Talcott v. Levy

20 N.Y.S. 440
CourtThe Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo
DecidedJuly 11, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 N.Y.S. 440 (Talcott v. Levy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talcott v. Levy, 20 N.Y.S. 440 (superctny 1892).

Opinion

McAdam, J.

The bill was filed by a judgment creditor to set aside as fraudulent two deeds of premises Ho. 170 East Hinety-Fifth street, in the city of Hew York,—one made by the judgment debtor to Mahlke Charmaek, [441]*441July 9, 1888, and the other made by Charmack to Rebecca Levy, the wife of the judgment debtor, July 10,1888. The conveyances were subject to a $10,-000 mortgage, and the property was worth about $14,000. The transfers were made without consideration, and for the pui'pose of putting the title in Rebecca Levy, Charmack acting as a mere conduit. The conveyances, if they rested upon these facts, would have to be set aside, but the explanation ■offered requires serious thought before reaching that conclusion. It appears that the judgment debtor, on February 17, 1888, while doing a prosperous business, and before the debt was contracted for which judgment went against him, executed and delivered a deed of the realty in question to his wife, Rebecca, intending to make a gift of the property to her. The deed was not put upon record, because the defendant was advised that a deed executed from a husband direct to his wife was void, and, following this advice, the two deeds in question were subsequently executed and recorded in confirmation of what had been done before. This feature requires us to review the entire transaction, and to construe the three deeds as links in one chain, that the strength of all may be tested together. Separate ownership by the wife is now possible, and she may take the legal title to personal property, (even a transfer of the purchaser’s interest in a contract for the sale of land) by gift direct from her husband. Fruhauf v. Bendheim, 127 N. Y. 590, 28 N. E. Rep. 417; Kelly v. Campbell, 2 Abb. Dec. 492. A husband honestly indebted to his wife may give to her a chattel mortgage to secure the debt, although he is at the time ■of executing it unable to pay all his debts in full. Spaulding v. Keyes, 125 N. Y. 113, 26 N. E. Rep. 15. As to real estate the rule is somewhat different. Thus, in White v. Wager, 25 N. Y. 328, it was held that a deed executed by a wife to her husband was ineffectual to pass title. To the same effect is Winans v. Peebles, 32 N. Y. 423, in which case it was held that the deed might, however, be established in equity where a consideration had been paid. In Hunt v. Johnson, 44 N. Y. 27, the conveyance was by the husband to the wife, and the court, referring to White v. Wager, supra, said: “That case differs from the present action in this: that it was a conveyance by the wife to the husband; this was by the husband to the wife. They do not necessarily stand on the same basis in equity. It is the duty of the husband to provide an assured and comfortable support for his wife during his life, and after his death. No duty rests upon the wife to provide for the husband. * * * An application of the husband’s property for her comfort is eminently equitable, and has been favored by the courts from their earliest existence.” In Dean v. Railroad Co., 119 N. Y. 540, 23 N. E. Rep. 1054, it was held that, prior to the passage of the act of 1887, c. 537, a deed of lands from husband to wife, or from wife to husband, was void, and did not operate to divest the grantor of title, unless founded upon valuable or meritorious consideration, such as would enable a court of equity to sustain it. This case, like White v. Wager, supra, was, in the language of the court in Hunt v. Johnson, 44 N. Y., at page 35, “well decided upon its facts, and that without trenching upon the well-settled powers of the court to afford equitable relief in a proper case, and when presented by the parties entitled to ask for it. ” Winans v. Peebles, supra, was decided upon the ground that, the deed from the wife to the husband “being wholly without consideration, a court of equity would not interfere to sustain it.”

The deed executed by the judgment debtor to his wife, Rebecca, on February 17, 1888, being after the act of 1887, c. 537, expressly authorizing such transfers, was good both at law and ii) equity; and, being founded on love, affection, and the obligation to support his wife and family, might have been held valid as against all but existing creditors, if it had been placed on record at the time of its delivery to her, and if the grantee, in her answer, had pleaded its execution and delivery. See, also, Laws 1892, c. 594, authorizing a married woman to enter into any compact with her husband, which act is [442]*442supposed to destroy the'last remnant of marital disability to contract. Bump,, in his work on Fraudulent Conveyances, at page 82, says: “A deed, not at first fraudulent, may become so by being concealed, because by its concealment persons may be induced to give credit to the grantor. In such a case the use that is made of it relates back, and shows the intent with which it was made. The omission to place a deed on record, or leaving it in the hands-of the grantor, or placing it in the hands of a third person, to be produced or suppressed according as exigencies may demand, are instances of secrecy under, the rule," (citing cases.)

It will not do to leave title apparently in one, while it is, in fact, in another. This is out of the ordinary course of business, unnecessary, and directly tends to the injury of those not in the secret. Conveyances to the-wife, kept off record, cannot be sustained where the grantor yet continues in possession without any apparent change of ownership. In such case the-fraud consists in the design to obtain credit by means of continued possession and apparent ownership, after attempting to place the legal title of his property beyond the reach of creditors. Savage v. Murphy, 34 N. Y. 508, affirming 8 Bosw. 75; Case v. Phelps, 39 N. Y. 164. Such secret transfers have-a direct tendency to induce persons to credit the apparent owner on the faith of his continued ownership, and, where they are made without any new consideration, they should not, in justice to creditors, be upheld to their prejudice. As was said by the court of appeals in Neuberger v. Keim, (N. Y. App.) 31 N. E. Rep. 268: “The rule we regard as well stated by Mr. Justice-Brewer in the case of Schreyer v. Scott, 134 U. S. 411, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 579: ‘It is evident that the rule obtaining in New York, as well as recognized by this court, is that even a voluntary conveyance from husband to wife is good, as against subsequent creditors, unless it was made with intent to defraud such subsequent creditors, or there was secrecy in the transaction by which, knowledge of it was withheld from such creditors, who dealt with the granr tor upon the faith of his owning the property transferred, or the transfer was made with the view to entering into some new and hazardous business, the-risk of which the grantor intended should be cast upon the parties having-dealings with him in a new business.’ See, also, Todd v. Nelson, 109 N. Y. 316, 327, 16 N. E. Rep. 360.”

It is not contended that the failure to record a deed is conclusive evidence of fraud, but that, unexplained, it is a suspicious and strong circumstance tending to prove fraudulent intent. Warner v. Gillette, 15 Wkly. Dig, 153; Brockaway v. Fleming, 22 Wkly. Dig. 430. The difficulty with the-explanation offered here is that it strikes at the integrity and validity of the-deed itself.

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Related

White v. Benjamin
23 N.Y.S. 981 (Superior Court of New York, 1893)
Talcott v. Levy
23 N.Y.S. 1162 (Superior Court of New York, 1893)

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.Y.S. 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talcott-v-levy-superctny-1892.