Whitney v. . Davis

42 N.E. 661, 148 N.Y. 256, 2 E.H. Smith 256, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 549
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 21, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 42 N.E. 661 (Whitney v. . Davis) 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
Whitney v. . Davis, 42 N.E. 661, 148 N.Y. 256, 2 E.H. Smith 256, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 549 (N.Y. 1896).

Opinion

Gray, J.

This action was brought in aid of an attachment which had issued in another action against the defendant Davis. In that other action this plaintiff, Whitney, as assignee of the Lincoln Rational Bank of Boston, Massachusetts, had sued Davis upon certain promissory notes, upon which he was endorser. Both plaintiff and defendant were residents of the state of Massachusetts and the summons and complaint therein were served there. The plaintiff in that action procured the issuance of an attachment against the defendant as a non-resident. Before the defendant’s time to answer in that action had expired the plaintiff and the sheriff, in whose hands the writ of attachment had been placed, commenced this action against said Davis and two other persons; seeking to set aside, on the ground of fraud, the transfers of *259 certain lands in Erie county, through which their title had. passed out of Davis into other persons, also non-residents of the state. A trial of the present action resulted in the dismissal of the complaint upon the merits. After its determination, the trial of the action upon the promissory notes was had and it, also, resulted in a judgment dismissing the complaint upon the merits. Subsequently to the result of .that trial, a motion was made in the present action for a new trial thereof, upon the ground of newly-discovered evidence. That motion was denied for the reason, as stated in the order, that this action was prematurely brought” and “ without a consideration of the motion upon the merits.” The General Term affirmed that order and the plaintiffs have appealed to this court.

The form of the order is, doubtless, such as to permit us to review it; inasmuch as, if correct, it was final in its operation upon the plaintiffs’ right to proceed in the action and determined the same.

The question which this appeal presents must turn upon the ■construction, which is to be given to subdivision 2 of section 655 of the Code of Civil Procedure; which was added as an ■amendment to the section by the legislature, in 1889. Prior to its enactment, there was no way in which an action upon a money demand against a non-resident debtor, who had not •appeared, could be brought to judgment; if the attachment issued therein had not been levied upon property of the ■debtor. That was an essential prerequisite to the entry of judgment upon default. (Code, sections 1216,121'T.) In the present case, as the property of the defendant Davis within the state had consisted of real estate and had been conveyed ■away by him, no levy of the attachment against his property was possible and, hence, no judgment could have been entered therein, had Davis, elected to suffer a default.

There was no authority for the plaintiff to bring an action in equity to set aside the transfer by Davis of his real property under any provision of the Code and the circumstances of the case were not of such a character as to justify the interference of equity. The case of People ex rel. Cauffman *260 v. Van Buren (136 N. Y. 252), which is cited to us on both sides, presented a question as to the power of the Supreme Court, in the exercise of its equity jurisdiction, to interfere,, at the instance of an attaching creditor, in an action brought in aid of his attachment. Earlier cases in this and in other courts were noticed and it was held . that a plaintiff who had attached personal property, fraudulently transferred, was entitled to have his attachment lien preserved, until he could merge his claim in a judgment and issue final process for its collection. The circumstances were peculiar. Chattels had been levied upon by the sheriff, under executions issued upon fraudulent judgments, and they were attached at the suit of Cauffman’s firm. They were about to be sold to satisfy the executions. Cauffman & Co. had sued upon their claim and had obtained and issued the warrant of attachment, upon the ground of a fraudulent disposition by the debtors of their property. They then commenced an action upon the equity side of the court against the fraudulent judgment creditors and the sheriff and the defendants in the attachment suit, in which they demanded the relief that the liens of the fraudulent judgment creditors under their executions should be postponed to the lien of the plaintiffs under their attachment and, meanwhile, the sale was enjoined. The point presented for decision by this court was whether the attaching creditors had the right to-prevent the application of the attached property to the payment of a prior lien. The decision recognized the general rule to be well settled that, until after the recovery of the judgment and the issuing of execution, no equitable action could be maintained by the attaching creditor to set aside fraudulent transfers, or to reach equitable assets. Thurber v. Blanck (50 N. Y. 80) and M. & T. Bank v. Dakin (51 id. 519) were cited as authorities; which were not in conflict with each other, because contemplating different conditions of the property sought to be reached. But it was held that a court of equity was not without jurisdiction to interpose in aid of an attaching creditor, even where no specific lien had been gained, and to grant the equitable relief demanded, if special *261 ■circumstances existed which required such an equitable interposition. “ Such circumstances,” as it was said in the opinion, “ are shovpi to exist here. The case would be different, if ■executions had not been issued upon the fraudulent judgments. The mere existence of a fraudulent transfer would not be sufficient to. authorize a court of equity to entertain an action at the suit of an attaching creditor to set it aside. But when it is sought to make use of such a transfer, for the purpose of removing the attached property from the jurisdiction of the officer who has it in his custody, it is evident that nothing but the equitable arm of the court can prevent the consummation of the wrong.” All that the Gcmffman case decided was, that special circumstances might exist and if shown that they would authorize the granting of equitable relief at the instance of an attaching creditor, though prior to judgment and execution, in order to preserve the debtor’s property in a condition where a recovery by the attaching ■creditor could be made effective. It was not intended to hold that an equitable action was within the power of the attaching creditor to maintain, ordinarily, prior to judgment and execution, nor to introduce any innovation upon the settled rule. It was considered, however, that where the debtor’s property was about being transferred beyond the reach of the sheriff, in whose hands it was, a case was presented where the court might properly extend its equitable arm and stay the threatened transfer.

The principle of equitable intervention to annul or set aside transfers of a debtor’s property, for being fraudulent as to his ■creditors, demands for its application an adjudication of the fact of the debt and that it shall appear that an execution upon the judgment is incapable of levy because of a fraudulent transfer by the judgment debtor. The exception is where, as in the Thurber case, (suq>ra)

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.E. 661, 148 N.Y. 256, 2 E.H. Smith 256, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-v-davis-ny-1896.