Van Wyck v. Seward

18 Wend. 198
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 18 Wend. 198 (Van Wyck v. Seward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Wyck v. Seward, 18 Wend. 198 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1837).

Opinion

After advisement, the following opinions were delivered :

By Justice Bronson.

[377] The parties are agreed in relation to the most material facts of this case, which will be found to lie within a narrow compass. In November, 1817, William Seward contracted an obligation to the appellant, on which his .responsibility, as subsequently ascertained "by the judgment, amounted to nearly $3000. Seward at this time owned a farm worth, according to the estimate of General Brush, the only witness on that subject, about $11,000, and personal property worth about $1000, besides two bonds amounting to a fraction over $2900 ; and owed no debt, save his obligation to the appellant. About five months after making the covenant with the appellant, Seward gave all his estate, real and personal, to his children, except the two bonds. One of the bonds he afterwards gave to his son Philander—what became of the other, does not appear. About four years after the gift, Seward died, totally destitute of property. The appellant had, in the mean time, recovered his judgment, issued execution, and become the purchaser of the farm, for the sum of $2500. He has obtained no actual satisfaction of the judgment, or of any part of it. The question to be decided is, which of these patties has the better legal right. Shall the appellant be paid his debt, or shall the' defendants enjoy the gift, while the creditor of the donor loses his demand ? For the honor of the law, I trust there can be no great diversity of opinion on such a question. If the defendants are entitled to the decree which has been made in their favor, it must either be on the ground that there is some controlling fact beyond the outline which has been drawn, or because our jurisprudence comes lamentably short of attaining the ends of substantial justice.

Before examining the questions which legitimately belong to this controversy, it may be proper to notice some others which have been urged upon our con iideration. While it is the privilege of counsel to present the cause of their [200]*200client in its best aspect, it is the business of the court to discriminate between truth and error, and to take care that it is not drawn .aside and bewildered either by facts or arguments which are foreign to the true point of controversy.

I. The answer of the defendants, which is in several respects a document of a very peculiar character, sets up the trial and verdict in an action of ejectment between some of these parties as a conclusive bar to the present suit. (See Jackson v. Seward, 5 Cowen, 67; S. C. in, error, 8 Cowen, 406.) Although this objection is not among the printed points made on the part of the respondents, and although the ground was distinctly abandoned by their leading counsel, it was nevertheless insisted on by the counsel who followed, and it is therefore proper to see how much the argument is worth. It is no doubt a general rule that the verdict of a jury in a matter directly litigated, where a judgment has followed the verdict, is a conclusive estoppel as between the same parties and those claiming under them, and they will not again be allowed to controvert the same matter. But it is equally clear that the action of ejectment, previous to the late revision of the laws, formed an exception to the rule, and that the verdict of a jury, either the one way or the other, was no impediment in the way of a further trial between the same parties. The only restraint against an unlimited number of successive actions of ejectment to try the same right, was an injunction from the court of chancery. This doctrine is so familiar to every lawyer, that I should not have thought it necessary to notice the question in this place, had it not been pressed upon our consideration with much apparent zeal and confidence.

[378] There is another very satisfactory answer to this objection. The judgment which followed the verdict has been reversed, and a verdict without a judgment is not an estoppel, in whatever action it may have been rendered.

Although the verdict is a matter of no legal importance in this controversy, yet the moral influence of what twelve men upon their oaths have said—the decision of a jury that there was no fraud—was' strongly urged upon our consideration. If we are at liberty to follow the argument, it will be found that the supposed verdict is entitled to no more weight on the score of moral influence, than it is by the law of the land. There has, in fact, never been any verdict— no twelve men have ever said that this' transaction was not fraudulent as against the appellant. When the parties had given their evidence, they voluntarily withdrew the cause from the consideration of the jury, and prepared a case for the opinion of the supreme court, containing such facts and conclusions as they thought proper. That case was afterwards turned into a special verdict, appearing, as the forms of law necessarily required, to have been found by a jury, although in truth'no verdict had ever been rendered. We may then safely lay this supposed finding of twelve men upon their oaths, entirely out of the case, both in its legal and its moral influences, and wait some more fitting occasion to vindicate the right of trial by jury.

II. I shall here notice another matter set up in the answer. The defendants insist that the northern and Oneida county lands, which were sold under the judgment against William Seward, jun., and purchased by the appellant, were of suflicient value to satisfy the judgment; and consequently that the appellant ought not to have recovered against William Seward on his covenant. Although this matter has not been deemed worthy of a place among the printed points of the respondents, it is put forth in the answer as one of the most important grounds of defence, and was much relied on by one of the counsel on the argument. Proofs have been taken, for the purpose of showing the value of the farm which William Seward, jun., conveyed to the appellant, and the value of the lands and other property which the appellant gave as a part of the price.

[379] And it is said, on the one hand, that as the appellant has got back the

northern and Oneida county lands, that he has on the whole lost nothing [201]*201in this matter; while on the other hand it is said, that independent of the northern and Oneida county lands, the appellant paid William Seward, jun., all that his farm was worth—that unless he is paid the judgment recovered against William Seward on the covenant, he will on the whole be a loser to that or a greater amount. If we are at liberty to go into these collateral questions, and the inquiry was, whether the appellant has made or lost money by his dealings with William Seward, jun., it would appear most conclusively on the proofs, that after the judgment against the father shall have been paid, the appellant will still be a loser to nearly or quite the whole amount of his own judgment against William Seward, jun.

[380] But there is no principle upon which we can go back and inquire into the merits of the appellant’s claim upon William Seward. That question has been settled by the judgment on his covenant. The appellant has asserted his right in the forms prescribed by law. William Seward has made his defence, or had the full opportunity of doing so, and nothing can be more clear than that this matter cannot be overhauled in any collateral proceeding.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bromley v. Mollnar
179 Misc. 713 (New York County Courts, 1942)
Snack v. New York Central Railroad
223 A.D. 192 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1928)
Hoffman v. Friend
111 A. 654 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1920)
Vannest v. Dealaman
87 A. 329 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1913)
Barton v. Corcoran
157 A.D. 143 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1913)
Wood v. . Snider
79 N.E. 858 (New York Court of Appeals, 1907)
People ex rel. Phillips v. Severson
121 Ill. App. 224 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1905)
Rosin v. Lidgerwood Manufacturing Co.
89 A.D. 245 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1903)
Lawson v. Stacy
51 N.W. 961 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1892)
Commons v. Commons
16 N.E. 820 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1888)
Crandall v. Eldridge
53 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 411 (New York Supreme Court, 1887)
Leggett v. Rome, Watertown & Ogdensburg Railroad
2 N.Y. St. Rep. 312 (New York Supreme Court, 1886)
Leggett v. Rome, Watertown & Ogdensburgh Railroad
48 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 80 (New York Supreme Court, 1886)
People ex rel. Bagley v. Green
3 Thomp. & Cook 90 (New York Supreme Court, 1874)
Cronkhite v. Cronkhite
1 Thomp. & Cook 266 (New York Supreme Court, 1873)
Swarthout v. New Jersey Steamboat Co.
46 Barb. 222 (New York Supreme Court, 1865)
Justice v. Lang
2 Rob. 333 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1864)
Davidson v. Mayor of New York
2 Rob. 230 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1864)
Gridley v. . Gridley
24 N.Y. 130 (New York Court of Appeals, 1861)
Gridley v. Gridley
33 Barb. 250 (New York Supreme Court, 1860)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Wend. 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-wyck-v-seward-nysupct-1837.