Court Opinion

ID: 5458365
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-09 19:26:49.682761+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:46.115575
License: Public Domain

By the Court, Parker, J.
Under the general exception to the charge, the defendants cannot question the correctness of any single proposition contained in it; inasmuch as it contains several propositions, the correctness of which is not controverted. But three several exceptions were taken to refusals to charge, which are properly before us for examination. One of them is stated as follows: The defendants’ counsel asked the court to charge that no question of fraud could be raised against the defendants’ mortgage, as none was alledged or put in issue by the pleadings; and the plaintiffs were not in a situation to raise *470it. The court refused so to charge, and the defendants’ counsel excepted.
This was the only exception taken at the trial in regard to which I had any doubt on the argument; and to decide it, it is necessary to understand the precise state of the pleadings. The action was brought against the defendants for wrongfully taking and converting to their own use, on or about the 19th of Juno, 1849, a canal boat and the furniture thereof, claimed to belong to the plaintiffs. The defendants, in their answer, justified the taking and conversion of the property, under a chattel mortgage, dated the 30th of December, 1846. made by C. L. Brace & Co., under which the same was sold, and purchased by the defendants. They alledged, in the answer, that such mortgage was executed for a valuable consideration, (describing it,) and in due form of law; and that it was duly filed and renewed and refiled, according to law, and remained in full force, and unsatisfied, and “ a valid and subsisting lien” on the property in question. The plaintiffs, in reply, denied that the chattel mortgage of the defendants was ever a lien on such property; and proceeded to set up a purchase from C. L. Brace & Co., made on the 15th of July, 1848, under which the property was delivered to the plaintiffs, and held and used by them till it was taken and sold by the defendants
Under the code of 1849, section 153, which was in force when this issue was joined, the plaintiffs were required, when new matter was set up in the answer, either to deny it, or to alledge new matter in avoidance of the answer, or to demur to the answer for insufficiency. It is now claimed on the part of the defendants, that the plaintiffs could not set up on the trial that the defendants’ mortgage was fraudulent, because they had not so alledged in their reply.
Independent of the question of pleading, the plaintiffs were clearly in a position to set up the fraud, it being alledged and proved that the plaintiffs were subsequent purchasers in good faith, while the property still remained in the possession of the mortgagors. Both parties claimed to derive title from C. 1. Brace & Co. The defendants claimed the oldest lien, which the *471plaintiffs could only defend against by showing it fraudulent as to subsequent purchasers in good faith. I do not think it was necessary that the plaintiffs should alledge, in their reply, that the mortgage of the defendants was fraudulent. I concede that fraud was a question of fact. Though the law would presume the transaction fraudulent, when there was no change of the possession of the property; still it was a question of fact, and the presumption could be overcome by proof of such explanatory circumstances as would satisfy the jury that no fraud was in fact intended. But the issue actually joined seems to cover this question. The defendants alledged that the mortgage was a valid and subsisting lien on the property, and this allegation was denied by the plaintiffs. Though this may be the allegation of a conclusion of law, and might, perhaps, have been demurred to on that ground, yet it is not for the defendants to complain of the character of the issue that they have tendered to the plaintiffs. If the mortgage was fraudulent as to subsequent purchasers in good faith, it was of course void, and not as the defendants had alledged, a valid lien on the property in question.
[Albany General Term,
December 6, 1852.
Parker, Harris and Wright, Justices.]
I think the judge was right in refusing to charge as requested, on this point, and also on the other two points which are necessarily controlled by the decision of this question.
The judgment at the circuit must therefore be affirmed.