Rome Bank v. Eames

1 Keyes 588
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1 Keyes 588 (Rome Bank v. Eames) 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
Rome Bank v. Eames, 1 Keyes 588 (N.Y. 1864).

Opinion

.Weight,

J. The general exception in the case, if it raises any legal question to be reviewed here* is the single one, whether .the plaintiff’s judgment against Mrs. Eames is a debt, within the. -provisions of the trust deed, which the defendant Kirkland is bound to pay in the execution of the trust. Points, it is true, are now made that the deed is fraudulent and void as to the plaintiff’s creditors of Mrs. Eames, and that in any. view it was error to dismiss the complaint, as she had a valuable equitable -interest in what remained -of the -trust property which the. -plaintiffs were entitled to; but in-the complaint there was no allegation or pretense that the trust deed was for any reason fraudulent' or invalid, or that Mrs. Eames had any interest in the trust property applicable to the payment of the plaintiff’s debt, nor were there any facts found, or legal conclusions of the court, to which exception -was taken, .bringing up either point for review. -The plaintiffs treat the trust deed as valid in their complaint, -not seeking to impeach it, but claiming the benefit of it, as creditors' of Mrs. Eames, within the scope of the trust; and the judgment demanded is that the trustee pay the plaintiffs’ debt out of any trust funds in his hands, or transfer sufficient of the property to pay it. Instead of alleging, in the complaint that the trust deed was void as to them, or intended to.defraud creditors, the plaintiffs claimed a beneficial interest under it, and the pleading was not framed to reach' any. equitable interest of Mrs. Eames, if she had any, but to obtain payment of their debt from the funds . or estate remaining in-the -hands of .the trustee, on the ground that it was provided for in the deed. [592]*592It is a rule in chancery,'not affected by the Code, that a party must recover according to the case made by his complaint, or not at all; “ seoundem allegata ” as well as aprotata.” Mo decree can be made in favor of a plaintiff on grounds not stated in his complaint, nor relief granted for matters not charged, although they may be apparent from some part of the pleadings and evidence. (Kelsey v. Western, 2 Comst., 506; Ferguson v. Ferguson, 2 id., 160; Baily v. Rider, 6 Seld., 363; Thomas v. Carter, 4 Barb., 265; New York Protective Insurance Company v. National Insurance Company, 20 Barb., 473.) If it be as is claimed, that the deed was void as against the plaintiff’s judgment, for the reason that it was a conveyance by Mrs. Eames of her property in trust for her own use, or that it was made to hinder, delay, and defraud her creditors, these matters should have been alleged. Mot being alleged in the pleading, no proof of them could properly be received, or no judgment predicated upon them. (Chautaugua County Bank v. White, 2 Seld., 236; Baily v. Rider, supra.) Most clearly, when a party claims the benefit of a trust conveyance, treating it as valid in his complaint, and nowhere seeking to impeach it, he is not entitled to any relief on the ground that it is void or fraudulent, or intended to defraud creditors; and this is so although it may appear to be fraudulent or void on the pleadings and evidence. (Ontario Bank v. Root, 3 Paige, 478.)

In Barley v. Rider, a judgment creditor sought to have certain lands applied in payment of his demand, on the ground that the purchase of them was in trust for the benefit of Rider, the judgment creditor. The answer asserted, and the evidence showed, that the purchase and investment made was not for the benefit of Rider, but for his children. The complaint had gone solely upon the ground that the judgment debtor was the equitable owner of the lands, they having been purchased by his direction and with his money, and the title taken and held for his use and benefit by two other defendants. This being disproved, and the trust shown, being not for the judgment debtor but for his children, the plaintiff attempted to shift his claim for relief, [593]*593contending that the investment of the sum of $1,500 by the judgment debtor, although in trust for his children, was intended to defraud his creditors then existing, or that should thereafter exist; that it was in the nature of a voluntary conveyance to defraud creditors, and was, therefore, void as to such creditors. But this court said that a sufficient answer to this was that the plaintiff had made no such case by his bill. The court say: “ There is no allegation or suggestion in the bill that the investment made by Rider for the benefit of his children was voluntary or fraudulent as against his creditors. The only point which the bill attempts to put in issue in respect to these lands is, whether or not the purchase of them was in trust for the benefit of Rider; there is no allegation that if the character of the transaction was, in fact, nominally as set up by the defendants, that it was fraudulent. * If his (the plaintiff’s) rights depended upon the fact that the purchase and investment for the benefit of the children of Rider was fraudulent as against him, it should have been so alleged, for it is an invariable and universal rule of the Court of Chancery to found its decrees on some matter put in issue between the parties by the bill and answer. * * It makes no difference whether the defendant has by way of avoidance set up a distinct and independent fact, or merely denied the matters alleged in the bill. If the existence and truth of the facts thus set up by a defendant be controverted, the defendant must prove it, and the complainant may. examine witnesses to disprove it; but when the fact set up by a defendant is made out, either by proof or the admission of the complainant, and destroys his title to relief, it is not admissible for the complainant, after the fact is made out, to impeach it on a ground not taken in his bill, and on a ground not arising from the issue between the parties. * * * If the complainant’s rights depended upon showing that the creation and execution of the trust for the use and benefit of the children of William Rider was voluntary and fraudulent as against him, his course was plain. He should have amended his bill and stated the facts on which he meant to [594]*594impeach it. The defendants would have been required to answer such facts, and, if denied, it would then have been competent to have supported the allegations by proof. The rule is explicit and absolute that a party must recover in chancery according to the case made by his bill, or not at. all.” The doctrine of this case is in harmony with the law as it now exists, the Code providing that “ the relief granted to the plaintiff, if there be no answer, cannot exceed that which he shall have demanded in his complaint; but, in any other case, the court may grant him any relief consistent with the case made by the complaint and embraced within the issue.” (Code, § 275.) In the present case, the only relief that could have been granted “consistent with the complaint and embraced within the issue” was to direct the payment of the plaintiff’s judgment by the trustee as being a debt provided for m the trust deed itself. A decree setting aside the deed on the ground that it was fraudulent or void as against the plaintiffs, that they might subject the property in the hands of the defendant Kirkland to the payment of the judgment, would have been utterly inconsistent with' the case made by the complaint, and wholly without any issue raised by the pleadings.

Looking, therefore, at the matters charged, the issues raised • and tried, the facts found, the legal conclusions of the judge,

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Bluebook (online)
1 Keyes 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rome-bank-v-eames-ny-1864.