Hanford v. Artcher

4 Hill & Den. 271

This text of 4 Hill & Den. 271 (Hanford v. Artcher) 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
Hanford v. Artcher, 4 Hill & Den. 271 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1842).

Opinion

Walworth, Chancellor.

This is one of that interminable class of cases arising upon the construction of the section of the revised statutes declaring, that sales and assignments of goods and chattels shall be presumed to be fraudulent when not accompanied by an immediate delivery and an actual and continued change of possession. In the cases which have heretofore come before this court for decision the complaint of the plaintiffs in error has been, that the court below assumed to decide upon the sufficiency of the evidence offered to rebut the presumption of fraud, and had not submitted the question as to the fraudulent intent to the jury as a fact; of which fact, as it was supposed, another provision of the statute had made the jury the exclusive judges. But in the case now before us the principal complaint is, that the circuit judge left too much to the decision of the jury, by instructing them that it was foi them to decide whether there was any good reason shown, which they could approve, why there had not been an immediate delivery and an actual and continued change of possession. 1

In the case of Butler v. Van Wyck, (1 Hill’s Rep. 438,) the supreme court has erroneously assumed that in Smith & Hoe v. Acker, (23 Wend. Rep. 653,) a majority of the members of the court had decided, that proof that a chattel mortgage or a sale of property was founded upon a sufficient consideration, was of itself enough to rebut the presumption of fraud arising from [275]*275a want of change of possession ; and that., if a consideration was proved, whether any excuse for the continuance of the possession was given or not, the question of fraudulent intent must be submitted to the jury, as a matter of which they were the exclusive judges. The property, in the case of Butler v. Van Wyck, was levied on in the possession of the mortgagor, as in the case of Smith & Hoe v. Acker; and as nothing is said about it in the opinions of Justices Bronson and Cowen, they probably came to the conclusion that this court had also overruled their decision on this point in Randall v. Cook, (17 Wend. 54,) and bad decided that an action of replevin for an unlawful taking could be sustained against the sheriff for levying upon mortgaged property in the hands of the mortgagor, before th,e mortgagee had attempted to assert his right to the possession by virtue of the mortgage. I am satisfied, however, that neither of those questions was intended to be decided by a majority of the members of this court in the case of Smith & Hoe v. Acker. Although the report of that case now contains an elaborate opinion of one of the senators upon this last question, it will be seen, by a reference to the opinion itself, that it must have been prepared after that cause was decided. And that the fact is so, will be recollected by such of the members of this court as were present when the judgment in that case Was given. That opinion, therefore, cannot be considered as having been adopted by "the other members of this court wdio voted for a reversal of the decision of the court below, and who never heard of it until it appeared in the printed reports.

To understand the extent of the decision intended to be made m the case of Smith & Hoe v. Acker, a short explanation appears to be necessary. That case was not argued in this court, but was submitted upon very imperfect briefs just at the close of the session for the hearing of arguments, probably with a view of obtaining a speedy decision of the question upon which the justices of the supreme court had differed in Doane v. Eddy, (16 Wend, Rep. 523 ;) or rather what some persons supposed the supreme court had intended to decide in that and other ca[276]*276ses ; viz. that nothing short of a physical impossibility would be sufficient to excuse the immediate delivery of the property, and rebut the legal presumption of fraud. And it will be seen by the report of the case of Smith & Hoe v. Acker, that the written opinions of Senators Edwards and Hopkins were confined to 'that question alone. Nor had any other member of the court except myself looked into the record for the purpose of ascertaining whether the decision of the cause at the circuit necessarily turned upon that question.

As it is a well settled principle that if the court below has given the proper judgment in the case, it cannot be reversed on a writ of error, although the court or judge who decided the cause has given an insufficient or erroneous reason therefor, I considered it my duty to look into the error book for the purpose of seeing whether the nonsuit in that case was properly granted. Upon that examination I found, or supposed I found, two unanswerable objections to the plaintiff’s right to recover in that suit; one of which at least was of such a nature that it could not .possibly have been obviated at the circuit, even if the opinion of the judge was wrong upon the question on which he based the nonsuit. Having very little time for investigating the important principle involved in what was deemed the main question, and wishing to hear it fully argued, I did not therefore examine it at all, but placed my vote in favor of the affirmance of the judgment upon the other grounds.

One of those grounds was, that the statute of 1833 had declared that a chattel mortgage, which was not accompanied by an immediate delivery of the property, should be absolutely void as against creditors, unless such mortgage Was filed in the clerk’s office as directed by that act; and that, as the mortgage under which the plaintiffs claimed had not been filed, without unreasonable delay after it was executed, the statute of 1833 had made it absolutely void as against creditors. But what I considered a more clear and unanswerable objection to the right of the plaintiffs to recover, in Smith & Hoe v. Acker, was, that the revised statutes had made it the duty of the sheriff [277]*277to levy upon the interest of a defendant in goods pledged for the payment of a debt. (2 R. S. 366, § 20.) And as the sheriff had levied upon the property then in question in the hands of the mortgagor, and before the plaintiffs had claimed and exercised the right to reduce it to possession by virtue of their, mortgage, an action of replevin for merely levying upon the property could not be sustained; and if the sheriff had wrongfully detained the property from the mortgagees, after such levy, that a different action for the improper detention of the property should have been brought. (See 17 Wend. Rep. 54, and 3 Hill’s Rep. 348.) I also referred the court to the notes of the revisers, to show that the 20th section of the article of the revised statutes, in relation to executions against property, (2 R. S. 366,) was intended to place the right to sell personal property mortgaged and continuing in the possession of the. mortgagor, upon the same footing as real estate mortgaged, while it continued in the possession of the mortgagor. And I think I succeeded in satisfying most of the members of this court, that by the statute the sheriff was authorized to levy upon mortgaged property thus situated, and to sell the right of the mortgagor in the same, subject to the right or claim of the plaintiffs if they had any ; leaving the question as to their right, and the extent of it, to be settled between them and the purchaser.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hinde's Lessee v. Longworth
24 U.S. 199 (Supreme Court, 1826)
Jennings v. Carter & Wilcox
2 Wend. 446 (New York Supreme Court, 1829)
Divver & Gunton v. McLaughlin
2 Wend. 596 (New York Supreme Court, 1829)
Jackson ex dem. Peek v. Peek
4 Wend. 300 (New York Supreme Court, 1830)
Jackson, ex rel. Bigelow v. Timmerman
7 Wend. 436 (New York Supreme Court, 1831)
Hall v. Tuttle
8 Wend. 375 (New York Supreme Court, 1832)
Doane v. Eddy
16 Wend. 523 (New York Supreme Court, 1837)
Miller v. Adsit
18 Wend. 353 (New York Supreme Court, 1837)
Beekman v. Bond
19 Wend. 444 (New York Supreme Court, 1838)
Stoddard v. Butler
20 Wend. 507 (New York Supreme Court, 1838)
Cole & Thurman v. White
26 Wend. 511 (New York Supreme Court, 1841)
Stoddard v. Butler
20 Wend. 507 (New York Supreme Court, 1838)
Smith & Hoe v. Acker
23 Wend. 653 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1840)
Brooks v. Powers
15 Mass. 244 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1818)
Lewis v. Stevenson
2 Hall 63 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1829)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Hill & Den. 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanford-v-artcher-nycterr-1842.