Mason v. Somers

45 A. 602, 59 N.J. Eq. 451, 14 Dickinson 451, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 89
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 19, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 A. 602 (Mason v. Somers) 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
Mason v. Somers, 45 A. 602, 59 N.J. Eq. 451, 14 Dickinson 451, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 89 (N.J. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Grey, V. C.

The complainant contends that the proofs in this case show that the defendant Alfred Somers made a fraudulent conveyance of his real estate to his son, for the purpose of avoiding the payment of his debts, and insists that the deed for that reason is void under the statute of frauds.

The counsel for the defendant Alfred Somers contends that in order to sustain the complainant’s claim he must have been in the position of a creditor of Alfred, at the time the latter made the conveyance to his son; that in the transaction as to the note, Alfred was merely an accommodation maker for the benefit of William Somers, who got all the money; that for this reason the complainant, who was second endorser ou the note, was not, when the deed was made, a creditor of Alfred Somers. He cites Severs v. Dodson, 8 Dick. Ch. Rep. 634, as authority for the proposition stated.

That case declares simply a rule of evidence that a conveyance will not be presumed to be void solely because it is voluntary, except in favor of debts existing when it was made; and further that an accommodation endorser of a note does not become a debtor to the holder, in the' sense prescribed by the statute of frauds, so as to raise the presumption of fraud, until the note is dishonored.

The principle decided is applicable in the present case, but not for the reason alleged by the defendant. It is not because Alfred Somers was an accommodation maker, nor because William Somers, the payee, got the proceeds of the discounting of the note, that the complainant was not a creditor of Alfred Somers. For if the complainant had himself discounted, or purchased and paid for Alfred’s note, he would have been his creditor, whether Alfred got the avails or not.

The complainant in the case now before me, at the inception of the note, had no interest in it; he gave nothing for it; he did not discount it or purchase it; all he did was to lend his name as second endorser to aid in procuring it to be discounted. Ho recovery could have been had upon it by the complainant if it had remained in his hands when he endorsed it, and had come [456]*456to be due and had been dishonored. He was not, because of this note, at that time, in any sense a creditor of Alfred Somers. The note had no efficacy whatever until the bank gave it life by discounting it. Then the parties for the first time became answerable according to the order of their liability, but it was to the bank which furnished the money, and not to the complainant, who at this stage of the transaction was simply an accommodation endorser of the note held by the bank, with only a possibility that he might ever become a creditor of Alfred Somers. This status of the complainant toward Alfred’s note continued from June 30th, 1896, when the note was made, to September 30th, 1896, when it was renewed, and during all the subsequent renewals until he took up the paper. Meanwhile, the alleged fraudulent conveyance was made on July 23d, 1896, by Alfred Somers to his son.

The principle propounded in Severs v. Dodson, ubi supra, precludes the complainant from being considered in the class of creditors as against whom a voluntary conveyance by their debtor will be presumed to be void. It declares that such a presumption will not be raised with respect to a mere responsibility because it may, on the happening of some contingency, come to be an indebtedness, as in case of a warranty of title, or a suretyship on a bond. In this case the complainant, when the note was made and up to the time that he paid it, had but a possibility that he might become a creditor of Alfred Somers, in respect to the note, by paying it as second endorser to some one who was the holder. This, when done, did make the complainant an actual creditor of Alfred Somers, who made the note, and of William Somers, the prior endorser. But this situation did not arise until the note had been last renewed on December 30th, 1896, and was paid by the complainant about March 30th, 1897, more than eight months after the deed had been made by Alfred to his son.

The complainant not being a creditor of Alfred Somers on July 23d, 1896, the time of the making of the challenged conveyance, it 'follows that it will not be presumed that the convey[457]*457anee in question, even if voluntary, was fraudulent as to the complainant, so as to be void under the statute of frauds. •

The result is that the complainant cannot maintain a right to relief by simply showing that there was a conveyance which was voluntary, or for a grossly inadequate consideration, and then invoke the presumption that it was fraudulent as to him as a creditor. He must go beyond this and prove that when the defendant made the questioned conveyance it was with a fraudulent purpose to defeat or hinder his creditors. If he is able to show such a condition of-affairs, the same case (Severs v. Dodson, 8 Dick. Ch. Rep. 637) declares that a contingent liability as that of an accommodation creditor will lay a ground for a proceeding under the statute to set aside any transfer of property made in fraud of the holder of the claim.” The complainant asserts that this purpose is shown by the evidence.

It appears that while the negotiations for the loan were pending, the defendants Alfred Somers and. William Somers were anxious that the proposed note of Alfred Somers should be so accredited that it could readily be discounted. They wanted the complainant, for a consideration, to lend his name as endorser, and, to induce him to do this, the complainant testifies, and William Somers supports him, that the defendant Alfred Somers stated to the complainant his ownership of the very lands which he afterwards conveyed to his son, as an inducement to the complainant to give him credit by endorsing his note. Alfred Somers made a gwasi-denial of this testimony by attempting to show that he had no conversation with the complainant in June, when the note was first made; that it was in September that he first saw the complainant, and that he then had none of the real estate referred to in the conversation.

The denial of the defendant was not given in such a way as to be impressive of its truth. The conversation narrated would naturally, under the circumstances, have taken place at the inception of the credit. It is proven, by both the complainant and by William Somers, to have then taken place. The testimony of either is as disinterested and as credible as is that of the defendant Alfred Somers. It is established by the weight [458]*458of the evidence. The defendant Alfred Somers thus obtained from the complainant the loan of his name upon a representation that his ownership of the lands now in question entitled him to that credit. He thus knew that the complainant would look, and had a right to look, to those lands in case, because of the loan of his name, he should be obliged to pay the note.

The defendant, in the early part of July, 1896, became president of the “ shoot-the-chutes ” company, and entered upon the conduct of the business of the company, whose stock was purchased by the money borrowed on this note, and on another one which the defendant Alfred Somers had endorsed. His only child, Milton Le Roy Somers, a young man of twenty-two years of age, was that summer employed as a ticket taker of another amusement affair immediately in front of his father’s shoot-the-chutes” place.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 A. 602, 59 N.J. Eq. 451, 14 Dickinson 451, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-v-somers-njch-1900.