Schneider v. Altman
This text of 16 Abb. N. Cas. 312 (Schneider v. Altman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
It appears from the record that the defendant, a judgment debtor, was under examination in proceedings supplementary to execution, and that while being examined the fact was disclosed that he had made a general assignment to one Charles Cass, for the benefit of his creditors. Upon such disclosure the defendant’s counsel objected to any and all questions “ relating back prior to the filing of the assignment.” The objection was sustained, the court, holding that “ the examination must be limited to property acquired since the assignment,” to which an exception was taken, and this ruling and exception is now presented for review.
It is quite clear that as to property acquired prior to the assignment, an examination could only furnish proof of its fraudulent disposition, and the judgment creditor would, in one sense, be securing evidence and not property, and as this court possesses no equitable jurisdiction, and could not entertain a suit to set the assignment aside, the judgment creditor could secure no advantages in this tribunal, and for economic reasons the examination has frequently been restricted to after acquired property.
[314]*314I am unable, however, to see how this course can be sustained upon any legal or equitable principle. It is well settled in the court of common pleas that “no examination will be allowed which seeks to set aside the assignment, and will only be permitted where it is in aid of it.” The examination should not extend to an inquiry as to whether the preferences are fraudulent, or as to whether assignors, either in making the assignment or in transactions anterior to the assignment, did any act that was fraudulent in fact or fraudulent in contemplation of law. No inquiry as to what the assignors, prior to the assignment, did with the borrowed money or with their own property should be permitted (In re Rindskopf,
All the othér courts of record in this department allow such an examination (Seligman v. Wallach,
Property fraudulently conveyed to a general assignee involving fraudulent preferences and fictitious debts is still in equity the property of the judgment debtor, and its discovery under such circumstances is not the discovery of evidence, but the actual discovery of property, and its recovery is solely a question of practice and procedure which is but a mere incident. A general assignment is simply a personal disposition of property, and the law has thrown about it- no special safeguard. The property so conveyed is subject to the claims and demands of creditors in any form or method of proceeding which they may institute to reach it, and to protect a fraudulent debtor in such concealment has, in my opinion, no warrant or justification in law. The case of Lathrop v. Clapp (40 N. Y. 328), [316]*316cited by appellants, presents this question fully and conclusively.
It may be irksome for this court to allow these examinations with full knowledge that the court can grant no relief for its recovery, by reason of its want of equity jurisdiction, but this furnishes no sufficient reason why its litigants should be deprived of their right to discover the property of a judgment debtor, however concealed or transferred. The method by which the judgment creditor shall secure its possession, is, in my view of the case, a subject wholly foreign to the question at issue. Such an examination clearly tends to discover the judgment debtor’s property, and that fact is sufficient to justify the question asked in the case at bar, and all other similar questions.
Order reversed, with costs to appellants.
Reported post, p. 316.
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