McIlhargy v. . Chambers

23 N.E. 561, 117 N.Y. 532, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 921, 72 Sickels 532, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1465
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 23 N.E. 561 (McIlhargy v. . Chambers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIlhargy v. . Chambers, 23 N.E. 561, 117 N.Y. 532, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 921, 72 Sickels 532, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1465 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Danforth, J.

The controversy is between the voluntary assignee of an insolvent debtor for the benefit of his creditors on one side, and his judgment and execution creditors on the other. The jury found in favor of the assignee, but judgment on the verdict was suspended until exceptions taken at the trial could be passed upon by the General Term. That court sustained the exceptions and ordered a new trial. From that order this appeal is taken by the assignee.

The principal question considered in both courts, was whether the assignment under which the plaintiff claimed, operated as a valid instrument at the time of its apparent date and time of signing by the assignee, or whether its actual delivery by the assignor determined the time when the 'rights and duties of the assignee attached.

The trial judge held, in substance, that the title did not pass until delivery of the instrument, as under the rule of the comihon law, while the General Term were of opinion that the statute relating to assignments (Laws of 1877, chap. 466), created a test and made the consent of the assignee, subscribed to the instrument, conclusive evidence as to the time when it took effect.

The facts on which the answer to the question thus at issue depends, are undisputed. It appears that on the twenty-fourth of June, Wennberg, the debtor, directed his attorney to prepare an assignment of all his property to McIlhargy, in trust for the assignor’s creditors. This was done. The instrument purported to be an indenture bipartite, and at the end, contained a recital that the party of the second part (McIlhargy) did “ accept the trust created and reposed in him ” by the instrument, and also a covenant on his part to and with the assignor, “ that he will faithfully and without delay execute the trust according to the best of his skill, knowledge and ability.” In that condition, and before its execution by the assignor, the instrument was signed and acknowledged by *537 Mcllhargy, but not delivered to or taken by 1dm. On the contrary, it remained in the hands of the draftsman undelivered, and incomplete. Some hours afterwards, but on the same day, Wennberg, in the absence of Mcllhargy, signed and acknowledged the instrument and left it with his attorney. Unless the assent of the assignee, expressed as above stated, gave effect to the assignment, it was still inchoate, and nothing further was done in relation to it on that day. The evidence, indeed, warrants the conclusion that it was left with the attorney to await directions by the assignor, and that it was not intended by either party that the assignor should lose control over it, or that it should be deemed a completed transaction until he so determined. On the third of July, Wennberg made a formal and unconditional delivery of the assignment to the assignee’s agent, who at once caused it to be recorded, and possession was immediately taken of the assigned property by the assignee. So execution had then been issued, but afterwards, and on the eighth of July, the property, while in the hands of the assignee, was seized by the sheriff under process in favor of the judgment creditors. They indemnified him for so -doing, and he being sued for that act, they were substituted in his place as defendants.

The question is as to priority. The defendants claim that by virtue of the statute relating to assignments {supra), the subscription of the instrument by the assignee, although without any actual delivery to him, gave effect to the assignment the moment it was signed by the assignor, and that the continued possession of the property by the assignor until the third of July, was conclusive evidence of a fraudulent intent in making the assignment.

The trial court ruled otherwise, but gave all the circumstances attending the transaction to the jury, and asked them to determine, as a matter of fact, whether the assignment was made, executed and accepted within the intention of the parties on the day of its date, and said if such were the case, *538 then continued possession by the assignor of the property embraced in it would be deemed fraudulent; and so if the assignment was, in fact, fully executed on that day, but with the understanding that the assignor might revoke it, or if such a power was reserved at the time of its execution, or if the assignment so made was, by agreement of the parties, to be withheld from record, or left concealed at the pleasure of the assignor. At the request of the defendant the trial judge said, “ that a formal delivery of the assignment was not necessary, but the jury might infer' from circumstances that the assignment in question was, in fact, delivered on the day of its date.” He refused, however, to charge, as matter of law, that the execution of the assignment, on the twenty-fourth of June, and its acknowledgment, “made the instrument, at that time, a complete and valid assignment under the laws of this state relating to general assignments.” The verdict of the jury negatived the implication of fraud sought to be raised by the defendants, and established that there was no delivery or acceptance of the assignment until the third of July, when it actually came under the control of the assignee, and ■ was placed on record. The title of the assignee, therefore, began at that time, and the jury also found that the assignment was created by a fair and honest transaction and without any fraudulent intent.

There was no error in submitting the questions to the jury. The construction of the instrument, if it became necessary, was for the court, but whether the instrument was delivered so as to become effective between the parties depended on extrinsic evidence, and could not be determined solely by an inspection of it. Upon its face the assignment, when produced at the trial, appeared to be a complete and perfect instrument, executed by both parties. But the evidence showed that when signed by the assignee it had not been signed by the assignor. It is clear there could have been no trust created until he did sign it, and consequently there could be no acceptance of a trust until that event.

When the assignor did sign he still retained control of.the *539 instrument, and while he did so there was no trust created in the assignee. He came under no obligation or duty. The assignee could not be charged because he never had the assignment, and the assignor might at any moment have destroyed it without infringing the right of any one or violating any moral or legal duty. He could have executed another assignment to another person, and was under no control but Ms own will whether he should do so, or destroy or deliver the one in question. Delivery is as essential since the statute of assignments as before its passage. It is the final act without wMcli all other formalities are ineffectual, and the real date of the instrument, is the time of its delivery. Until that event the assignment could not become operative, whatever language on the part of the proposed assignee may have been written in it. The mere talcing of an instrument into his hands by the grantee, even if he retained it, would amount to nothing if the circumstances showed that he did not receive or hold it as an effective conveyance. (Jackson v. Richards, 6 Cow. 617.) In that case, as also in Crosby v. Hillyer (24 Wend. 284), and in Brackett v. Barney (28 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.E. 561, 117 N.Y. 532, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 921, 72 Sickels 532, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcilhargy-v-chambers-ny-1889.