White v. Cole

24 Wend. 115
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 24 Wend. 115 (White v. Cole) 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
White v. Cole, 24 Wend. 115 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1840).

Opinion

By the Court,

Cowen, J.

The statute under which the plaintiff claims title, 2 R. S. 70, 2d ed. § 5, declares, among other things, that every assignment of goods and chattels by way of mortgage or security, or upon any condition whatever, unless the same be accompanied with an immediate delivery, and be followed by an actual and continued change of possession of the things mortgaged or assigned, shall be presumed to be fraudulent and void, as against the creditors of the person making such assignment, or subsequent purchasers in good faith; and shall be conclusive evidence of fraud unless it shall be made to appear on the part of the persons claiming under such assignment, that the same was made in good faith, and without any intent to defraud such creditors or purchasers. Subsequent sections 9 and 10, id. 71, declare such a mortgage absolutely void without any qualification, unless it be filed in the clerk’s office of the town where the mortgagor resides. In the case at bar, the mortgage being filed, must stand or fall by the 5th section, unless it come within the 7th, id. 70, concerning bottomry and respondentia, and assignments and hypothecations of vessels at sea, or in foreign ports.

^Taking the case upon the 5th section, it comes to us with a [ *122 ] shade of difference from those which have heretofore been presented for our consideration. Is this a mere difference of fact or principle ? The vessel being, at the time when the mortgage was executed, abroad on her trip to Oleaveland, an immediate delivery was impracticable, and this doubtless furnished a legal excuse for postponing the time. The statute required the immediate delivery in general terms, but allowed the defendant to excuse it by showing circumstances tending to neutralize the presumption of fraud, which would otherwise be derivable from the omission to comply; and, that the vessel was abroad on the lake, perhaps in a distant port, was calculated at once to relieve the mind from suspicion. But clearly this could no longer be so, when the excuse ceased to operate, by the return of the vessel into the port of Oswego, much less in all future time during her repeated ar[122]*122rivals both before and after the mortgage become forfeited by non-payment of the money secured. In such an event, the mortgagees were expressly authorized by the Demings to take possession, and sell the schooner for the payment of the debt. After her return, therefore, the negligence was calculated rather to excite than allay suspicion that the purpose was something more than merely to secure payment. The debt might have been very honest in the abstract, but might, for that very reason be made a more dangerous instrument in working a fraudulent delay of other creditors. Every statute made to suppress fraud should be construed liberally for the promotion of that end. The principle of the exception should be regarded. The fact of the vessel not being in port, excused the immediate delivery ; but giving to that fact the same operation, after the vessel was perfectly within the control of the mortgagees, would be straining a point in favor of parties engaged in using the very means which the statute had regarded as strong proof of fraud being intended. It would be so construing the statute as to promote, not to remedy the evil. It would be saying to parties, “ watch your opportunity, mortgage while the vessel is abroad, and then you are ab- [ *123 ] solutely beyond the reach of *the statute. If you are so lucky as to escape detection from other kinds of evidence, a very common thing, the possession may remain unchanged in all time to come.” No. In answer to the fact of non-delivery, the mortgagee can be relieved only by making out such a case as establishes his good faith ; and it is difficult to see how'a continuance of possession in the mortgagor, after all reason for it has ceased to operate, should tend to the establishment of such faith, or leave it to be inferred, any more than omitting an immediate delivery without an original excuse.

But other arguments are adduced! The vessel was owned in common, the Demings residing at Oswego, the other owners at a distance. The previous arrangements for the season had led to the common appointment of a master, who had entered into an engagement to sail the vessel under the direction of the Demings, on joint account. It is difficult to perceive what reasonable obstacle was presented by any of these considerations to the change of possession, so far as the Demings were concerned. Surely one tenant in common may sell and deliver, or relinquish the control of his interest to another, in spite of any objections from his co-tenants. If the master was under contract, the transfer might have been subject to that, or he might have been released or discharged, or his powers revoked, if there were any dissatisfaction with the change. The registry and other papers might have been altered; and in short the Demings might have given all their control into the hands of Weed and Thurman, the mortgagees. But no at tempt was made to do any of these things. How do we know that the Utica owners would have been dissatisfied with the change ? How that the master [123]*123would have been ? Hone of them were ever consulted. The whole argument lies in a possibility coming in by way of after-thought.

Again: it is said the plaintiffs had notice of the lien by mortgage. This is an objection of a very ancient date—one which has been often made, but never without being overruled. The obvious consequence of listening to it would be, to furnish a ready expedient for protection to fraud of *the kind now alleged in all cases. A creditor having notice of a [ *124 ] fraudulent mortgage is a reason why he should bestir himself to avoid it.

We are now told that the plaintiffs conceded the mortgage to have been bona fide. If that were indeed so, I admit we could not hold otherwise. But the argument misconstrues the admission. It was, that the debt was due at the time when the mortgage was given, that this ivas entered into at the solicitation of Weed & Thurman, and that it was duly filed at the clerk’s office. When it is established as a legal consequence that a debt actually due, secured by a mortgage given on the creditor’s solicitation, and filed, necessarily overcomes all evidence of fraud, or, in other words, that it necessarily cuts off all force from the debtor still holding his property, the argument will be conclusive. But the real debt of a favored creditor, a friend or connection, is known in practice to be a very common instrument of fraud. Why should the debtor still hold on to his property ? Doubtless, because it is for his own convenience—probably because the creditor soliciting the preference promises that he will be indulgent to the calls of that convenience; and thus the debtor is still allowed to continue the man of ostensible fortune and business, drawing in the world to credit him. Thus he is enabled to go on, concealing or pocketing his other effects, till his purposes are still farther subserved by winding up his affairs at the convenient season, and defrauding his tens or hundreds, where otherwise he could have deceived nobody. The mortgagee thus makes himself a party to the false pretences or appearances by which frauds may be and commonly are multiplied; and what is the excuse ? The debt was a fair one. But the parties fly in the face of the law. They refuse to comply with those forms of business which the law has devised to prevent them from becoming parties to a fraud on their neighbors, and for the more general and enlightened purpose of preventing fraud in general.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Wend. 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-cole-nysupct-1840.