McCloskey v. Stewart

10 Daly 496, 63 How. Pr. 137
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 18, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Daly 496 (McCloskey v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCloskey v. Stewart, 10 Daly 496, 63 How. Pr. 137 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1882).

Opinion

Van Brunt, J.

This is a creditor’s bill filed to reach certain property claimed to have belonged to one Henry Stewart, [497]*497and by him transferred in fraud of his creditors. The evidence, shows that, prior to January 18th, 1879, the defendant, Henry Stewart, for many years had been a manufacturer of sewing machines in the City of New York, and was at that date in the possession of certain tools, fixtures and machinery, with which he was carrying on business ; that on the 19th of November, 1878, a judgment was obtained against said Henry Stewart by the plaintiff for $992.88, and which judgment also established the right of the plaintiff to a share in the profits arising from the use of a certain device which Henry Stewart was using in his business as a sewing-machine manufacturer.

Execution upon this judgment having been stayed, on the 17th of January, 1879, such stay was vacated, and on the 18th of January, 1879, the certificate of incorporation of the Henry Stewart Manufacturing Company was filed, and it took possession of all the machinery, tools and fixtures, and machines manufactured and in course of manufacture, book accounts and good will, which had belonged to Henry Stewart, or with which he had been carrying on business.

The only trustees and incorporators of said company were the said Henry Stewart, Frances Stewart, his wife, and Beatte Mills, his daughter. The capital stock of said company was to be $50,000, and all that was issued was issued to the wife of said Henry Stewart and to his daughters, with the exception of $1,500, which was issued to the said Henry Stewart.

The Henry Stewart Manufacturing Company, under the presidency of Henry Stewart, and under his direction and sole control, carried on business until August of 1860, when a new corporation was formed by Henry Stewart, Erastus Crawford, and William Niemann, the nominal capital being $250,000, the Henry Stewart Manufacturing Company transferring to the Stewart Manufacturing Company the same property with which it had commenced business, including such new tools and machinery as had been bought to replace those which had been worn out in the course of the business ; and issued stock to the amount of $150,000 in payment therefor to the stockholders of the Henry Stewart Manufacturing Company, which stock was issued as follows: $100,000 to Frances Stewart, [498]*498$49,000 to Beatte Mills, and $1,000 to Henry Stewart. Ho money was paid upon the transfer; neither was any cash put in the business, with the exception of $2,000 contributed by William Hiemann, and all the stock that was issued amounted to $156,600,

On the 29th of July, 1881, the plaintiff recovered a judgment against Henry Stewart upon said contract above mentioned for $13,212.84, and an execution issued to the sheriff was returned unsatisfied.

The defendants claim that no ownership in the property transferred to the Henry Stewart Manufacturing Company has been shown to be in Henry Stewart, and, if there was, the property transferred being personal property, a creditors bill will not lie to reach it. Various authorities have been cited by the defendants to support the latter proposition, which, although it may seem to be established by certain dicta, has never been sustained by any direct decision; and in the only decisions where the question has come up with reasonable directness, the contrary position has been held. The result of a rule such as has been claimed upon the part of the defendants to have been established, in the case of a creditor who was unable to indemnify the sheriff, would deprive him of every opportunity that he might have to attack a fraudulent conveyance. If the judgment debtor should be so fortunate as to have a creditor who was not able to indemnify the sheriff in order that he might compel him to make a levy, such debtor might make any transfer of his property, no matter how fraudulent, and the judgment creditor would be remediless.

In the case at bar, transfers have been made of the property in question. The property is claimed to have changed possession, and it is for the purpose of establishing the fraudulent character of the conveyances pf this property that this action is brought.

It is also urged upon the part of the defense that the evidence in this case shows that the property in question prior to this transfer to the Henry Stewart Manufacturing Company was sold at auction under a chattel mortgage, It is true that [499]*499the witness Snyder so testified in answer to a question which did not call for such a response. A motion was at once made by the counsel for the plaintiff to strike out the testimony in regard to the chattel mortgage, upon the ground that the mortgage itself and the person who conducted the sale were the best evidence. The ruling of the court was that it would allow the evidence to stand, and if testimony was not produced which would sustain the evidence gi ven, it should fall.

The case is entirely barren of evidence of the existence of any chattel mortgage. There is not the slightest evidence that any sale was ever made under any chattel mortgage; there is not the slightest evidence by what authority this pretended sale was made; and the case is entirely barren in testimony as to who purchased upon any such sale. By this pretended auction sale under a pretended chattel mortgage (because in view of the circumstances of the case, if such chattel mortgage existed, if such sale had taken place under the mortgage, the defendants would have undoubtedly proved it), Henry Stewart’s property, upon the eve of a judgment, in the face of a large unliquidated claim, is sold to somebody, to whom, we are not informed, or at what price. I say it was Henry Stewart’s property, because, under the evidence in this case, he being shown to be in possession of it, shown to have carried on business with it, the presumption would be that it belonged to him, unless some evidence to the contrary was shown, especially in view of the fact that shortly prior to this time Henry Stewart had sworn that he was worth §50,000 over and above all his debts and liabilities, and he is not shown to have been possessed of any other property. There is not the slightest evidence that the persons to whom the stock of the Henry Stewart Manufacturing Company was issued ever acquired by such sale the slightest interest in the tools and machinery whch it is claimed were sold at such pretended sale. There is no evidence as to any transfer by Henry Stewart of the book accounts to any body for any consideration, and yet they all passed into the hands of the Henry Stewart Manufacturing Company, and stock is issued to the family of Henry Stewart ' for such book accounts as well as for such tools and machinery.

[500]*500There does not seem to be the slightest particle of evidence which can possibly sustain the good faith of such a transaction.

Upon the evidence as it stands, it is one of the most slovenly attempts to cover up an alleged fraudulent transfer that has ever come under my observation. There is not a scintilla of evidence to show the slightest good faith upon the part of any body connected with the transaction.

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Related

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82 N.Y. 625 (New York Court of Appeals, 1880)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Daly 496, 63 How. Pr. 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccloskey-v-stewart-nyctcompl-1882.