Platt v. Schreyer

25 F. 83, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2209
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedSeptember 10, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 F. 83 (Platt v. Schreyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Platt v. Schreyer, 25 F. 83, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2209 (circtsdny 1885).

Opinion

Shipman, J.

This is a bill in equity, in behalf of the assignee in bankruptcy of John Schreyer, to set aside the conveyances of Nos. 348 and 350 West Thirty-ninth street, and of Nos. 351, 353, and 355 West Forty-second street, in the city of New York, on the ground that the conveyances were made by the bankrupt to his wife, through the intervention of a third person, in fraud of the bankrupt’s existing and subsequent creditors, and also to obtain two mortgages which were nominally made to the said wife, but which are alleged to have been and to be the property of the husband.

John Schreyer was a stair-builder, doing a large business in the city of New York from 1854 to February 15, 1876, when he ceased to work at his trade. Prior to 1871. he seems to have invested his profits in real estate, and on January 30, 1871, owned Nos. 351, 353, 355, West Forty-second street; 17, 19, 21, 23, West One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street; 348,350,West Thirty-ninth street; 424 West Fortieth street; 135 East Seventy-eighth street; and 73 West One Hundred and Twenty-seventh street, all in the city of New York. The buildings on One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street cost $28,000. The value of the whole property was not proven, but was probably large. The Thirty-ninth and Forty-second street properties have rented for $10,000 or $12,000 per annum.

On said January 30, 1871, said John Schreyer conveyed, through Edward Sharkey, to Ms wife, Anna Maria Schreyer, all said estate except 135 East Seventy-eighth street and 73 West Ono Hundred and Twenty-seventh street. No. 135 East Seventy-eighth street was conveyed, through said Sharkey, by said Jolm Schreyer to his said wife on February 11, 1871. On April 23, 1871, said John Schreyer conveyed 73 West One Hundred and Twenty-seventh street to Edward Sharkey, said Sharkey executing an instrument of trust by which he agreed to hold said property in trust for John and Anna Maria Schreyer. Subsequently said Sharkey died, and on May 29, 1873, William H. Leonard was appointed trustee, and was directed by decree of court to convey said lot to Anna Maria Schreyer, which was done July 25,1873. By these various deeds John Schreyer conveyed [84]*84to his wife all his real estate and all his property, except the machinery, tools, and appliances, and personal property belonging to his stair-building business, the accounts due him, and his balance in bank.

• The only testimony in regard to the consideration for these conweyances, and the only oral testimony in regard to the pecuniary condition of John Schreyer, at the time they were made, comes 'from ■Schreyer himself. I am not favorably,impressed with the truthfulness of his testimony. I disbelieve much of it; but, as he is the only witness, it is difficult to state with positiveness the exact line of demarkation between truth and misrepresentation. He and his wife were married in 1854. His theory is that at the time of their marriage she had $3,000 in money; that Nos. 348 and 350 West Thirty-ninth street, then known as^Nos. 228 and 230, then belonged to the “Rapalyea Estate,” and, as was also the case with other lands of said estate, were leased for a small annual rent to persons who built thereon small frame houses or shanties; that she bought for $1,000 the leasehold interest of the lessees in Nos. 228 and 230, rented apart of them, .and thereafter collected the rents, which she loaned to her husband. 'They lived in a part of No. 228. That she loaned him also, soon after their marriage,, $1,500, which he did not pay; that she took two of her husband’s workmen to board, and loaned the board money to her husband; that in 1869, the lots Nos. 228 and 230 were sold by the Rapalyea estate to John Schreyer, and that he owed her, in round numbers, at that time—

The original capital, - - - - - - - $ 2,500

Rents, - .- - - - - - - 10,000

Board money, ------- - 5,000

$17,500

That this money was equitably or legally due from the husband to the wife, and formed the nucleus of all the property which he owned in 1871, and that he thought it right to make over his property to her for the'benefit of herself and their children. Nothing was due from the husband to the wife on account of the board money of the workmen who boarded in their family. This money and the rents were delivered to the husband, who deposited the same with his other moneys in his own name in bank, and used all said deposits alike.

If the statements in regard to the ownership and investment of $2,500 by the wife in 1854 are true, the course of dealing and of life between the parties show that there was no indebtedness in 1871 from husband to wife. The conveyances to her were voluntary and without any substantial pecuniary consideration. On January 30, 1871, John Schreyer was considerably indebted by mortgages upon his real •estate. The amount did not appear. Mechanics’liens upon the West One Hundred Twenty-sixth street property to the amount of $12,437.65 were filed against said property, and against him as the owner thereof. [85]*85Most, if not all, of these liens were for unpaid work done by subcontractors for the principal contractors. At this time Schreyer vas troubled and annoyed with these lions, some of which were for larger sums than were due. He thought, for some reason or other, that ho would be better off, and that his existing creditors would be impeded, hindered, and delayed, if he placed his real estate in his wife’s name, and he also made the conveyances with the purpose to defraud any future creditors whom he might have, and as a cover for future schemes of fraud. The conveyances were a sham and subterfuge, .and his wife’s ownership of these properties was a pretense. lie managed and disposed of them after the conveyances, received tlio rents, •deposited the same in his own name, and built houses in the same manner as before. He built houses in 1872 upon 348 and 350 West Thirty-ninth street, costing $20,000, with his own money. All said conveyances were made without substantial consideration, for the purpose of hindering, delaying, and impeding his existing creditors, and for the purpose of defrauding future creditors, and were fictitious, and known both to the grantor and grantee to be made merely for the purpose of giving her the nominal title, while the entire beneficial interest was to be and was retained by the grantor, so that future creditors might be defrauded.

In 1874 said John Schreyer, in the name of Anna M. Schreyer, •agreed with George Gebhard and Matthew L. Ritchie to advance the money, and to build front houses upon the lots 420 and 422 West Fortieth street, which had been conveyed to said Gebhard and Ritchie, respectively, by said John Schreyer before 1871. The money was advanced by him, and the work was done under his direction, and, when the houses were finished, a mortgage on No. 420, dated July 3 7, 1874, to secure the sum of $7,750, the amount due said Schreyer by said Gebhard, was given to Anna M. Schreyer by said Gebhard and bis wife; and on the same day a mortgage op No. 422 to secure the sum of $8,850, the amount due said John Schreyer by said Ritchie, was given to Anna M. Schreyer by said Ritchie and his wife. These two mortgages belonged to and were the property of John Schreyer, though nominally in the name of his wife, and were executed in the name of Anna M. Schreyer, in furtherance and in pursuance of the same scheme of "fraud which was entered into in 1871. Peter-J.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. 83, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/platt-v-schreyer-circtsdny-1885.