In re the Accounting of Raymond

34 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 508
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 34 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 508 (In re the Accounting of Raymond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Accounting of Raymond, 34 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 508 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1882).

Opinion

Learned, P. J.:

The first point made by the respondents is that the appellants failed to except to the report of the referee; and therefore no review could be made by the County Court. (Levy’s Accounting, 1 Abb. N. C., 177.) But the case before us states that all the evidence was submitted to, and considered by, the court. Nor does it appear that any objection was made, before the County Court, to the hearing of the question now presented by this appeal: The case seems to have been prepared with the view of presenting the point in issue in a compact shape. And it would be unreasonable to dismiss this appeal for a defect which is really only formal.

The facts on which the question is raised are these: On the same day on which the assignor made his assignment, he executed to the assignee a bill of sale of some potatoes and a canal boat, which bill of sale was dated the day previous; and the assignee took possession of them. It was intended by the parties that this [510]*510property should be held and disposed of by Raymond for the benefit of Seeley. The bill of sale was made in contemplation of the general assignment, and with the purpose of withdrawing the property from the creditors of Seeley. The potatoes were sold by Raymond for $11,460. Raymond claimed to have paid, for the benefit ■of Seeley, out of the moneys, $8,589.13, leaving a balance of $2,870.87, not paid to Seeley or accounted for. Among the items so claimed to have been paid by Raymond out of these moneys is a note, called the Ames note, of $1,136.94, which was in fact paid by Seeley. The amount of this note, added to the above balance, makes $4,007.81, which sum the creditors and the substituted assignee claim should be charged to Raymond as assets, now remaining in his hands, on this accounting. Thus the question which the appellants present is this: One person makes a transfer •of property to another, alleged to be fraudulent as to the creditors ■of the former, in contemplation of the assignment about to be made, and then makes a general assignment to the same person, for the benefit of creditors. An accounting of the assignee is had before the county judge, after a new assignee has been appointed. Can the judge, on such accounting, and on behalf of the creditors ■of the assignor, investigate the transaction, and if he should decide that the transfer was fraudulent, compel the assignee to account for and pay over the property, or the avails thereof, thus fraudulently transferred before the assignment ? In examining this question we must first observe that the property thus fraudulently ■transferred is not, in terms, held on the trusts of the assignment. The assignor has a right to compel the performance by the assignee of these trusts. But if the assignor, prior to the making of the assignment, had transferred property to the person who was after-wards assignee, in fraud of the creditors of the assignor, such .•assignor could not afterwards reclaim that property. Though void .as to his creditors, the transfer would be good as to him.

The finding in this, case is that the potatoes were transferred, to be held and disposed of for the use of Seeley. If this trust were void as to Seeley’s creditors, still he could not assert its invalidity. If it were a valid trust, it could only be enforced by Seeley; and 4hat too, not in this proceeding, but in some independent action.

Hence it follows that the assignee cannot be held to an account[511]*511ing here, on the ground that the property transferred was part of the assigned property, and was taken by the assignee on the trusts of the assignment. Indeed, the claim of the creditors and of the assignor is directly contrary to this view. They .-claim to hold the assignee, on the ground that the prior transfer was fraudulent as to the assignee, and that he could repudiate it; that it was his duty to do so, and to hold the property as assignee and adversely to the transfer.

Again, we do not see that the assignor has any right of this kind. Assuming that the transfer was fraudulent as to his creditors, Seeley has no right to attack that transfer, directly or indirectly. Whatever right his creditors may have, it is plain that he cannot, by the indirect proceeding of calling the assignee to an accounting, under the trusts of the assignment, reclaim property, transferred by him, previously to the assignment, in fraud of his creditors. Nor can he, in this indirect manner, reclaim this property for his creditors. To pursue that property may be their right, but is not his.

We pass then, to the rights of creditors of Seeley. The appellants' compare the position of the assignee to that of an executor. And it may be worth while to look briefly at the course of the law in similar cases as to executors. Where a person had made a conveyance of goods, fraudulent as to creditors, his executor could not, before the Revised Statutes, reclaim the goods. (Osborne v. Moss, 7 Johns., 161.) The remedy of the creditor was to treat the fraudulent grantee as executor de son tort. But since the Revised Statutes the personal representative of the grantor may controvert the validity of the sale. (2 R. S., 449, § 17; Babcock v. Booth, 2 Hill, 185.) And ordinarily he alone. (Bate v. Graham, 11 N. Y., 237.) Still, however, the voluntary assignee of the assignor could not impeach the validity of a fraudulent transfer (Brownell v. Curtis, 10 Paige, 210, at 219); although a receiver in' proceedings supplementary might. (Potter v. Clark, 12 How. Pr., 107.) But the act of 1858 (chap. 314) gave power to an assignee, as well as to .an executor, etc., to “ disaffirm, treat as void and resist all acts done, transfers and agreements made in fraud of the rights of any •creditor.”

Now it is insisted by the appellants that the assignee cannot sue .himself in order to disaffirm the fraudulent transfer; and therefore [512]*512that, on his accounting, the county judge may pass upon the question of fraud in the transfer, and charge him with any property thus fraudulently received. And they rest upon the authority given by chapter 466 of 1877, amended by chapter 318, Laws of 1878, especially by subdivision 2 and subdivision 9, section 20. These subdivisions give the county judges such powers as the surrogate has in reference to the accounting of an executor.

It seems to be settled that a surrogate has jurisdiction to pass on the validity of a personal liability of an executor to the estate which he represents (Gardner v. Gardner, 7 Paige, 112); and of a debt from the testator to the executor personally. (Kyle v. Kyle, 67 N. Y., 400.) In the language used in these eases, and those like them, the courts have spoken of debts, or claims, which existed between the testator and the person appointed his executor,, in favor of one or of the other. And they have said that, for the reason that the executor could not sue himself, and might not pay himself, the claims must be adjusted before the surrogate. (Kyle v. Kyle, ut supra.) But none of these cases are quite like the present, inasmuch as the alleged liability here is one which in the analogous relationship could not exist between the testator and the person named as executor. No liability, as is well known, could arise in favor of the fraudulent assignor, or in favor of one claiming under him but not representing creditors.

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Related

Kyle v. . Kyle
67 N.Y. 400 (New York Court of Appeals, 1876)
Bate v. . Graham
11 N.Y. 237 (New York Court of Appeals, 1854)
Porter v. Clark
12 How. Pr. 107 (New York Court of Appeals, 1853)
Osborne v. Moss
7 Johns. 161 (New York Supreme Court, 1810)
Gardner v. Gardner
7 Paige Ch. 112 (New York Court of Chancery, 1838)
Brownell v. Curtis
10 Paige Ch. 210 (New York Court of Chancery, 1843)
Levy's Accounting
1 Abb. N. Cas. 177 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1876)

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34 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-raymond-nysupct-1882.