First National Bank v. . Shuler

47 N.E. 262, 153 N.Y. 163, 7 E.H. Smith 163, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 690
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 47 N.E. 262 (First National Bank v. . Shuler) 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
First National Bank v. . Shuler, 47 N.E. 262, 153 N.Y. 163, 7 E.H. Smith 163, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 690 (N.Y. 1897).

Opinion

Andrews, Oh. J.

We think the proceedings and judgment in this case are fatally defective for the omission of the plaintiff to bring in and make the defendant Elizabeth N. Shuler a party defendant in the action, in her capacity as executrix of the original defendant, Isaac C. Shuler. The action was in *166 the nature of a creditor’s bill, instituted by the plaintiff as a judgment creditor of Isaac G. Shuler before his death, and after the issuing and return of an execution against his property unsatisfied, to set aside a general assignment for the benefit of creditors, made by the judgment debtor to one Waldron on the 19th day of November, 1889, and also to set aside certain transfers of property made by him to the defendant Elizabeth N. Shuler prior to the making of his general .assignment, on the ground that such assignment and transfers were in fraud of his creditors. The debtor, Isaac C. Shuler, Waldron, his general assignee, and Elizabeth N. Shuler and others were joined as defendants in the action. The defendants named answered the complaint, and in their answers denied the alleged fraud. After issue joined, the defendant Isaac 0. Shuler died. Subsequently the plaintiff upon an affidavit stating the death of Isaac 0. Shuler, that he left a will appointing the defendant Elizabeth N. Shuler his executrix, and making her his sole legatee and devisee, that the will had been duly proved and that the executrix had qualified, applied to the court for an order permitting the plaintiff to serve a supplemental complaint alleging the facts stated in the affidavit. Notice of the application was given to the surviving defendants and the motion was granted, the defendant Elizabeth N. Shuler not appearing thereon. The supplemental complaint was served on the defendants. It simply averred the death of Isaac C. Shuler; the making of the will; the appointment of the defendant Elizabeth N. Shuler as executrix; that she was the sole legatee and devisee under the will, its proof and her assumption of the office of executrix. In other respects it left the averments of the original complaint unchanged, as also the demand for relief.

No answer was made to the supplemental complaint and the action went to trial before a referee upon the issues originally framed. There was no allusion in the papers on which the motion for leave to serve a supplemental complaint was made, of an intention to make the executrix a party to the action. No order was made continuing the action against her *167 as executrix or directing that she he i-nade a party in her representative character. Not only was there no order nlaking the executrix a party, hut she was not named as a party in the process, pleadings or judgment. No relief was demanded against her as executrix, and so far as appears her rights as executrix or the rights of the general creditors of the estate were not put in issue or actually litigated on the trial.

The referee found and decided that the general assignment executed by Isaac C. Shuler to Waldron, and certain transfers made by him to his wife, embracing chattels and securities, were fraudulent and void as against the plaintiff, and directed that a receiver he appointed, and a referee to take the account of the property and assets fraudulently assigned or transferred, and that the defendants Waldron and Elizabeth N. Shuler account for and transfer to the receiver to he appointed the property in their hands and the proceeds of the property assigned and transferred to them, and that the same be applied by the receiver to the payment of the plaintiff’s judgment. An interlocutory judgment was subsequently entered in conformity with the decision of the referee, and a receiver appointed, and also a referee to take the accounts. The referee stated the accounts, and, on the coming in of his report, application was made in behalf of the plaintiff for final judgment in the action, which was directed. On the application for final judgment a motion was made in behalf of the defendant Elizabeth N. Shuler, individually and as executrix (of which previous notice had been given), to modify the interlocutory judgment by striking out the provision therein appointing a receiver, and the direction that the defendants account for and transfer to him the assigned property and its proceeds, and by inserting a direction that the receiver appointed thereby transfer and deliver to Elizabeth N. Shuler, as executrix, all money or other property in his possession as receiver which had come to his hands under the terms of the interlocutory judgment. The motion also included, as part of the relief demanded, that Elizabeth N. Shuler, as executrix, be made a party defendant in the action. The motion was *168 wholly denied, and the final judgment was thereupon entered. The defendant Elizabeth N. Shuler filed exceptions to the report of the original referee, and, among other things, excepted to the direction for the appointment of a receiver, and that the defendants account for and transfer to him the property received by them, or either of them, under the assignment and transfer which had been adjudged fraudulent, to be applied in satisfaction of plaintiff's judgment. These facts sufficiently present the question upon which our judgment proceeds.

Isaac 0. Shuler was living when the action was commenced, and was made a defendant. The action, as has been stated, was in part to set aside his general assignment for the benefit of creditors, made by Isaac 0. Shuler to the defendant Waldron. For the purpose of this relief, Isaac 0. Shuler, the assignor, was an indispensable party. By the assignment, he created a trust to dispose of his property in the way and for the purposes disclosed in the instrument. He divested himself by the assignment of the legal title to the assigned property, and it became vested in the assignee as trustee. But, as between himself and the assignee, he had a right to insist that the assignee should perform the trust and devote the assigned property to the payment of his debts, as prescribed in the assignment. The plaintiff brought its action in hostility to the assignment, and sought to annul and defeat it for alleged fraud. .The assignor was entitled to insist upon its validity, and to be heard before the property should be taken by the judgment of the court from the possession of his assignee and devoted to the payment of the plaintiff’s debts in disregard of the assignment. The assignor was entitled to any surplus which might remain after the purposes of the trust were accomplished, and, although it might appear that there would be no surplus, nevertheless he had the right to contend that his estate should be distributed under the terms of the assignment, and that it was a valid and not a fraudulent instrument. The authorities are decisive in affirming the general rule that, in a creditor's action brought to impeach and set aside a gen *169 eral assignment by a debtor of his property for the benefit of creditors, the court will not proceed to judgment in the absence of the debtor as a party defendant, unless by death or other circumstance his joinder, as a defendant, is wholly impracticable. (Lawrence v. Bank of Republic, 35 N. Y. 320; Miller v. Hall, 70 id. 250; Gaylords v. Kelshaw, 1 Wall. [U. S.] 81; Beach Eq. Jur.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.E. 262, 153 N.Y. 163, 7 E.H. Smith 163, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-shuler-ny-1897.