Case ID: ny-super-ct_52/html/0527-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

HENRY H. REMINGTON, Respondent, v. CHARLES E. FISHER, et al., Appellants.
    
      Transfer to hinder, Sc., creditors.—Purchase upon sale under execution, necessity of actual change of possession to rebut presumption of fraud, &c., effect of payment of valuable consideration.—Judge's charge.
    
    Before Sedgwick, Oh. J., Freedman and Trttax, JJ.
    
      Decided June 1, 1885.
    Appeal from judgment in favor of plaintiff entered upon verdict of a jury, and from order denying defendants’ motion for new trial.
    Action for an alleged wrongful taking of certain goods. Plaintiff claimed title to them under and by virtue of a purchase made by him August 7, 1888, at a sheriff’s sale under an execution upon a judgment recovered by him in a certain action in which he was plaintiff and Ettel & Mackintosh were defendants. Defendants now here, took the goods in January, 1884, under an attachment procured by them in an action commenced by them against Ettel & Mackintosh, and claimed they had a right to take them on the ground that the prior purchase by the plaintiff was fraudulent as against them. At the trial, plaintiff showed the purchase by himself as claimed, and that he paid a valuable consideration for the goods so purchased.
   The Court at General Term (after stating the facts as above) said:—“If, in addition to this, it had also been clearly shown that there was an immediate and actual change of possession, the title of the plaintiff could only have been defeated by proof that his purchase was a participation in a scheme to hinder, delay or defraud the creditors of Ettel & Mackintosh, and the burden of proof in this respect would have been upon the defendants. But it also appeared that the goods so purchased were left with Mackintosh as plaintiff’s agent, for the purposes of a sale for plaintiff’s account, and that thereupon the business of Ettel & Mackintosh was continued by Mackintosh in his name, with the word “ agent ” behind it. Witnesses differed as to whether the whole business was so continued for the benefit of the plaintiff, or whether Mackintosh was the agent of the plaintiff only for the purpose of effecting a sale of the particular goods with some others, and at the same time carried on business for himself. This rendered it necessary that the question as to a change of possession should be submitted to the jury, and the question was so submitted to them upon all the facts, and circumstances of the case. They were instructed that the burden of proof in the case depended entirely upon how they would determine the question of change of possession. As the uncontradicted evidence showed payment of a valuable consideration, this instruction, in view of what was said by the learned judges of the court of appeals who delivered the opinions in Starin v. Kelly (88 N. Y. 418), and Murphy v. Briggs (89 Ib. 446), was probably more favorable to the defendants than it should have been. At any rate it was the most they could claim.”

Isaac N. Miller, for appellants.

Morrison & Kennedy, for respondent.

Opinion by Freedman, J.; Sedgwick, Oh. J., and Truax, J., concurred.

The judgment and order affirmed, with costs.