. Sprague, 6 C. E. Gr. 530, and have, therefore, in this forum, the force of unquestionable law.

According to the rule laid down in the case last mentioned, it cannot be disputed that William Van Sickle, at the time he executed the deeds assailed here, was insolvent. The proofs render it perfectly clear he was unable at that time to meet his pecuniary engagements, and that if his affairs had then been wound up he could not have paid his debts.

I am also satisfied that the deeds and mortgages interchanged between the original parties were fraudulent, in fact, against the creditors. The real character of the transaction is seen, conspicuously, in the $2,20Q mortgage, whereby 'a debtor, unquestionably insolvent, attempted to appropriate that amount of his property to the benefit of his wife [212]*212and himself, during their several lives, in defiance of the rights of his creditors.

It is obvious, I think, the mortgagees named in the Cortright mortgage can lay no claim to the character of bona fide mortgagees under the fifteenth section (the sixth, before the revision,) of the statute of frauds {Bev. p. 447). There is enough in the time and circumstances attending its execution and registry to warrant the belief that its execution was a more desperate device against creditors than the original scheme. That mortgage cannot be permitted to stand against creditors.

The only question of difficulty in the case relates to the rights of the defendant Garrison. He claims t'o be the assignee for value, and without notice of the $2,000 mortgage made by the fraudulent grantee to the fraudulent grantor as security for part of the purchase-money. While I think it is debatable whether the assignee of a mortgage, made by a fraudulent grantee to a fraudulent grantor, as a step in a scheme to defraud creditors, can acquire the precise rights and immunities conferred by the statute on a bona fide mortgagee, still, it must be admitted, as an undoubted principle of equity jurisprudence, that though an assignee of a mortgage takes it subject to all the defences which would exist against it if it had remained in the hands of the original mortgagee, yet, if he takes it innocently and for value, he acquires a title free from all latent, equities existing in favor of third persons. Woodruff v. Depue, 1 McCart. 168; Shannon v. Marselis, Sax. 414; Cornish v. Bryan, 2 Stock. 146; Wilson v. Hill, 2 Beas. 143. It must, therefore, be conceded that Mr. Garrison could, by the purchase of this mortgage, acquire rights entitled to protection, even against the creditors intended to be defrauded by its execution. This brings us to the question, was he a purchaser for value ? He admits he paid the whole of the purchase-money, except $102.62, with the notes of the assignor. The surrender of a pre-existing debt is not sufficient to give him the character he claims. Mingus v. Condit, 8 C. E. Gr. 313; Pancoast v. Duval, 11 C. E. Gr. [213]*213445. The reason is, by refusing to give the security any greater virtue in his hands than it had in the hands of the original mortgagee, he is put in no worse condition than he was before he obtained it; in the language of some of the judges, he is not hurt. The mortgage in the hands of the fraudulent grantor was unquestionably void against creditors. To give it any greater force' against creditors in the hands of his assignee, it must be shown to have acquired a new virtue or equity, and this can only be imparted to it by the actual payment of money, the surrender of a valuable right, or the assumption of an irrevocable obligation. 2 Lead. Cas. in Lq. (4 Am. ed.) 82. Such new equity can only arise when a third person has, by an innocent purchase of the security for value, placed himself in a position from which it is impossible to extricate him without loss; but if, by declaring the paper still infected with its original infirmity, he is left just where he was when he took it, he suffers no hurt, and the court is bound to declare it invalid. Creditors may then have justice without injustice to him. Equity will give validity to that which would otherwise be invalid only when it is clearly necessary to prevent loss to an innocent person. A debtor who attempts to discharge his debt by passing to his creditor a security which he has created as part of the means to defraud his creditors, does not discharge it. The debt due to Mr. Garrison in this case has not been discharged.

■ I confess I am unable to appreciate the argument intended to show that the application of the rule just'adverted to is limited to titles and securities executed by the fraudulent grantee, but has no application to those obtained from the fraudulent grantor. It is true, Chancellor Kent, in construing a similar statutory provision, drew a distinction between the rights acquired by a purchaser from the fraudulent grantor and those acquired by a purchaser from the fraudulent grantee, holding that a purchaser from the former was entitled to the protection of the statute, while a purchaser from the latter was not. Roberts v. Anderson, 3 Johns. [214]*214Ch. 371. But on appeal, this view was repudiated (18 Johns. 515), it being held by the court of errors and appeals that a purchaser from either was within the protection of the statute. And that is the .rule in force in this state. Phelps v. Morrison, 10 C. E. Gr. 538. The limitation contended for would render the rule nugatory as a principle of justice, and so shorten the arm of the law that it would be impossible to do justice in many cases.

The great purpose of the rule is to give the courts power to reclaim, for the benefit of creditors, all the property of a debtor aliened in fraud of their rights, regardless of who may happen to hold it, when reclamation can be effected without injustice or injury to an innocent person. Whether the avails of the fraud are held by the vendees of the fraudulent grantee or the fraudulent grantor, is a matter of no significance whatever. Creditors have a right to have them sequestered for their benefit, no matter who holds them, unless their right is encountered by a right founded in a superior equity. Paying for them by the mere surrender of a debt due by one of the fraud-doers, does not give such right. To divest the right of a, purchaser who pays in this mode, merely puts him back where he was before his purchase, His claim remains intact against his debtor. He is not harmed, but simply remitted to his original position. And it seems he will be sent back there, even if he is put in a position less fortunate than that he occupied originally. Justice Potts, in Owen v. Arvis, declared, and his declaration is quoted approvingly by the justice who pronounced the judgment of the court of errors and appeals in National Bank of the Metropolis v. Sprague: “ That the debtor subsequently, in pursuance, as he says, of his intention at the time of the conveyance, assigned the mortgage to a portion of his creditors, does not purge the fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.J. Eq. 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-witt-v-van-sickle-njch-1878.