Dunlap v. Hawkins

14 N.Y. 342
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 22, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 14 N.Y. 342 (Dunlap v. Hawkins) 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
Dunlap v. Hawkins, 14 N.Y. 342 (N.Y. 1874).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The appeal is from an order of the Supreme Court reversing a judgment on the report of a referee, and granting a new trial on questions of fact as well as law, so that the whole case is before us for review. (Code, § 268.) The premises sought to be charged with the payment of the judgment against Elijah W. Hawkins, the husband of the defendant, were conveyed to the defendant upon a consideration'paid b)r the husband, and at his request. There was no evidence of fraud, or fraudulent intent to impeach the conveyance, other than the fact that it was a voluntary conveyveyance by the judgment debtor, no valuable consideration being paid therefor by the defendant. The referee has not found an actual fraudulent intent upon the part of the judgment debtor, or that the title to the premises was conveyed to the defendant, with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, and the statute declares that no conveyance or charge shall be adjudged fraudulent as against creditors or purchasers solely on the ground that it was not founded on a valuable consideration. (2 R. S., 137, § 4.) The plaintiff’s claim rests exclusively upon the statute of “ uses and trusts ” (1 R. S., 728, §§ 51, 52), which enacts that when a grant for a valuable consideration shall be made to one person and the consideration therefor shall be paid by another, no trust shall result in favor of the person by whom such payment shall be made, but, the title shall vest in the alienee named in the con veyance subject only to the provision that every such conveyance shall be presumed fraudulent as against the creditors at the time of the person paying the consideration, and when a fraudulent intent is not disproved a trust shall result in favor of such creditors to the extent that may be necessary to satisfy their just demands. The statute makes the fact that the consideration is paid by one for a grant to another, without other evidence, presumptive proof of fraud, but does not make [346]*346it conclusive and casts the burden upon the grantee to disprove afraudulent intent in the defence of his title. It goes farther than the statute of frauds (2 R. S., supra), for it allows a voluntary conveyance to be impeached solely for the want of a valuable consideration moving from the grantee,- but it does not incapacitate one indebted at the time from making provision for wife or children by a conveyance from a third person upon a consideration paid by him which is but a voluntary conveyance from himself by indenture. The question in a case like the present, under the statute, is not one of fraud in-law in which the inference founded on a voluntary disposition of property while indebted would not depend on the particular circumstance, or greater or less degree of pecuniary embarrassment of the party, but is made by the statute one of fact in which the pecuniary circumstances of the party making, the grant, or as here procuring it to be made, are matters for consideration. It becomes a question of actual fraud; The statute in substance enacts the rule which appears to have the sanction of the greater weight of authority, although it cannot be denied a more stringent rule, and one that would make the fact of indebtedness at the time of a voluntary conveyance of property by the debtor conclusive - evidence of fraud, as against creditors existing at the time, has the sanction of very learned judges. Chancellor Kent seems to have deemed this the just rule as deducible from the cases, and he would only permit the- presumption of fraud to be repelled with respect to the claims of subsequent creditors. (Reade v. Livingston, 3 J. Ch., 481.) But this rule was never adopted by the Supreme Court of this State, and the weight of authority, both here and in England, is in favor of the more liberal rule which regards a present indebtedness' at the most but prima facie evidence of fraud in a voluntary conveyance to a wife or child. (Townsend v. Westacott, 2 Beav., 340; Hindes’ Lessee v. Longworth, 11 Wheat., 199, per Spencer, J.; Verplanck v. Sterry, 12 J. R., 536, per Woodworth, J.; Jackson v. Town, 4 Cow., 599; Gale v. Williamson, 8 M. & W., 405.) The doctrine seems to be [347]*347that a creditor cannot impeach a conveyance founded on natural love and affection, free from the imputation of fraud, and when the grantor had, independent of the property granted, an ample fund to satisfy his creditors. By proving the pecuniary circumstances and condition of the grantor, or him who pays for and procures a grant from others, his business and its risks and contingencies, his liabilities and obligations, absolute and contingent, and his resources and means of meeting and solving his obligations, and showing that he was neither insolvent nor contemplating insolvency, and that an inability to meet his obligations was not and could not reasonably be supposed to have been in the mind of the party, is the only way in which the presumption of fraud, arising from the fact that the conveyance is without a valuable consideration, can be repelled and overcome, except as the party making or procuring the grant may, if alive, testify to the absence of all intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors.

In Van Wyck v. Seward (6 Paige, 62), it was held that the mere fact of an existing indebtedness does not render a voluntary conveyance absolutely fraudulent or void in law, as against creditors whose debts were previously contracted, if there was no intention on the part of the grantor to delay or defraud his creditors, and that when a parent makes an advancement to his child, and honestly and fairly retains in his hands sufficient property to pay all his debts, such child will not be bound to refund the advancement for the benefit of the creditors, although it should afterward happen that the parent does not pay his debts which existed at the time of making the advancement. So in Jackson v. Post (15 Wend., 588), a voluntary conveyance was held not void as against creditors, on the ground that the grantor was, at the time of the conveyance, indebted, when it was shown that the residue of the real estate of the grantor was amply sufficient to pay his debts. The same principle is recognized in Phillips v. Wooster (36 N. Y., 412) and Bank of United States v. Housman (6 Paige, 526), and expressly reaffirmed in Fox v. Moyer. (54 N. Y., 125). If there is evidence that a fraudulent use [348]*348was intended to be made, or was made, of the grant, it would be held void as against creditors or subsequent purchasers. (Savage v. Murphy, 34 N. Y., 508.) The judgment debtor was not, at the time of the grant to the defendant, his wife, and has not been at any time since engaged in any business involving risks and hazards of an extraordinary character, and his ability to 'pay his debts and meet his engagements has not depended upon the fluctuation of prices or of the markets or the result of speculations, and he has not, so far as the record discloses, had any occasion for credit in his own affairs, and has not obtained or had credit on the faith of the ownership of the property in question. At the time of the grant, he owed no debts of his own, but was liable as second indorser upon the promissory notes of a third person, to an amount not exceeding $4,000. One of the notes for $3,000, for which he was then contingently liable as indorser, was continued by renewal, as is claimed, and constituted the liability for which the judgment now owned by the plaintiff, and which is the foundation of this action, was recovered.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.Y. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlap-v-hawkins-ny-1874.