Donnelly v. Shaw

7 Abb. N. Cas. 264
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Abb. N. Cas. 264 (Donnelly v. Shaw) 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
Donnelly v. Shaw, 7 Abb. N. Cas. 264 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1877).

Opinion

Van Vorst, J.

The power of the court to order a sequestration of the property of a husband, upon his neglect or refusal to give security for the allowance made to his wife in an action for a separation or limited divorce, or upon his default to provide such allowance, is conferred by statute. Upon such neglect, refusal or default, the court may sequester his personal estate and the rents and profits of his real estate, and may appoint a receiver thereof, and may cause such personal estate and the rents and profits of such real estate to be applied towards such allowance as to the court shall, from time to time, seem just and reasonable (2 R. S. 148, § 60). In the action brought by his wife against her husband, a defendant in this action, for a limited divorce for ill-treatment, a judgment was recovered decreeing a separation, and requiring him to pay her $7,000 a year, in semi-annual installments, for [266]*266her support and maintenance, and an additional sum of $1,600, and to give security therefor. Her husband has wholly neglected to give the security or provide for the allowance, and has absconded and gone beyond the jurisdiction of the court: Upon that fact appearing, the court has made the usual order of sequestration, and the plaintiff has been appointed sequestrator.

Before, the order of sequestration, but after the commencement of the action for a separation, the defendant, the husband, by deed executed and recorded, has conveyed away all his real estate, of large value, several hundred thousand dollars, and sold and disposed of his personal property. The conveyances of the real property were made to the daughters of the defendant, and the personal property was also conveyed to them and others. The conveyances were fraudulently made, and with the intent and purpose of preventing his wife from collecting or enforcing any order or judgment making provision for her support in her action against him. The daughters, when they received the conveyances and transfers of the property from the father, knew of his fraudulent purpose, and accepted the conveyances and transfer with the like fraudulent purpose and intent. The above facts appear by the complaint in the action. One of the daughters, who received conveyances and transfers of property, real and personal, is a defendant in this action, and a similar action is pending against another daughter and her father. When the sequestrator came to exercise the functions of his office, he found no real estate the rents and profits whereof belonged to the defendant, and no personal property to which he had legal title. This action is brought to impeach the goodness and honesty of the conveyances and disposition made by the husband of his property, real and personal. They are claimed to be fraudulent, and for the purposes of this [267]*267inquiry must be deemed to be of that character. The plaintiff demands that the conveyances and transfers of the property, real and personal, may be declared fraudulent and void as against the judgment recovered by the wife in her action against her husband, and as against the plaintiff, and that the property be held and adjudged to be subject to and held applicable to the payment of the judgment, and that the plaintiff as sequestrator be allowed to take possession of the real estate, and to collect and receive the rents and profits thereof, and also all of said personal property. An accounting is also demanded of the grantee and vendee of the real and personal estate, of the rents, profits and proceeds thereof. The rents and profits of the real estate follow the title. By the conveyance of the land to the daughter the father is divested of all legal and equitable claim to the same. There is no claim or pretense that anything was reserved to the grantor by the conveyances. By the order appointing him sequestrator, the plaintiff is not vested with nor is he entitled to a conveyance to himself of the real estate of the husband, the defendant. He is not entitled to receive the rents and profits through any supposed title in himself to the land. Bents and profits of real estate have been sequestered. It is very clear that the rents and profits intended to be reached are those the husband was entitled to receive. After his appointment, the sequestrator could collect such rents and profits, instead of the husband, and the husband’s tenants could, by order of the court, be obliged to attorn to the plaintiff. But having parted absolutely with his title to the land, the rights of the landlord, legal and equitable, to the rents was ended. The proceeding to sequester the rents and profits was not intended to disturb title to the land. However they may be impeached by others, the conveyances by the defendant to his daughter of the land was and is as between [268]*268them good and effectual to pass the title and carryover the rents as inseparable therefrom. Although fraudulently made, the conveyances could not be questioned at the suit of the father against his daughter (Story Eq. Jur. § 371). As against a creditor the conveyances may be fraudulent, and at his instance may be set asidé ; but until they are so set aside, the legal right of the grantee to the rents and profits is complete. Has the sequestrator, by virtue of his appointment, any right to maintain an action to annul these conveyances and place himself in an attitude legally to collect these rents ? He has been ordered by this court to bring an action to annul the conveyances. Does this order vest him with a right to maintain in his own name this action ? I think not.

But is the court to be baffled by the defendant, and its judgment rendered wholly inoperative by his contrivances to defeat it? Not at all.

Foster v. Townshend (2 Abb. New Cas. 29-44) in the court of appeals, decides “ that any proceeding to compel the application of the rents and profits, or in any way to compel the payment of the alimony from the property, must be had by the party in whose interest the sequestration was ordered.” And again, at page 46, it is said “ that when an adverse claim to the. rents and profits is asserted, the plaintiff in the action would have a remedy by an order for the examination of the claimant pro interesse suo, and such proceedings thereon as would lead to an adjudication of the rights of the parties.” Various authorities and cases are cited by the learned judge delivering the opinion of the court of appeals', sanctioning such a proceeding and practice. The learned chief justice of the court of common pleas examined the question of rights and duties of the person appointed by the court to make a sequestration effective, in the case of Foster v. Townshend, when it was in his court (2 Abb. New [269]*269Cas., 33). His opinion covers nearly every point involved. He says “in respect to the real estate the right extended only to possession, the legal title remaining in every respect as before.”

He does indeed well say “ that a fraudulent alienation of the profits can have no effect upon a sequestration,” but he afterwards adds, and cites authorities in support of his position, that “it appears now to be settled that the parties for whose benefit the sequestration has been ordered may require the party claiming an adverse right or title to come in and show cause why he should not be examined pro inter esse smo ” (Empringham v. Short, 3 Hare, 461). I know of no rule which limits proceedings of this nature in the original action to rights acquired by others after the sequestration was ordered.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Abb. N. Cas. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donnelly-v-shaw-nysupct-1877.