H. B. Claflin & Co. v. Freudenthal

43 A. 529, 58 N.J. Eq. 298, 13 Dickinson 298, 1899 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 46
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 20, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 A. 529 (H. B. Claflin & Co. v. Freudenthal) 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
H. B. Claflin & Co. v. Freudenthal, 43 A. 529, 58 N.J. Eq. 298, 13 Dickinson 298, 1899 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 46 (N.J. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Emery, V. C.

These are creditors’ suits consolidated for the purpose of hearing, and the bills are filed to set aside as fraudulent a deed executed by Julius Freudenthal, the debtor, to Bernard Katz, one of the defendants, for lands in Englewood, N. J. The deed in question was dated June 9th, 1896, acknowledged June 10th, 1896, and recorded on the following day. The consideration named in the deed is “ one dollar and other valuable considerations.” The'complainants in both suits are attachment creditors-under writs issued subsequent to the recording of the deed. The allegation in the Currie bill is that the deed of June 6th,. 1896, was made by the debtor, in combination with Katz, to defraud complainant and other creditors and to prevent the recovery of their debts; that the deed was without consideration and that the property is worth $35,000 or $40,000. No further [299]*299particular allegations of fraud are made in the Currie bill. In. the Claflin bill it is alleged that Ereudenthal, being insolvent,, and for the purpose of defrauding complainant, and without any or upon a totally inadequate and merely colorable consideration,, gave the deed in question, and that there was no good or valid consideration for the deed; that the land was worth $75,000; that Katz was a relative of Ereudenthal and must have known of the large value of the land, and that the debtor was attempting to defraud complainant and his other creditors, by the deed, and that the whole transaction was a scheme to remove the land from liability to attachment. The latter bill asks also a discovery of the consideration paid for the conveyance and tlx* “good causes and considerations” mentioned in the deed. The answers of defendant Katz undertake to disclose “the facts and circumstances which led to the giving of the deed,” and say substantially, that for a long time prior to the date of the deed he had been furnishing to Ereudenthal, purely for the accommodation of the latter, his (Katz’s) promissory notes, signed by him as maker, which Freudenthal discounted or sold in the market for his own benefit, using the proceeds solely for his owni business and purposes, and that like notes signed by the firm of Katz Brothers were also given to Ereudenthal and similarly disposed of; that the amount of these accommodation notes was at one time as large as $50,000, and the notes were renewed from time to time, and that at the time the deed was given noles of this character were outstanding to the amount of $44,000, $37,000 being notes of Bernard Katz and $9,000 of Katz Brothers, upon which notes Freudenthal had paid $2,000. A list of the outstanding notes — six in number — dated from November 30th, 1895, to May 26th, 1896, due at various dates from June 30th, 1896, to November 26th, 1896, is given, and it is said that all of these notes represented by renewal, notes given and renewed a long time previous to the dates thereof respectively. The answers then allege that shortly before the date of the deed Freudenthal informed defendant Bernard Katz that he would be unable to take up these outstanding notes or either of them at maturity, and he desired Katz to. assume their payment and [300]*300release Freudenthal therefrom, offering to convey the property in question, his homestead, absolutely, as satisfaction for the assumption .by defendant Katz of the outstanding promissory notes. Defendant, believing he could get no better recompense or reimbursement, alleges that he accépted the deed upon this basis, took immediate possession of the property and at the time of the answer, September 16th, 1896, had paid three of the notes, and intended to pay the balance as they matured; that all of the notes were in the hands of bona fide holders and that the obligation of the makers thereof was complete at the time of the execution and delivery of the deed. No disclosure is made in the answer of any security upon the property being held by defendant previous to the delivery of the deed, or that the surrender of any such security formed part of the consideration of the transaction.

The transactions and dealings between Freudenthal and Katz have been investigated on the hearing exhaustively and in great detail, and the defendant has satisfactorily established that the deed was given and accepted in consideration of Katz assuming the payment of $44,000 of notes outstanding in the hands of bona fide holders, which Katz and Katz Brothers had signed for Freudenthal’s accommodation, and that at the time of the hearing all of these notes thus assumed had been paid by Katz. It was also admitted at the’hearing and for the purpose of the suit, that the value of the property in question at the time of the conveyance was $44,000. Defendant Katz and Katz Brothers, upon the negotiation of their accommodation notes to bona fide holders, became, as between themselves and Freudenthal, creditors of the latter, and the assumption of payment of these accommodation notes by the acceptance of the deed and the discharge of the liability of Freudenthal upon these notes, constituted them purchasers for value. It appeared, however, at the hearing, and was first disclosed by the evidence of defendant Bernard Katz, that as long ago as 1892 and some years after the accommodation notes began to be made, Freudenthal executed to Katz and Katz Brothers a deed for the property as security against liability on the notes, which deed Katz, at Freudenthal’s request, [301]*301agreed not to record, and that in October, 1895, this first deed was returned to Freudenthal and another deed to Bernard Katz- and Philip Katz, which included a tract not embraced in the first deed, was received in place thereof for the same purpose of security, and with the same agreement not to record. The debts of complainants were incurred while these previous deeds were unrecorded, and the debts of some of the complainants were incurred in reliance on statements made by Freudenthal before the deed of June, 1896, in relation to his property, by which statements it appears that in addition to other property he owned the Englewood property unencumbered. There was no disclosure to the persons to whom the statements were made that Katz held the unrecorded deed as security. It is claimed by complainants that the retention of these prior deeds from the-record, taken in connection with all the circumstances of their retention, was a fraud on them as creditors, which would entitle-them to relief against these unrecorded deeds, if set up by Katz, and that this fraud has not been purged by the execution of the-deed of June, 1896, but also invalidates this deed as based either wholly or in part on the previous fraudulent transaction. The-defendant, in reference to any claim for relief based on the alleged fraud or invalidity of the previous unrecorded deeds,, raises the preliminary objection that the deed of June, 1896, is the only deed attacked in the bill, and that a claim for relief based upon the alleged frauds in previous deeds is not within the issues, and that the defendant has had by the pleadings or during the hearing no notice of such issue, or warning or opportunity to prepare defences arising thereon. I think, however,, that the existence and' surrender of the previous deed, held as security against future liabilities, entered into and formed part of the consideration of the deed of June, 1896, and that under the issues on the pleadings as they stand, in reference to the fraudulent character of this last deed and its consideration, evidence as to the entire consideration, in all its details, is relevant and admissible.

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Bluebook (online)
43 A. 529, 58 N.J. Eq. 298, 13 Dickinson 298, 1899 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-b-claflin-co-v-freudenthal-njch-1899.