Sanford v. Deforest

84 A. 111, 85 Conn. 694, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 26, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 84 A. 111 (Sanford v. Deforest) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanford v. Deforest, 84 A. 111, 85 Conn. 694, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 188 (Colo. 1912).

Opinion

Hall, C. J.

The complaint in this action alleges that on December 4th, 1908, James A. Morris executed and delivered to the plaintiff a mortgage upon certain described real estate to secure the payment of a negotiable note of $1,000, given for money loaned, and payable one year from date; that Morris died, intestate, on the 20th of October, 1910; that the defendant is the administrator of his estate; that the mortgage was recorded November 8th, 1910; that by agreement of the parties the mortgaged property has been sold; and that the proceeds of the sale are held by the defendant to respond to the judgment that may be rendered in this action.

*696 The administrator, who is the sole defendant, filed an answer, alleging that at the time the mortgage was given, and up to the time of his death, Morris was insolvent, and that his estate has been represented and adjudicated insolvent, and is in process of settlement as an insolvent estate, and that, without said mortgaged property,- it will pay but a small percentage of the claims proved against it; that ever since the execution of the mortgage credit has been given Morris upon his record title to said property, and without knowledge of the existence of the plaintiff’s mortgage; that the plaintiff withheld the mortgage from record from said December 4th, 1908, until December 8th, 1910, at the request of Morris that she should temporarily withhold it from record. The defendant claimed in his answer that, for these reasons, the mortgage was void as against him, and as against the creditors of Morris, who had legally proved their claims against his estate.

To this answer the plaintiff demurred, upon the ground, in substance, that the facts therein alleged did not render the mortgage invalid as against the defendant.

The trial court overruled said demurrer, and, upon the refusal of the plaintiff to plead over, rendered judgment for the defendant. The overruling of the demurrer is in effect the only error assigned by the several reasons of appeal.

It is true, as the plaintiff claims, that the answer contains no averment that the plaintiff refrained from recording the mortgage for the purpose of defrauding or enabling Morris to defraud any person. But it appears that it was not so withheld from record by accident or mistake, but intentionally, and to accommodate Morris. She was chargeable with knowledge that, by reason of her failure to record the mortgage *697 for nearly two years after it was executed, the records did not disclose the true state of the title to the mortgaged property; and that after the execution of the mortgage, and before it was recorded, persons acting in good faith, and in reliance upon the record title, would be liable to be deceived to their injury, if the after-recorded mortgage could be enforced against them. Manifestly Morris desired that, for a time at least, the existence of this mortgage should not appear of record. The plaintiff knew this fact. Although acting in good faith, she aided Morris in his manifest purpose of concealing the existence of the mortgage from the record. However innocent such an act may be, it is not one which commends itself to a court of equity (Curtis v. Lewis, 74 Conn. 367, 372, 50 Atl. 878), and especially in actions against executors or administrators of insolvent estates to foreclose mortgages not recorded until after the death of the mortgagors whose estates are in process of settlement.

Our law regarding insolvent debtors (General Statutes, § 262) provides that “no transfer of property withheld from record for the purpose of concealing its existence . . . shall be of any effect against creditors, although such transfer may be recorded . . . before any proceedings in insolvency are instituted, by or against the party making such transfer”; and the settlement of insolvent estates of deceased persons by executors and administrators is, in many respects, quite similar to the settlement of estates by trustees in insolvency proceedings. Bassett v. McKenna, 52 Conn. 437, 439.

But we do not base our decision of this case upon the ground that the plaintiff was guilty of fraud, nor upon the ground that the mortgage in question was void under the provisions of § 262, but upon the well-established law of this State applicable to the duties *698 and powers of executors and administrators in the settlement of insolvent estates of deceased persons, and upon certain principles enunciated in recent decisions of this court regarding the effect of unreasonable, though not fraudulent, delay in the recording of deeds.

When property has been fraudulently conveyed, or conveyed by a deed not duly recorded, so that it may properly be taken for the payment of the debts of the grantor after his decease, it is the right and duty of his executor or administrator, if such property is needed for the payment of debts, to inventory it, and to institute all proper proceedings to appropriate it to that use. 1 Swift’s Digest, s. p. 277; Bassett v. McKenna, 52 Conn. 437, 439; Munger v. Doolan, 75 Conn. 656, 662, 55 Atl. 169; Andruss v. Doolittle, 11 Conn. 283.

Since such conveyances are good between the parties, and binding upon the heirs and devisees of the grantor, the title to the property thus inventoried and taken by the executors or administrators of such insolvent estates, beyond the equity of redemption in cases of mortgages, is not, strictly speaking, in the grantor at the time of his death. The property sought to be conveyed by such deeds is property which, as to the creditors of the grantor, may be treated as if no conveyance of it had been made, provided proper legal proceedings are taken to appropriate it to the satisfaction of the grantor’s or mortgagor’s debts. 1 Swift’s Digest, s. p. 277.

Such proper proceeding under our law, during the life of the grantor, is by attachment or execution levied upon the property, in an action by the creditor against the grantor duly pursued to final judgment. Owen v. Dixon, 17 Conn. 492, 498.

By the death of the grantor, his creditors are deprived of the power of reaching such property by attachment; and the law furnishes another method *699 of appropriating it for the payment of their debts, where it is needed for that purpose.

As we have shown, the law requires the executors and administrators to inventory it as a part of the insolvent estate; it permits them to bring all necessary actions to appropriate it to the benefit of creditors. It also gives to them, after they have lawfully obtained possession of it, the custody and control of it during the settlement of the estate, and gives to the Court of Probate the power to order the sale of such property, and provides for a distribution of the avails of such sale among creditors who have properly proved their claims. In so far as executors and administrators take part in such proceedings, they act as the agents of the law and the representatives of the creditors. In re Wilcox & Howe Co., 70 Conn. 220, 232, 39 Atl. 163; Newtown Savings Bank v. Lawrence,

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Bluebook (online)
84 A. 111, 85 Conn. 694, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanford-v-deforest-conn-1912.