Mertens v. Mertens

48 Misc. 235, 96 N.Y.S. 785
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 48 Misc. 235 (Mertens v. Mertens) 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
Mertens v. Mertens, 48 Misc. 235, 96 N.Y.S. 785 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

Bischoff, J.

In the year 1890, Frederick W. Mertens, Sr., then being engaged in business with his two sons, Fred[237]*237erick and Robert, under the firm name of Frederick W. Mertens & Sons, conveyed to these sons the real estate of which he was then possessed, and the sons entered into an agreement, jointly, to pay him the sum of one thousand dollars a month during his life, the performance of the agreement being secured by mortgage upon the real estate thus conveyed.

During the period which intervened this transaction and the death of Mr. Mertens, in 1899, he invested moneys in the erection of three apartment-houses which he .conveyed shortly before his death to his son Frederick, the defendant, his other son Robert having died a few months earlier.

‘It appears that loans had been made by the sons to the father, during this period of nine years, evidenced in the firm books by journal entries of the loans and by corresponding transfers of the moneys loaned from the sons’ to the father’s capital account, the amount of the apparent indebtedness to Robert being, with interest, thirty-seven thousand six hundred and twenty-seven dollars and ninety-seven cents, and this action is brought by Robert’s administratrix to set aside the conveyance of the three apartment-houses by the father to Frederick as in fraud of creditors, under section 232 of the Real Property Law, the cause of action being thus dependent, for practical purposes, upon the existence of the debt to Robert and the insufficiency of the father’s estate to meet it.

The plaintiff’s theory is that the debt is established by these firm entries, as a matter independent of actual partnership transactions, and so the proper subject of collection without a partnership accounting, and that the insolvency of the estate is apparent from the surrogate’s decree upon the accounting of the defendant Frederick as executor of his father whereby the assets are found to be about six thousand' dollars.

The defendant Frederick, to meet this claim of insolvency, interposes the sons’ agreement to make payments to the father at the rate of twelve thousand dollars a year for the period of nine years, which elapsed before the latter’s death, and asserts that this annuity agreement evidences an asset of [238]*238the estate, while the plaintiff contends that the agreement was satisfied by the application of the rents of the sons’ real estate (conveyed tb them by their father) to the father’s use during the period referred to, and that this was what the parties to that agreement actually intended. Upon the issue presented as to the presence or absence of an outstanding indebtedness to the father’s estate by virtue of the annuity agreement, I should be inclined to hold in favor of the plaintiff, since the inference is strong that the father had continuously enjoyed the rents of the property conveyed by him to his sons, and that- this was the actual intention of the parties as to the scope of performance.

Direct proof is afforded by the testimony of the attorney who advised the parties and drew the papers at the time of the transactions' of 1890, that the avowed purpose of the annuity agreement was to secure to the father the rents of the property, which were estimated to be about the amount named in the agreement, and, so far as appears from all the evidence reasonably available to the plaintiff, the rents were devoted to the use of the father as a matter of continuous system which excluded the sons from actual participation.

Had the annuity agreement been deemed a matter for strict and punctual observance, it is but reasonable to assume that some account of the condition of the annuity would have been preserved and available to the defendant as evidence. Some receipt or other paper expressing satisfaction of an instalment, or payment on account of an instalment, should be in existence, but nothing of the kind is produced, and the evidence of the actual use of the rents by the father with no further demand, apparently, during the life of the agreement, leads very strongly to the view that the understanding was as indicated by the testimony of the attorney, ' Mr. Holm.

Moreover, if further evidence be needed, it is afforded by the sworn statement in the account of the defendant Frederick, as executor, that he knew of no claims in favor of the estate other than those stated when omitting- any statement of a claim upon this agreement. If the agree[239]*239ment were deemed enforceable for arrears of the stated instalments, it is quite obvious that this individual (the sole survivor of the parties to it), would have known of the fact that there was a claim which it was his duty to assert, and there is no hardship in holding him to a position which, as a matter of fact, the evidence discloses to have been probably then well assumed.

In my view of the case the fact that every penny of the rents was not traced to the father’s benefit is not important. Where any record is available, the result is found to be that the father, not the sons, enjoyed these rents, and where the matter is made to rest upon probabilities in the similarity of items paid with items of withdrawal from the later bank account, in which the rents were deposited (the checks and stubs not being in existence), the same system of a continuous use of these rents by the father is clearly indicated.

My conclusion upon this question must be that the annuity agreement was satisfied in accordance with the parties’ practical construction of it, but still I cannot take the case to be sufficiently supported to justify the relief sought by the plaintiff.

Granting that the annuity agreement does not suffice to increase the estate of the defendant’s grantor of the premises in suit, constructive fraud in the conveyances is still an open question, while the amount of the grantor’s interest in the firm of Frederick W. Mertens & Sons remains undetermined. The value of this interest was expressly excluded and excepted from the finding of the value of Mr. Merten’s estate by the surrogate’s decree and it is impossible for the court to determine in this action what the amount of this outstanding asset may be, in advance of an adjudication in an action properly brought for the settlement of the partnership accounts. The plaintiff’s case depends upon proof of fraud, and where the fraud sought to be proven arises from an asserted insufficiency of the grantor’s assets to meet the creditor’s demand, without any previous resort by the creditor to the means afforded by law for the collection of the debt, as in the present case, the actual insufficiency of the assets becomes an essential fact which the plaintiff must [240]*240establish or fail in the action. By amendment of the answer the plaintiff’s allegation of the value of the estate- was placed in issue and there is no admission of the fact that the testator died insolvent. The accounting executor’s estimate of the value of the testator’s interest in the firm as six thousand seven hundred and ninety-nine dollars and two cents was not accepted by the surrogate when the parties were before him, and cannot well be given the force of an admission by the defendant individually for the purposes of this action.

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26 N.E. 621 (New York Court of Appeals, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 Misc. 235, 96 N.Y.S. 785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mertens-v-mertens-nysupct-1905.