Phœnix v. Dey

5 Johns. 412
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedFebruary 15, 1809
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 5 Johns. 412 (Phœnix v. Dey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phœnix v. Dey, 5 Johns. 412 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1809).

Opinion

Spencer, J.

By the decree of the court of chancery, in this case, all the conveyances, assignments, securities and payments, made by Ingraham, the bankrupt, to the appellant, or for his use, stated and set forth in the bill of complaint, and which were made subsequent to the 6th of October, 1800, are adjudged to be fraudulent and yoj^ as against the assignees of the bankrupt, and arq set aside, and the appellant is ordered to account for, and pay to the respondents all moneys received by him, being the proceeds of property, or securities so assigned, and to assign and reconvey such as had not been disposed of by him. The decree refers several things to the master, which it is not necessary for me to state.

In considering this case, I shall confine myself to the. examination of two points only.

1. Whether there was sufficient evidence to authorize, the conclusion, that Ingraham contemplated an act of bankruptcy, when he executed the conveyances, and made the assignments and payments to the appellant, which have been a (fudged fraudulent and void.

2. Whether, if Ingraham did, at that time, contemplate an act of bankruptcy, the application of the appellant to him for further security, and the giving the same accordingly, were not valid acts, notwithstanding a subsequent act of bankruptcy.

I shall not enter into a repetition of the various facts in the case, but shall notice such prominent ones, as are necessary to the consideration of the points proposed to be examined»

There is. one fact beyond all controversy, that the appellant had advanced to the bankrupt, at various times, large sums of money, and furnished him with his credit for other sums, which, eventually, the appellant had to pay. These advances began in May, 1798, and were continued down to the latter part of the year 1800. These loans appear to have proceeded from the relation which existed between the parties, the appellant being [425]*425the father-in-law of the bankrupt, who was doing business as a merchant, and whose exigencies seem to have required the appellant’s aid. The motives to the advances he made, may be considered as dictated by friendship, and with a view to aid the bankrupt in his business. The appellant stands before the court in a meritorious light, and will be protected in any security he may have legally acquired;.

The only evidence in chief, in the cause, on which the respondents can rest to make out that Ingraham contemplated an act of bankruptcy, when he gave the appellant the securities, attempted to be set aside, is his answer on oath, and the testimony of Ingraham, a witness on the part of the appellant.

The answer admits that the appellant believed Ingram hmn to be insolvent, about the time mentioned in the bill, which I presume to be the 6th of October, 1300, and that he did not, in consequence thereof, generally pay his notes at the bank, or elsewhere; it alleges that In-graham, until a short time before he was declared a bankrupt, always appeared solicitous to avoid doing anything that might be deemed an act of bankruptcy, and that Ingraham did not, to his knowledge or belief, commit an act of bankruptcy until February, 1801, and that the appellant did not know whether he had it in contemplation or not, at the times when the securities were given, to become a bankrupt.

The testimony of Ingraham states, that after the month of October, 1800, he continued to do business as a merchant, almost to the time when he was declared a bankrupt, and that he paid several notes and other debts to a large amount; that at the time of giving the moneys and securities to the appellant, he had no intention of becoming a bankrupt, nor did he make any such conveyances, assignments or payments in contemplation of bankruptcy.

[426]*426The most which- can be deduced from this evidence *S’ ^llSra^lain was insolvent; but it expressly rejects the idea that the acts done were in contemplation of bankruptcy. Reference has been had to the answer of Ingraham, and to the testimony of Dickson and Prime, .to impeach that part of his evidence, which denies that ' what he did to secure the appellant, was in contemplation of bankruptcy ; if it be admitted that his answer and the declarations he made, completely produce that effect, still the fact is to be made out affirmatively, that the preference given to the appellant, was in contemplation of bankruptcy : For no propositions can be clearer, than that the answer of one defendant is not evidence against his co-defendant; and that the declarations of a party to a sale or transfer, going to destroy and take away the vested rights of another, cannot, ex post facto, work that consequence, nor be regarded as evidence against the vendee or assignee. The book which Prime says Ingraham showed him in December, 1800, in which were the names of certain creditors who were his friends, and whom he said he had secured to a large amount, since his failure, as he was determined his friends should not suffer, stands upon the same principle ; for if the subsequent declarations of a party making a sale and transfer of his property are not evidence, surely the ex parte acts of such person cannot be evidence.

If then the ex post facto acts and declarations of In-graham, are not evidence against the appellant, and can only be used to impeach Ingraham’a testimony, admitting that testimony so far to be impeached, there is no evidence' of an aqt of bankruptcy contemplated, nor any circumstance from which to infer it, but the simple fact of In-graham’s insolvency ; and the court is without any evidence to show the nature and extent of this insolvency, and whether it was irretrievable and desperate, or not.

That an insolvency is no objection to giving a preference, unless it be shown that a bankruptcy was com-[427]*427t'emplated at the time, was decided in the supreme court, in the case of M'Menomy and Townsend v. Ferris. (3 Johns. Rep. 82.) That principle will be found admitted and acted upon, in a great variety of cases. It is founded upon the right which every man has to dispose of his property to whom he pleases, for an adequate consideration, and in satisfaction of his debts, until he commits an act of bankruptcy, or contemplates so to do; and where a part only of the insolvent’s estate is transferred for the payment of a just debt, though the act be voluntary on the part of the insolvent, the transaction is not, on that ground, impeachable.

I have hitherto supposed that Dickson and Prime were competent witnesses, and that their testimony had produced the effect of discrediting Ingraham, in that part of his testimony, which goes to deny that he contemplated bankruptcy, when he gave the appellant the securities for his debt. I do not propose to enter into a minute discussion of the question of their competency; because, if they were competent, and the fullest effect be given to their testimony, it does not go to make out the fact, that bankruptcy was contemplated, as it is not evidence in chief, Dickson appears to me to have been a competent witness ; his interest being remote and contingent. This is not the case with Prime ; he was a creditor of Ingraham’s, had proved his debt under the commission, and had a right to a distributive part of the bankrupt’s estate, and Iris testimony went directly to increase that fund. Prime’s

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Bluebook (online)
5 Johns. 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phnix-v-dey-nycterr-1809.