Shultz v. . Hoagland

85 N.Y. 464, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 108
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 14, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 85 N.Y. 464 (Shultz v. . Hoagland) 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
Shultz v. . Hoagland, 85 N.Y. 464, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 108 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The validity of the general assignment made ‘by Hoagland & Son, for the benefit of creditors, was assailed upon the ground of fraud. The Special Term upheld it, as honest and fair, because not satisfied from the evidence that it was executed with an intent to hinder, delay or defraud the creditors of the assignors. Upon appeal, the General Term reversed this decision, having reached an opposite conclusion upon the question of fraudulent intent. Since the reversal by the latter court is certified to have been upon questions of fact, as well as upon questions of law, the inquiry whether this assignment is proved to have been made with an actual fraudulent intent is open to our review, unrestrained even by the findings of the' trial judge. (Godfrey v. Moser, 66 N. Y. 250.)

The case furnishes no exception to the rule that fraud is to be proved and not presumed. (Grover v. Wakeman, 11 Wend. 188.) It is seldom, however, that it can be directly proved, and usually is a deduction from other facts which naturally and logically indicate its existence. Such facts, nevertheless, must be of a character to warrant the inference. It is not enough that they are ambiguous, and just as consistent with innocence as with guilt. That would substitute suspicion as the equivalent of proof.. They must not be, when taken together and aggregated, when interlinked and put in proper relation to each other, consistent with an honest intent. If they are, the proof of fraud is wanting.

The evidence also must ascertain and' establish the assignor’s intent at the time of the execution of the instrument. As *468 was said in Hardman, v. Bowen (39 N. Y. 200), “ If the assignment was valid in creation, having been honestly and properly executed and. delivered, no subsequent illegal acts, either of omission or commission, can in any manner invalidate it.” But this rule must be taken as not intended to deny that such subsequent acts may reflect light back' upon the original intent, and help us 'to discern that correctly.

The facts relied npon as indicating the fraudulent intent, in this case are, in substance, as follows: That the assignee selected was the son-in-law of one of the assignors, and resided with him; that such assignee was preferred as. a creditor to an amount equal to one-fifth of the assets; that four large items of property, owned by the assignors, were not placed upon the schedules, or their existence disclosed; that at least one of these was afterward retained by the assignors for their own use and benefit; and that these circumstances of suspicion pressed upon the assignors for an explanation consistent with honesty of purpose, but no such explanation was given. Substantially this is the case made by the attacking creditors, and which led the General Term to the inference of a fraudulent intent..

The relationship of assignor and assignee, and their intimacy and friendship, and the preference given to the latter as a creditor prove nothing by themselves. They are consistent with honesty and innocence,, and become only important when other circumstances,, indicative of fraud, invest them with a new character and purpose, and transform them from equivocal and ambiguous facts into positive badges of fraud. Qur attention, therefore, must be concentrated at first upon the other circumstances relied upon, and their extent and importance determined. . ' ' •

The assignment purported, on its face, to transfer all the property of the insolvents. Its schedules annexed amounted, therefore, to a representation that their contents disclosed all the property of the assignors, with nothing omitted, or concealed and hidden. Such a representation would have some influence and effect upon creditors. Its tendency would be to *469 disarm their suspicions, and induce them to rest quiet in the. belief that the debtor had devoted all his property to the payment of his debts. If, now, that representation was false to a material extent, and consciously and purposely so, the inference of a fraudulent intent could hardly be avoided. The intentional omission, calculated to deceive, and to- lull into slumber and inactivity the interest and diligence of the creditor, would plainly argue a fraudulent purpose. Hot so, however, if shown to have been unintentional, and the result of accident or oversight. It would be hard to find any schedules absolutely perfect, or any debtor who could inventory every item of his property with strict accuracy. Room must be allowed for honest mistake, and possibly even for careless and thoughtless error; but, where the omission cannot thus be explained or excused, the inference of a fraudulent intent must follow.

The omissions in the present ease were four in number, and consisted of a bond and mortgage for the sum of $1,000; a balance on deposit in the Greenwich Bank of $33.03; a balance in the Freedman’s Savings Bank of $3,000; and a balance in the People’s Bank of $434.02. As to the first two items, the assignors allege that they were omitted from the schedules inadvertently and by mistake, but were, in fact, delivered to the assignee. The sum in the Greenwich Bank was small, and the bond and mortgage alleged to be of -little value. Ho proof of that fact was -given because the evidence to show it was excluded, upon the objection of the creditor. The mortgage was on record ifi Richmond county, where the land was situated, and ran to the defendant Hoagland, openly and by name. It was delivered to the assignee at the time of the assignment. The assignor so swears explicitly, and there is no contradiction of his evidence in this respect. The small balance in the Greenwich Bank was drawn by the assignee upon a check furnished him for that purpose by the assignor, on the 24th of September, 1878, about a fortnight after the making of the assignment^ and the day after the schedules were verified by' the affidavit and signatures of the assignors. These explanatory facts substantially relieve the *470 case from a suspicion of intentional fraud or concealment as to the items under consideration. They were not withheld from the assignee; they went fairly into the assets; their surrender repels suspicion, and we are justified in the belief that their omission from the schedules was, as the answers allege, the result of mistake and inadvertence. So far, both the Special and General Terms are in accord with our conclusions.

The claim upon the Freedmen’s Bank has a different explanation. The answers put in issue the ownérship of any such claim by the assignors at the date of the assignment. The proof leaves- that fact in doubt. The assignor first says that he had such a claim when the schedules were filed, but afterward, when asked about the amount of the dividends, says: “ In my supplementary proceedings I could not state, but I found out since that it was so valuable that I drew what I had in the book and gave it to my wife"— a present of it — she has got it — got the bank-book.” Precisely what this means we do not know. Neither side inquired, probably for the reason that the claim was valueless, as afterward appeared. It was admitted that the bank had become insolvent and passed into the hands of commissioners to close up its affairs, by whom two dividends had been paid to the assignor, -Hoagland, before his assignment. The balance was probably valueless.

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Bluebook (online)
85 N.Y. 464, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shultz-v-hoagland-ny-1881.