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Britton v. Lorenz

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Feb 21, 1871
45 N.Y. 51 (N.Y. 1871)

Opinion

Argued February 17th

Decided February 21st, 1871

Amasa J. Parker, of counsel for appellant.

Aaron J. Vanderpoel, of counsel for respondents.



The judge found that the bill of sale, etc., made by the plaintiff's assignor to the defendants, though absolute upon its face, was really made upon the trust that the defendants should convert the property into money, and from the proceeds pay all his debts for borrowed money in full, and to distribute the residue, pro rata, among all his other creditors. It was competent to show this trust by parol evidence. ( Day v. Roth, 18 N.Y., 448; Mulford v. Miller, 1 Keyes, 31.) The bill of sale having been given upon these trusts, it comes within the provisions of chap. 348, Laws of 1860, 594. Section 1 of that act provides that every conveyance or assignment made by a debtor or debtors of his, etc., estates, real or personal, or both, in trust to an assignee or assignees for the creditors of such debtor or debtors, shall be in writing, and shall be duly acknowledged before an officer authorized to take the acknowledgment of deeds, and the certificate of such acknowledgment shall be duly indorsed upon such conveyance or assignment upon the delivery thereof to the assignee or assignees therein named. Unless instruments of this character are executed in conformity with this section they are void. ( Hardmann v. Brown, 39 N.Y., 196.) It was insisted by the counsel for the appellant that this section was only applicable to instruments which upon their face purported to have been made upon trust for the creditors of the party executing it. This is not the true construction of the section. All instruments made upon the trusts therein specified come within its language, and clearly within the intention of its framers. That intention was to prevent fraud by setting up fictitious transfers of property claimed to have been made for the benefit of creditors, and by such means prevents its application by the course of law to the payment of the debts of the owner. Such frauds may be practiced with equal success, where it is necessary to resort to intrinsic proof to show the trust for creditors, as when such trusts appear upon the face of the instrument. The bill of sale not having been executed, as required by section 1 ( supra), was void, and no title was acquired by the defendants under it. It follows that such title remained in Schenck, the former owner, until his assignment to the plaintiffs and passed to them by virtue thereof.

It was assumed by the parties that the case was not triable by jury, and no request that it should be so tried was made by the defendants nor any ruling of the court thereon. That question cannot, therefore, be raised in this court.

An exception was taken to the finding by the judge that the value of the lease transferred to the defendants by Schenck was $10,000 in cash. This finding was not unsupported by the evidence, and after affirmance of the judgment by the General Term is conclusive upon this court. The defendants also excepted to the finding of the fact by the judge, that the defendants had converted the property to their own use, and also to the legal conclusion deduced therefrom, that having so converted it they were liable to the plaintiff for the value thereof. These exceptions are general and applicable to the whole property, including the check and lease, as well as the property embraced in the bill of sale. It is somewhat difficult to see what precise question was designed to be raised by these exceptions. The evidence warranted a finding of the conversion of the goods embraced in the bill of sale and of the check, and this being the property of the plaintiff, the legal conclusion that the defendants were liable to him for the value thereof was correct. The lease created an interest in real estate for a term of years unexpired at the time of the assignment thereof to the defendant by the debtor Schenck. This assignment was rightly adjudged to be void, and that the defendant acquired no title to the premises by virtue thereof. This title became invested in the plaintiff under the assignment to him. The appropriate relief in respect to these premises would have been to have required the defendants to surrender up the possession of the premises to the plaintiff, and to pay such damages as he had sustained by the wrongful withholding of the premises from him, if it was still in the power of the defendants to surrender such possession. But it does not appear that it was in their power to yield up possession. There was no request by the defendants for any finding upon these facts, nor any request made to the judge to apply any such rule in respect to the premises covered by the lease. For aught that appears, they had put it out of their power to restore possession to the plaintiff. If this was the fact, they were equitably liable for the injury thereby sustained; and the value of the leasehold interest, of which the plaintiff had been deprived by the wrongful act of the defendants, was the appropriate measure of damages for the injury. The exception taken fails to show that any legal error was committed in respect to the leasehold interest, to the prejudice of the defendants.

The remaining inquiry is, whether the judge erred in receiving the testimony of Dickinson as to what was said by Schenck and the defendants, at the time he drew the bill of sale. Dickinson was an attorney and counsellor, and was employed to draw the bill of sale. It is insisted by the counsel for the appellant that all that was said by either having any relation to the business or the object or purpose of the bill of sale, are to be regarded as confidential communications from clients to counsel, and, therefore, inadmissible as evidence, without the consent of both parties. The competency of attorneys and counsel to testify as to communications made to them, and matters that they have learned in the course of their professional employment, has been extensively discussed by the courts of the State, and the cases involving that question thoroughly examined. ( Whiting v. Burney, 30 N.Y., 330; Coventry v. Tannahill, 1 Hill, 33; The Bank of Utica v. Mersereau, 3 Barbour Ch., 533.) The rule deducible from the authorities is, that all communications made by a client to his counsel, for the purposes of professional advice or assistance, are privileged, whether such advice relates to a suit pending, one contemplated, or to any other matter proper for such advice or aid; that, where the communications are made in the presence of all the parties to the controversy, they are not privileged, but the evidence is competent between such parties. ( Whitney v. Barney, supra.) Applying this principle to this case, the testimony of Dickinson was competent. The plaintiff sues as trustee for Schenck and his creditors. The question must be regarded as arising between him and the defendants. The conversation was had when both were present. They cannot be regarded as confidential or privileged as to either of these parties.

The judgment appealed from must be affirmed, with costs.

All the judges concurring,

Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Britton v. Lorenz

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Feb 21, 1871
45 N.Y. 51 (N.Y. 1871)
Case details for

Britton v. Lorenz

Case Details

Full title:FREDERICK S. BRITTON, Assignee of George Schenck, Respondent, v . CHARLES…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Feb 21, 1871

Citations

45 N.Y. 51 (N.Y. 1871)

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