Weiser v. Kling

38 A.D. 266, 57 N.Y.S. 48
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 38 A.D. 266 (Weiser v. Kling) 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
Weiser v. Kling, 38 A.D. 266, 57 N.Y.S. 48 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Rumsey, J. :

The facts appearing in this case are somewhat complicated, and for a correct understanding of the case it is necessary that they should be carefully recited.

[267]*267On the 5th of April, 1892, one Rebecca Weisel, with others, delivered to one Friend, a bond and mortgage to secure the payment of $5,500, of which $1,000 was to have been paid on the 1st day of December, 1892, and a like sum on the same day in each year up to and including 1895, and the remaining $1,500 on the 1st of December, 1896, with interest annually. On the 5th of October, 1895, Mrs. Weisel conveyed the mortgaged premises to the plaintiff in this action. By the deed it was stated that the premises were subject to two mortgages, one of $18,000, and one of $2,500, to which latter amount the Friend mortgage had been then reduced. At the time' of this conveyance Mrs. Weisel Was indebted to the defendant Wright in a considerable amount of money, for which he recovered a judgment against her on the 12th of March, 1896. This judgment was duly docketed in Flew York county and execution was issued upon it, which was returned unsatisfied, and Wright began a judgment creditor’s action against Weiser (this plaintiff) and Mrs. Weisel, in which he recovered a judgment that the conveyance from her to Weiser was made by the said defendants and eách of them, with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of Mrs. Weisel. The judgment directed that the premises should be conveyed to a receiver by the defendants in that action, and should be disposed of by him and the proceeds applied as more particularly stated in the judgment. Whether this direction of the judgment was fully carried out or not does not appear. ' It does appear, however, that the receiver sold- the premises at auction and conveyed them to the defendant Illing. When sold, they were subject to a mortgage of $18,000. Weiser was in possession of the premises from the date of his deed in October, 1885, until they were sold by the receiver. While he was in possession, he paid, as he says, to Friend, what was due upon his mortgage, and proeured a satisfaction piece thereof, which was executed on the 1st of December, 1896, the last of the payments having been made upon it on' that day. After he had been dispossessed from the premises in pursuance of the receiver’s deed, he brought an action against Friend, alleging that, for certain reasons stated in his complaint, he was entitled to be subrogated in Friend’s place as to all the payments made on the $5,500 mortgage, and asking that the satisfaction piece of that mortgage be vacated, and that he be [268]*268declared to 'be the assignee of the mortgage. No other person than. Friend was made defendant in that action. Friend, having no interest in the matter, made no substantial defense, and Weiser procured the judgment which he asked for.

' Of.that judgment it may be said that, as neither Wright nor Kling were parties to it, it is evidence in this action of nothing but. its own rendition, and it is only material as tending to show- that by some means Weiser has the title to the mortgage and that it is not satisfied. It neither establishes, as against the defendants in this action, that Weiser- paid any money upon that mortgage, nor that lie paid the money in good faith, nór that the mortgage was not properly reduced to $2,500 when Weiser took his conveyance, nor that the money paid upon the mortgage before that time was actually advanced by him to Mrs. Wéisel. For any other purpose than showing that the mortgage is no.t in fact extinguished it is of no-importance whatever.

After this judgment' against Friend had been entered,-Weiser brought this action against Wright and Klingdo foreclose the Friend mortgage, 'claiming that there was due upon it all the money which had been paid since it was made. The defendants Iiling and Wright-answered, disputing the right to foreclose the mortgage, and. setting up the judgment in the creditor’s suit as a reason why the plaintiff should-be defeated in this action. The learned justice at the Special Term dismissed the complaint, and from the judgment entered upon his decision this -appeal is taken. .

In the judgment creditor’s action, Wright, one of the defendants here, was the plaintiff; Weiser was one of the defendants,- and Mrs. Wpisel was another.. That judgment; therefore, is evidence in this action -between the parties as to everything which was decided in it, or whatever fact lay at the basis of the decision and was necessary to be established in order to warrant the decision therein made. (House v. Lockwood, 137 N. Y. 259, 268.) Wright alleged in that case that the conveyance by Mrs. Weisel to Weiser was made with intent to -hinder, delay and defraud her creditors, and especially himself. Weiser in his answer denied the fraud, and set up that he was a purchaser for a valuable consideration. To enable Wright to' recover in that action it was not sufficient that he should prove simply' that the conveyance was not founded upon a valuable considera[269]*269tion (2 R. S. [9th ed.] 1888, § 4), but, if it was voluntary, he was bound to prove in addition that as matter of fact it was fraudulent .and made with fraudulent intent. If, however, it was made to appear that the purchase was for a valuable consideration, then it was necessary for him to prove, not only that the grantor, Mrs. Weisel, made the conveyance with intent to hinder, delay and •defraud her creditors, but that Weisel had previous notice of the fraudulent intent of his grantor. (2 R. S.. [9th ed.] 1888, § 5.) Unless this fact appeared, it would not have been competent for the court to render a judgment that the conveyance was fraudulent. Therefore, the judgment necessarily is a determination that the grantor made it with a fraudulent intent and that the grantee had notice of that intent; in other words, that the grantee participated in the fraud.

Weiser claims, as the ground for his subrogation to the rights of Friend in this mortgage, that he paid every dollar of the, money which was paid upon it, both before the conveyance was made and .afterwards. In his bill of particulars he states that he had paid before the 15th of August, 1895, on account of the principal of this mortgage, $3,700, and on account of interest, $675. He alleges in This answer to the creditor’s bill that he was a purchaser of the premises for a valuable consideration. He testifies in this case that The received tliat conveyance of the 5th of October, 1895, for the money which he had let Mrs. Weisel have to pay upon this mort.gage. He had previously testified to that fact in supplementary proceedings, and he repeats his testimony in this action. There was no dispute in regard to that matter in this case, and the justice who decided the case finds as a fact that the consideration for the ■conveyance of the 5th of October, 1895,, was the money paid by Weiser before that time to Friend, the mortgagee, for the benefit of Rebecca Weisel. The judgment in the creditor’s action determines nothing contrary to that finding] but it does adjudge in terms that Weiser was a party to the intent to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of Mrs. Weisel. • It must be taken then as a fact conclusively proved in this action that Weiser, the plaintiff here, w-as a party to the fraud of which Mrs. Weisel was guilty in conveying the premises to him, and that the consideration for the conveyance was the money "which Weiser had advanced upon this mortgage for her benefit. .

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Bluebook (online)
38 A.D. 266, 57 N.Y.S. 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weiser-v-kling-nyappdiv-1899.