Langford v. Fessenden

220 A.D. 258, 221 N.Y.S. 424, 1927 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9283
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 22, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 220 A.D. 258 (Langford v. Fessenden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langford v. Fessenden, 220 A.D. 258, 221 N.Y.S. 424, 1927 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9283 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Merrell, J.

The plaintiff is a judgment creditor of the defendant Levi A. Fessenden and brought this action to set aside the said conveyance by the said defendant Fessenden to his said wife, the defendant Josephine R. Fessenden, of his thirteen and one-third per cent interest in said parcels of real property upon the ground that such conveyance of said undivided interest was made for the purpose of defrauding the plaintiff and hindering and delaying the plaintiff’s collection of his said judgment. The real property in question was originally owned by the grandfather of the defendant Levi A. Fessenden. By the will of the grandfather the said parcels of real property, among others, were devised, subject to the life estate therein of the mother of the defendant Levi A. Fessenden, to the said defendant Levi A. Fessenden and two brothers and two sisters of said defendant, each to receive an undivided one-fifth share and interest in said parcels of real property. The evidence shows that following the death of the grandparent and until the present time the properties in question have been managed by the defendant Levi A. Fessenden, as agent for the various owners thereof, the said defendant renting the same and collecting the rents and income therefrom and, after paying the current running expenses of the properties, dividing the residue among those entitled thereto. In the year 1903 the defendant Levi A. Fessenden conveyed his one-fifth interest to his wife, the defendant Josephine R. Fessenden. The evidence shows that such conveyance was by way of gift and without other consideration than natural love and affection. Such conveyance, however, is not attacked in this action, and following such conveyance in 1903 the defendant Josephine R. Fessenden became the lawful owner of said one-fifth interest. In 1911 one of the owners in common of said real property, Emma A. Klssam, a sister of the defendant Levi A. Fessenden, died intestate and as a result thereof the defendant Levi A. Fessenden inherited a one-fourth share of a one-fifth interest of the said deceased sister in said real property, amounting to a one-twentieth interest therein. In 1913 Henry P. [260]*260Fessenden, another of the tenants in common of said real property and a brother of the defendant Levi A. Fessenden, died leaving a last will and testament wherein a one-twelfth interest therein was devised to the defendant Levi A. Fessenden. Through the combined interests thus received by inheritance from the deceased sister of said defendant and through the will of his brother, Henry P. Fessenden, the defendant Levi A. Fessenden became the owner of thirteen and one-third per cent of said real property. The evidence shows that thereafter the defendant Levi A. Fessenden continued as theretofore to manage the properties as agent for his surviving brother and sister and the defendant Josephine R. Fessenden, the owner of the original one-fifth interest of said property received by the defendant Levi A. Fessenden through his grandfather’s will, and it further appears that while the thirteen and one-third per cent interest therein, which he received from his deceased brother and sister, was owned by the defendant Levi A. Fessenden, the income due to such undivided interest went into his common account as agent, and the income appears to have been distributed to the persons entitled thereto.

The evidence further shows that in 1900 or 1902 a mortgage for $17,000 was placed upon one of the parcels of real property for the benefit of the defendant Levi A. Fessenden, all of the owners of said real property joining in said mortgage, the avails of which were received by the defendant Levi A. Fessenden and none of which was received by the other owners of the property. The evidence also shows that in December, 1904, the said defendant Levi A. Fessenden applied to his said brother and sister and his said wife for assistance and a mortgage was executed by them for the sum of $16,000 upon another parcel of real property. The avails of this mortgage also went to the defendant Levi A. Fessenden. In 1909 the brothers and sisters of the defendant Levi A. Fessenden secured from the defendants herein an agreement on the part of the defendant Josephine R. Fessenden that, to the extent of four-fifths of the $16,000 mortgage and of the $17,000 mortgage above referred to, the same were declared liens upon the said real properties prior and superior to any claim or interest which the defendant Josephine R. Fessenden had or might thereafter acquire in any or all of said properties, and that on the sale of said properties or any of them four-fifths of said sums of $16,000 and $17,000 and interest thereon from the date of the execution of said agreement, unless previously paid by the said Levi A. Fessenden, should be first deducted and paid over to the said two brothers and two sisters of the defendant Levi A. Fessenden before any part of said proceeds should be assigned and paid over to the defendant Josephine [261]*261R. Fessenden, and, further, that until said four-fifths of the said sums and the interest thereon were fully paid unto the said brothers and sisters, the said Josephine R. Fessenden should not ask or demand any part of the proceeds of the sale of either of said properties. The evidence of the defendants herein, who were the only witnesses testifying upon the trial save a real estate expert, shows that following the acquisition by the defendant Levi A. Fessenden of the thirteen and one-third per cent interest of said parcels of real property, the defendant Josephine R. Fessenden, on many occasions, requested and finally demanded that the defendant Levi A. Fessenden convey to her the additional undivided interests which he had acquired through the death of his brother and'jsister, and finally on February 28, 1923, the conveyance sought to be set aside in this action was made, the deed thereof being executed on that day and on that day duly recorded in the office of the register of the county of New York. Five days prior to the execution of such conveyance and on February 23, 1923, in the action which resulted in the judgment obtained by plaintiff against the defendant Levi A. Fessenden, the justice at Special Term before whom said action was pending rendered an opinion in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant Levi A. Fessenden in said action, holding that the said plaintiff was entitled to judgment against the said defendant in the sum of $13,262.42. (N. Y. L. J. Feb. 24, 1923.) On March 19, 1923, a judgment was entered in said action in favor of the plaintiff and against said defendant for $16,400.03. The defendant Fessenden appealed to this court from said judgment, and the judgment was, on appeal, reversed and modified and the matter sent to a referee to take and state the account between the plaintiff and sáid defendant. (See 208 App. Div. 315.) The referee found in favor of plaintiff and as a result thereof judgment was finally entered in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant Levi A. Fessenden on December 23, 1924, in the sum of $19,224.52. Execution on said judgment was duly issued and returned wholly unsatisfied, and said judgment remains wholly unpaid. Subsequently to the rendition of said judgment and the return of the execution unsatisfied, proceedings supplementary to execution were instituted by the judgment creditor against the defendant Levi A. Fessenden, and in said supplementary proceedings the defendant Josephine R. Fessenden was subpoenaed to testify as a witness. In said proceeding it was disclosed that the conveyance of said thirteen and-one-third per cent undivided interest of said real property was made by the defendant Levi A.

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Bluebook (online)
220 A.D. 258, 221 N.Y.S. 424, 1927 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langford-v-fessenden-nyappdiv-1927.