Wilder v. Fondey

4 Wend. 100
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 4 Wend. 100 (Wilder v. Fondey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilder v. Fondey, 4 Wend. 100 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1829).

Opinion

The following opinions were delivered;

By the Chancellor.

The bond and warrant of attorney on which the judgment of the defendants was entered were dated in 1821, long before the plaintiffs debt was contracted. If any thing was due at the time the judgment was entered, the defendants had a lawful right to enter up judgment and take out execution for what was then due, and they cannot be made liable for the penalty prescribed in the statute for such an act; but if they had taken a judgment for a larger amount than was due, for the purpose of defeating the plaintiffs’ recovery, they would have been liable for the penalty, although a part of the debt was actually due. The judgment being entered on a bond with a penalty, the nominal amount of the judgment must be the same, whether the whole amount specified in the condition of the bond was or was not due at that time. 1 think the court was right in supposing it ought not to be left to the jury to decide upon the motives by which the defendants were governed in entering that judgment. If it had appeared that they were amply secured in some other manner, and that it would be inequitable in them to give up that security, for the purpose of taking the only fund against which the plaintiffs could proceed, the question would have been entirely different. In that case the jury would have had a valid ground to question their motives in entering this judgment. But where the party has no other means of securing his debt, I do not think his motives in obtaining security can legally be questioned. The cases of Holbird v. Anderson, (5 T. R. 235,) and Meux v. Howell, (4 East’s R. 1,) referred to by the supreme court, fully support their decision on that question.

[105]*105But there is a difference in this case from both the cases referred to, which does not appear to have been noticed by the supreme court. It is evident, from an examination of the second and fourth sections of the statute of frauds together, that the legislature meant to prohibit fraudulent executions as well as fraudulent judgments, as each may be used for the purposes of fraud. A judgment is a lien on the land of the defendant, and would prevent purchasers from giving its full value on the execution of another party, and might thus delay and defraud him in the recovery of his debt, although no execution was taken out for many years afterwards. If a valid judgment was obtained, and afterwards paid, in whole or in part, a creditor might be defrauded, if the parties to that judgment by collision took out an execution and levied on the goods of the defendant for the whole amount.

I am satisfied that the plaintiffs had no right to recover on the first count in their declaration. But the second count is for talcing out an execution fraudulently and levying it on the goods. If the whole’""amount of the judgment was then due, the defendants had a perfect right to obtain a preference in that way, and their motives could not be enquired into unless it was shown that they-had money in their own hands, or some other means of obtaining the debt. From the statement of the case in the report, (6 Cowen’s R. 284,) I infer that the judgment was taken to cover future advances in part, and yet the execution was issued with a direction to collect the whole sum specified in the condition of the bond, together with costs. In that view of the case, although the judgment bond might legally be taken for the purpose of covering future advances, if an execution was issued after the failure of S. Fondey for more than was actually due at that time, it would be a fraud upon the other creditors if intentionally done. If it was issued by mistake for a larger amount than was intended, it would not be a fraud which could subject the plaintiffs in the execution to a penalty. From the opinion of the supreme court which was delivered on the application for a new trial it does not appear that this question was raised, aud if it had been it is hardly possible [106]*106that it should have been entirely- overlooked there. In addition to this, I am informed by the chief justice that the case before tjiem did not raise the question whether an execution fraudulently issued upon a judgment which had been paid, wholly or in part, subjected the party issuing it to the penalty. The decision of the circuit judge on the second trial was made in reference to the decision of the supreme court. If the plaintiffs',wished to prove facts to take the case out of that decision, the question should have been fairly presented to the circuit judge,' unconnected with the question of the validity of the judgment. In Lucas and others v. Nockells, (2 Young & Jarvis, 304,) on a writ of error from the court of long’s bench, in the exchequer chamber, the judges unanimously decided that it was competent and proper to submit the question to the jury, whether the goods were seized bona fide under the execution to satisfy the debt, or colorably only for a collateral 'purpose; and in that case the acts of the judgment creditor both before and after the levying of the execution were allowed to be given in evidence for the purpose of ascertaining his motives. If the plaintiffs in the case before us had proved or offered to prove that execution was taken out for more than was actually due at that time, I think they should have been permitted to go to the jury upon the question whether it was so issued by mistake or with a fraudulent intent.

I have had- some doubts in this case whether all such evidence was not necessarily excluded by the decision of the circuit judge; but as that decision was only intended to apply to a case where the whole amount of the execution as well as the judgment was actually due, he cannot be said to have decided this question, and the same should have been fairly presented to him by the plaintiffs in a different shape before they submitted to a nonsuit. The offer to prove the judgment fraudulent, by showing the improper proceedings under the execution, was a mere evasion of the decision of the supreme court, and was properly put down by the circuit jwlge.

Por these reasons, although I am of opinion that the plaintiffs had a right to recover, if the execution was fraudulent [107]*107and intended to hinder or delay them in the collection of their debt; even if the judgment was bona fide, I think the judgment of the supreme court in this case should be affirmed.

By Mr. Senator Oliver.

This case presents two questions for the consideration of the court: 1. Whether the evidence produced by the plaintiffs was competent to sustain the allegation that the defendants’ judgment was fraudulent and without a valid consideration; and 2. Whether it was competent to prove that the defendant had wittingly and willlingly enforced such judgment by a fraudulent execution.

To bring the case within the statute of frauds, it is necessary to prove that the judgment was in fact fraudulent and without a valid consideration in its concoction, (4 East, 1, 14,) for such are the express provisions of the statute by which the penealty sued for is given, (1 R. L. 76, § 4.) The evidence produced and offered does not pretend to shew that the judgment was without a good and bona fide

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Wend. 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilder-v-fondey-nycterr-1829.