Shaffer v. Martin

25 A.D. 501, 49 N.Y.S. 853
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 25 A.D. 501 (Shaffer v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaffer v. Martin, 25 A.D. 501, 49 N.Y.S. 853 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinions

Ward, J.:

The trial court made full and exhaustive findings of fact, among which was the following: That the bill of sale above set forth was “executed and delivered by said defendants Richard Curran and Frances T. Goler, and was received and accepted by said defendants George H. King, Rosa R. King and Sabina C. Martin with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the just creditors of the said defendants Richard Curran- and Frances T. Goler of their lawful "claims, debts and demands, and particularly to so hinder, delay and defraud the judgment creditors and the other creditors of said partnership, and that said defendants. (Curran and Goler) have no other property than that attempted to be conveyed by. said ,bill of sale" out of which the judgments above set forth (the ones against the firm) can be collected ■; ” that no testimony was offered upon the trial to prove that Richard Curran was ever appointed guardian for his children ;. that neither the defendant Frances T. Goler nor her husband nor any other agent of hers knew the source from which the $2,700 had been derived at the time it was contributed to the partnership capital by Richard Curran, nor did they have such knowledge prior to the year 1894, or know that said sum belonged to any trust [505]*505fund; that Richard Curran was the tenant by the curtesy, after the death of his first wife, in the house and lot condemned for public purposes, and after its sale was entitled to the use of the fund realized therefrom, and that he never executed a consent to take a gross sum on account of such tenancy.

It is apparent that the consideration of the bill" of sale consisted of two elements :

First, a claim of the defendant Sabina 0. Martin growing out of the fact that in 1882 Richard Curran, one of the partners of the firm of Curran & Goler, upon an arrangement with the other partner, Frances T. Goler, through her husband, George H. Goler, put the $2,700 into the firm to increase its capital.

This money had been deposited in a bank in Rochester by Richard Curran, and was a part of a fund received from the city of Rochester in condemnation proceedings whereby a house and lot was taken for public use, the title to which was vested in the first wife of Richard Curran, and upon her death had vested in Sabina C. Martin and her three sisters subject to a life estate of Richard Curran. This $2,700 and interest on the same from January 1,1883, until the execution of the bill of sale, amounted to $4,618.83, which went into the consideration of the bill of sale expressed at $7,300, thus including as a consideration in the bill of sale about $2,000 of interest upon the amount paid into the firm by Richard Curran. The other element consisted of debts dué to the defendant Rosa King in the sum. of $886.75, and to George H. King in the sum of $1,794.42, making the balance of the consideration up to the amount stated in the bill of sale.

It is conceded in the case that the claims of the Kings were just debts against the firm. The defendants’ first difficulty lies in the fact that about $2,000 of the consideration of this instrument consisted in interest upon "or use of the $2,700 claimed by the defendant Martin, which was never- the property of Richard Curran’s children, but belonged to Richard Curran himself as the tenant by the curtesy in the real estate from which the money was realized. And where land in which one has an interest as tenant by the curtesy is sold, the moneys obtained therefor represent the land, and the tenant by the curtesy is, in any event, entitled to interest thereon during his life. (Matter of Petition of Camp, 126 N. Y. 377.)

[506]*506The testimony in the case shows that the property transferred by the bill of sale was of the value from $7,000 to $8,000, an amount evidently, in the estimation of the parties to the bill of sale, sufficient to pay the debts which made up its consideration. The effect of - this transaction is that $2,000 of the consideration, the property of one of the firm, is turned over to one of his children and his creditors deprived of it—an element sufficient of itself to taint the transaction with fraud. Eliminating the $2,000 from the consideration and we have the children of one of the partners and two favored creditors obtaining the property for $2,000 less than its' value, which is a strong indicia of fraud upon the other creditors. ■

But the respondent claims that not only the interest on the $2,700 was fictitious and fraudulent, but that the principal itself did not form a valid consideration for the bill of sale, for the reason that the children did not become the creditors of the firm nor was any trust upon the property of the firm impressed in their favor, because the evidence, fairly.considered, establishes that neither Mrs. Goler. nor her husband had any notice or knowledge, at the time that this money was put into the firm, that it belonged to the children or that' it was other than the money of Richard Curran. The appellants contend that the other partner had notice of the character of this fund, but that if she did not "have such notice, as the money was put in for the benefit of the firm, the knowledge of Curran was the knowledge of the firm.

We will first consider the legal question raised and then the question of fact as to -the notice.

Long ago Lord Chancellor Thurlow said in Ex parte Apsey (3 Brown Ch. Cas. 265): “ Here, one, by abusing his trust, advances money to the partnership, that will not raise a contract between the partnership and the person whose money it is.”

In Jaques, Assignee, etc., v. Marquand (6 Cow. 497) the principle was laid down that a partner who holds money in his individual right in trust for another cannot subject the firm to an action for the money by applying it to the use of the firm without the knowledge or privity of the other member or members of the firm; otherwise where it is applied with their knowledge or privity.. And also held that where a partner borrows money on his individual credit, and afterwards applies it to the payment of partnership debts or

[507]*507lends it to the firm, this does not make the original lender a creditor of the firm. ■ The court in that case fortified its position by reference to a large number of English cases and this case has been followed without substantial dissent in this State. (Hollembaek, Trustee, etc., v. More, 44 N. Y. Super. Ct. 107; Willett v. Stringer, 17 Abb. Pr. 152; Tallmadge v. Penoyer, 35 Barb. 120,126, and cases cited ; Denton v. Merrill, 43 Hun, 228.)

And the same doctrine is asserted in the American and English Encyclopaedia of Law, volume 17, page 1071, and cases cited in note 3, 1st edition.

Ho privity could be established between the children of Curran and the firm as to this $2,700 until its payment was adopted by the firm with the knowledge and assent of all its members, and until thus in equity the relation of debtor and creditor was established between the children and the firm.

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Bluebook (online)
25 A.D. 501, 49 N.Y.S. 853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaffer-v-martin-nyappdiv-1898.