Court Opinion

ID: 6573053
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:31:47.104174+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:58.557586
License: Public Domain

Swift, Ch. J.
I am of opinion that a new trial ought to be granted, because the court charged the jury, that deeds and conveyances of all a man’s estate specifically described, and executed at different times, are a badge of fraud.
It has been decided in cases where conveyances of property are challenged as fraudulent, that it is not competent to prove that other conveyances, made at other and different times, were fraudulent, to raise a presumption that the sale in question was fraudulent ; but conveyances of other property made at the same time with that in question may be given in evidence in order to shew a combination to dispose of the property with a fraudulent intent ; or to shew that a bona fide consideration was not paid for the whole ; or it may be shewn, that any one of these contemporaneous conveyances was fraudulent, to shew, or raise a presumption, that the conveyance in question was fraudulent. Where general words are made use of in a conveyance ; as where a man sells all his property ; so where a man specifically conveys all his estate at one and the same time ; these are presumptive evidences of a fraudulent intent ; for it can hardly be supposed, that a man would strip himself of all his property, but that his intent was to put it all beyond the reach of his creditors, with a view to derive a benefit to himself. But where a man at different times is making specific dispositions of his properly, though he may in the end dispose of the whole, yet this has never been deemed a badge of fraud.
On this ground I would advise a new trial.
In this opinion Trumbull, Smith, Brainard, Goddard, and Hosmer, Js. concurred.
Baldwin, J.
I agree generally in the principles advanced by the Chief Judge ; but I differ in the application of them to the case before us, From the statement, as present *396ed to us, though imperfect, I think it evidently appears to have been claimed by the plaintiff, that in January 1798, with intent to defraud their creditors, Richard, Austin, and Daniel Nichols agreed with Philo Norton, that they should convey all their property in trust to him, and abscond ; that this was to he effected by deeds and judgments ; that in pursuance of that combination, on the eve of bankruptcy and absconding, deeds were executed on the 8th of January, and afterwards judgments suffered to pass by default, to a large amount, with a view to the same object ; which deeds, records of judgments and executions levied, were in proof on the trial. In this view of the case, and with such claim, of proof, the court charged the jury, that “ when a debtor conveys away his whole property, that is one of the badges of fraud.” As an abstract proposition, I agree that this would not be correct ; but when taken in connexion with the facts claimed to have been proved in this case, I think it was. It surely can make no difference in principle, whether a man on the eve of bankruptcy conveys at the same time, and to the same person, all his property, by one, or by several deeds. The effect will be the same ; and the presumption of law will equally apply, that he meant to deceive his creditors, and derive a future benefit to himself. The statement does not warrant the supposition that the conveyances were at different times ; and it was claimed that the judgments were in pursuance of the agreement upon which the deeds were given. Conveyances thus made, have, I think, a badge of fraud, and as such ought to be weighed by the jury, in support of the claim of a fraudulent combination, and of a fraudulent transaction.
The charge on this point is not expressed with all the caution it might have been ; but in connexion with the statement, it must be understood as having reference to a case so circumstanced. I am therefore of opinion, we ought not on that ground to grant a new trial.
New trial to be granted.