Savage v. Murphy

8 Bosw. 75
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedMarch 9, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 8 Bosw. 75 (Savage v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Savage v. Murphy, 8 Bosw. 75 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1861).

Opinion

Robertson, J.

As this case comes before us on an appeal from a decision of a single judge at special term, questions of fact as well as of law are before us for review, on the evidence appearing upon the trial. (Code, § 268.) The plaintiff in it, who is receiver of the property of the defendant George Murphy, as a judgment debtor, seeks to set aside certain voluntary conveyances by such debtor to two of his children, the defendants Edward and Ann Maria Murphy. The judgment on which the plaintiff was appointed receiver, was for a debt incurred after such conveyances were executed. Certain facts found by the judge, ■ by whom the cause was tried, were specified in his decision.

The defendants’ counsel excepted to the finding by the court of the following facts, viz.: That the property included in the conveyances in question constituted, at the time of their execution, all the property of the judgment debtor. That the only consideration for each of such conveyances was one dollar. That he was in debt Avhen they were executed. That there was no actual, permanent and visible change of possession of the property conveyed. That such conveyances were made with a vieAv to a continued and future indebtedness in his business, and with the intention of avoiding payment thereof, and that they were made with the intent to hinder, delay and defraud creditors, and in particular those on whose claims such judgments were recovered, of their claims.

As to the property conveyed being all the property of the judgment debtor, the complaint charges and the answer does not deny it, and the evidence only establishes that all the other property he at any time had was cattle, bought weekly on credit, to be paid for in a week after it [80]*80was bought. The question of consideration is immaterial, although the conveyances speak for themselves; only nominal considerations are mentioned in them, and natural affection was insufficient to sustain them against creditors. The indebtedness of Murphy to Carey, one of the witnesses at the time of executing such conveyances, of nearly $1,400, was fully proved by the uncontradicted evidence of the latter.

There is, however, it is true, some proof of change of possession of the triangular piece of land used for a yard to the dwelling-house of Murphy and an alley to his slaughter-house, and containing a hide shed; also of the premises on the opposite side of the way; and if the case turned upon such want of possession alone, or the conveyances of such parts stood alone, they might escape any claim of the plaintiff. But as the finding upon such possession is not indispensable to the judgment, and the decision is not made to rest on it, it may be laid out of view in disposing of the case.

There was sufficient evidence that the conveyances controverted contemplated a future continued indebtedness by the grantor in his business, and an intent to avoid its payment. He was in debt when he executed them, conducted his business afterwards entirely on credit, remaining all the time largely indebted to different creditors, and finally succumbed under a load of debt. The conveyances to his wife, son and daughter, were made suddenly and without communication with them. The only pretense for conveying to his son was to reclaim him from the vice of intoxication; a strange remedy, whose first application was not able to effect his cure. He conveyed to his minor daughter the house in which he lived, to prevent her from being dissatisfied with the conveyance to his son; for the conveyance to his wife he furnished no explanation. The first conveyance to his son not having effected his cure, he executed a second six months after-wards, of another piece of property, which completed it. There was no time from thenceforwards when the judg[81]*81ment debtor was free from debt. At the time of his failure it had increased to $3,800, and there is no evidence that he then had any assets left. These facts alone are sufficient, were there no others to warrant the conclusion that the judgment debtor executed the conveyances to deprive future creditors of the means which he then had to pay them, intending to carry on a speculative trade, and leave them at the mercy of his future failure. Ho confessions of the judgment debtor, at any time under such circumstances, would be necessary to complete proof of his intent to defraud his creditors by such conveyances.

One exception to the findings of the judge at special term was, his omission to find that the assertions of Murphy, the debtor, made after the conveyances, are no evidence of a previous intention on his part to defraud his creditors, and that such subsequent assertions could not and did not affect the validity of the prior conveyances. The decision is silent as to any effect of such assertions. There is no evidence in the case that the defendant claimed any such principle on the trial, or that the attention of the court was drawn to it by their counsel. Hor is there any evidence in the record that the judge did not adopt it, unless an opinion delivered by him can be invoked to prove it. It would seem rather anomalous to complain of a failure to decide what had not been required to be decided.

The Code does not admit of exceptions to opinions; as they have been held not to affect decisions, (Titus v. Orvis, 16 N. Y. R., 617), they certainly ought not to be employed to overturn them; where no other mode of arriving at the decision is pointed out, they may act as guides in exhibiting an error; they never have the formal exactness of a judgment or decision, and should not be held to the same strictness. In this case, the clause in the opinion cited to show an error in the reasoning of the court, or the rules adopted by it, is fully susceptible, without straining, of such an interpretation as allows the evidence to have been considered in a proper light.

[82]*82On the trial, the testimony of Endlong, a witness for the plaintiff, was given, to the effect that after the conveyances by Murphy, the latter said he had made them because he was afraid of losing his property, and wanted to save it for his family. This does not seem to be a very dangerous admission, as it is fair to assume that a similar motive must actuate every person in making a settlement; but its office was expressly confined on the trial to* the impeachment of Murphy, who had sworn to innocent or different motives in executing the conveyances. In the opinion now under examination, the learned judge observes : “ The defendant swears he did not intend to defraud his creditors, but to retrieve his son. One witness swears that he expressly declared he was apprehensive of losses, and meant to keep the property for his family. It is his intent, proven by his declarations and acts, which is to govern the case.” There can be no doubt of every proposition contained in this observation; yet this is claimed to be a statement that the court admitted Murphy’s admissions, not merely to contradict his testimony, but to make out, primarily, fraud in his transfers of property. But it only needs the insertion of a few words supplying the ellipsis in the reasoning, to make it a logical answer to deductions of fairness drawn from Murphy’s testimony. It is, substantially, that the defendant had testified to one motive; another witness testified that he admitted a different one; he must be judged by his intent, as proven by his declarations and acts, not by his oath as to that intent.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Bosw. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savage-v-murphy-nysuperctnyc-1861.