Forsyth v. Clark

3 Wend. 637
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 3 Wend. 637 (Forsyth v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forsyth v. Clark, 3 Wend. 637 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1829).

Opinion

The following opinion was delivered :

By Mr. Justice Marcy.

The settlement between Stewart and Clark, made in 1819, was not directly charged as fraudulent in the bill, but its fairness was incidentally involved in the matters that were in issue between the parties, and , the evidence that impeached it was properly received and ought not now to be laid out of view. The respondents might have repelled that evidence, if it could be done; and with the opportunity arose their duty to do so. At all events it is not for us to conjecture what different aspect might have been put on the transaction. So far as we are required to look at it, we must look at it as it is presented to us ; and so viewing it, we must say that the creditors of Stewart have most abundant reasons to be dissatisfied with the manner in which this business was closed. My investigations on this part of the case terminate in the conclusion, that Stewart [641]*641was not only a partner of Clark after Tallmadge retired from the concern until 1819, but had during all that time a large amount of funds therein under the control of Clark. ,

Clark states, that in part payment of the bond of $16,000 executed by him to Stewart as sectirity for the payment of the consideration money of the west half of the Tontine CoffeeHouse, he was to procure the discharge of an incumbrance of $7,500 existing on the whole lot at the time of the purchase. This he did in September, 1816, about one year after his purchase, by executing a mortgage of the part of the lot deeded to him for the amount of the former incumbrance, including the interest that had accrued since the purchase, accompanied with his individual bond. Lansing paid to Stewart some time afterwards one half of this incumbrance, which was about $3,750. The bond of $16,000 given by Clark to Stewart for the consideration of the purchase, was delivered up and cancelled without the payment by Clark directly thereon of one dollar, and without Stewart’s having received any thing for. his interest in the Tontine Coffee-House, except one half the amount of the incumbrance from Lansing. Clark had done nothing towards satisfying that bond but a transfer to the half purchased by him the incumbrance due on the whole lot at the time of the sale, and to give his personal obligation to Roberts for the future payment thereof. For the property purchased by Clark for $16,000, he has paid or become liable to pay the incumbrance of $7,500,-which, when it was settled in 1816, amounted to $7,950, and Stewart, who had an interest which was sold for $12,250 beyond " his proportion of the incumbrance, has received (and that from Lansing) about $3,750, and the balance amounting to $8,500 remains in the hands of Clark, and all legal claim for it is extinguished, and it is contended by the cancel-ling of the bond of $16,000 within twelve months of Stewart’s bankruptcy ; a bankruptcy which leaves him deficient in means to satisfy his creditors to the amount of $70,000. If these transactions are as they appear to be, our system of jurisprudence would merit but little commendation if it was so defective that no relief could be afforded to the' defrauded creditors. But with the amplest means of dispens[642]*642ing relief in such cases, it can only be effectually sought ¿n manner established for administering it. Has the appellant shewed a clear right to relief, and is he seeking it ™ an all°wa-ble way ?

Stewart, at the time of his failure, was indebted to Forsyth the appellant in this case, and to his partner, in the sum of #400, for the recovery of which he was prosecuted and a judgment obtained against him in the October term of the supreme court in 1819. Executions were issued thereon soon after, but no property was found to satisfy the debt. In March, 1822, another execution was issued against the real property of Stewart, and the premises purchased by Clark were levied on and sold to the appellant for #550, as the property of Stewart or as property in which he had an interest.

In July, 1813, Stewart became a co-obligor with Josephus B. Stewart and Moses Willard in a bond to the United States, conditioned for the faithful performance of the duties of a paymaster by Josephus B. Stewart. The condition was broken, and Gilbert Stewart, before he assigned his property in 1819, became a debtor to the United States on this bond in the sum of about #7000. For this debt a judgment was recovered against him, and all his interest in the premises formerly conveyed to Clark was sold by the marshal of the northern district of New-York on ajfi.fa. issued in June, 1821, and the appellant became the purchaser for the sum of five dollars and received a deed therefor in February 1822. These sales and the purchases under them were made in the belief that Stewart had a trust estate in the premises, and one of the objects of this suit is to obtain a discovery of the trust, and to annul any instrument by which it may have been fraudulently released.

If I am not mistaken in the views I have taken of this case Clark and Stewart combined together to withdraw from the creditors of Stewart a large amount of his effects, and the whole scope of their answers has been to cover up or gloss over their fraudulent conduct. This charge, impeaching as it does the integrity of the respondents and imputing to them fraud extensive in amount and odious in character, should not be lightly made; the examination of the facts brings us, [643]*643however unwilling we may be, to this conclusion. A detail of them will not be expected, for it would amount to little less than a repetition of the testimony. Clark’s own books shew that he misrepresented the affairs of the company at the time Tallmadge retired from it; the accounts on which the settlement was made in 1819, after Stewart had become insolvent, are grossly incorrect; and the pretences set forth by him as the true motives for abandoning the contract which he admits was made subsequent to the purchase by him, that Stewart should become a joint owner with him in the west half of the Tontine, and on which contract Stewart had paid, by giving up the bond, at the least eight thousand five hundred dollars, are effectually exploded. From answers thus impeached we were urged to withhold all credit; the counsel for the appellant asked us to throw them wholly out of view. He applied to them the maxim, falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus. That they have been in several important particulars seriously impeached, is certainly true; and considering them as evidence, I cannot bring my mind to yield them much consideration.

The general doctrine that an answer so far as it is responsive to the bill is evidence, for the defendant, cannot be denied.' An answer is often of a mixed character; the definition once given of it by a very eminent counsellor in this court is, in my judgment, exceedingly correct. In some respects, he says, it is mere pleading ; in others, it is pleading coupled with evidence ; and when it is neither, it is merely evidence. (1 Cowen, 745, note.) As pleading, the answers must certainly stand, and the appellant is put to the proof of the facts in issue; as evidence, they ought to be like every other species of evidence liable to be impeached and overthrown.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Wend. 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forsyth-v-clark-nycterr-1829.