About a month before C. Burkhalter & Co. made a general assignment to this defendant for the benefit of creditors, the plaintiff sold and delivered to them, on credit, a quantity of sugar, at the agreed price of $19,124.41. The sale was induced by false and fraudulent representations made by C. Burkhalter & Co. as to their solvency. Twenty-six days after the execution of the general assignment, plaintiff served upon the assignee a notice, in writing, rescinding the sale, on account of the fraud, and demanding a return of so much of the sugar as was then in the possession of the assignee, and that he account for and deliver to the plaintiff the proceeds of such goods as had been disposed of. All of the sugar except $2,400 worth was, before the assignment, sold and delivered to the customers of the firm upon various terms of credit, which had not then expired, and that which remained unsold plaintiff obtained possession of, after serving the notice of rescission, through an action brought for the purpose. Thereafter this suit was commenced, which has resulted in a judgment against the defendant for $11,809.83, which is adjudged to be a “first lien and charge upon any and all moneys and assets of every nature now or hereafter in the hands of the said defendant, formerly of the said firm of C. Burkhalter & Co.)” and the defendant is also directed to execute and deliver to the plaintiff instruments of assignment necessary to transfer all accounts and bills and claims *483receivable representing any portions of the merchandise sold by plaintiff to C. Burkhalter & Co.
The learned referee, in presenting the reasons which led him to make a report in favor of the plaintiff, laid down certain propositions as a foundation for his argument which do not admit of dispute, viz.: A sale of goods induced by fraud is voidable at the vendor’s option. On discovering the fraud, he may rescind the contract, and reclaim the goods from fraudulent vendee. As an assignee for the benefit of creditors is not a bona fide purchaser, but takes only the defeasible title of his assignor, the vendor may also compel a return of the goods from him. It may be observed that the legal principles thus accurately stated were successfully invoked in the possessory action by means of which the plaintiff compelled a return of all the merchandise which Burkhalter & Co. had not sold prior to the assignment. But the sales actually made by Burkhalter & Co. were to bona fide purchasers, and the attempted rescission of the contract did not, therefore, affect the title of such goods. This embarrassing fact was met with the assertion that the plaintiff nevertheless had the right to repudiate the contract; to treat the proceeds as a substitute for the merchandise sold; and to pursue them, whatever their form, into the hands of the fraudulent vendee, and fasten its equitable claim upon them. Our attention has not been called to any case which in terms, either affirms or denies this position, and we are to inquire whether it is well grounded in 'principle. The respondent contends that, notwithstanding the passing of the title to a purchaser for value and without notice, the fraudulent vendee is chargeable in equity with the proceeds, as a constructive trustee for the benefit of the defrauded vendor; that the trust arises ex maleficio out of the active fraud of Burkhalter & Co., and attaches to the property or its proceeds while in the hands of the vendee or his transferee, with notice. Whether the effect of the fraud was to create an enforceable trust we must inquire, for otherwise the fraud would not operate to secure the plaintiff any preference over the other creditors of Burkhalter & Co. “The equitable doctrine that, as between creditors, equality is equity, admits, so far as we know, of no exception, founded on the greater supposed sacredness of one debt, or that it arose out of a violation of duty, or that its loss involves greater apparent hardship.” Cavin v. Gleason, 105 N. Y. 256, 11 N. E. 504. In that case the debtor took nearly all of a trust fund, and paid his personal debts with it, and the court held that, as to the amount thus paid out, the trust creditor could have no preference. The doctrine of that case is applicable to this one, and should, perhaps, be allowed to dispose of it without other discussion. Burkhalter & Co., upon the delivery of the sugar to them in pursuance of their contract with the plaintiff, became vested with the title and possession, notwithstanding the fraud, subject, however, to the right of the vendor to rescind the contract, if it should so elect. Powers v. Benedict, 88 N. Y. 605; Goodwin v. Wertheimer, 99 N. Y. 152, 1 N. E. 404; Wise v. Grant, 140 N. Y. 593, 35 N. E. 1078. Before the plaintiff concluded to rescind *484the contract and reclaim the property, that portion of it which is now the subject of controversy was, in the usual course of business, sold and delivered to various customers of the firm, who were purchasers for value and without notice. It was then too late for the plaintiff to reclaim the property. The title and possession had become vested in persons protected, as a rule of necessity, from the original vendor. “A contrary principle would endanger the security of commercial transactions, and destroy that confidence upon which what is called the ‘usual course of trade’ materially rests'.” Root v. French, 13 Wend. 572. Then came the hour of the general assignment, which found the plaintiff apparently content with the then existing relation of debtor and creditor. By the instrument then executed, all of the debtors’ property passed to the assignee for administration and distribution. The proceeds of the sugar, necessarily, passed with the other assets of Burkhalter & Co. It was their sugar then sold. True, it might have been otherwise had the plaintiff elected to rescind the contract, and reclaim the property; but, as it did not do this, the vendees, in selling it, sold their own property, and the proceeds of it belonged to them when the assignment was made. Then the plaintiff’s relation to Burk-halter & Co., as to the sugar sold, was that of a contract creditor; the only difference between it and the other creditors being that fraud entered into the making of the contract between it and the common debtors. But this fraud did not entitle it to preference over the other creditors in the distribution of assets. Cavin v. Gleason, supra. The case would, we think, be well disposed of if discussion should be stopped at this point. But the elaborate and careful argument intended to make it clear that a trust in invitum was brought into existence by the fraud of the Burkhalters renders it entirely proper that the question be given some part, at least, of the consideration in .the opinion which it received in the consultation of the court.
It is not out of place to say here that the courts have less generously charged debtors as trustees ex maleficio in cases of personal property than they have in real estate. Alexander, C. B., in Newham v. May, 13 Price, 749, said:
“The cases of compensation in equity I consider to have grown out of the jurisdiction of the courts of equity, as exercised in respect to contracts for the purchase of real property, where it is often ancillary as incidentally necessary to effectuate decrees of specific performance.”
While the equitable remedy of following the proceeds of property doubtless arose in the manner suggested, it has been so extended as to include, in certain cases, the proceeds of personal property. To these cases a general reference will be made later, but for the present it may be said that they emphasize the fact to be that the courts have not extended the doctrine so generally over personalty as over real estate. One reason for it is suggested in one of the opinions in Land Co. v. Watson, 7 Q. B. Div. 374:
“I do not desire to find fault with the various intricacies and doctrines con- • nected with trusts, but I should be very sorry to see them introduced into commercial transactions.”
*485The leading authors who have attempted anything like a full discussion of the subject of trusts have, in their consideration of trusts raised by construction of equity, without reference to any intention of the parties, either expressed or presumed, and known as “constructive trusts,” made use of language, in a general discussion of the subject, broad enough, perhaps, to include the situation presented by this record. Mr. Perry, in his work on Trusts (section 166), says:
“There is another class of trusts which arise from frauds committed by one party upon another. Thus, if one party procures the legal title to property from another by fraud or misrepresentations or concealment, * * * equity will convert such party thus obtaining the property into a trustee.”
And in Pom. Eq. Jur. § 1053, it is said:
“In general, whenever the legal title to property, real or personal, has been obtained through actual fraud, misrepresentations, concealments, * * * which render it.uneonscientious for the holder of the legal title to retain and enjoy the beneficial interests, equity impresses a constructive trust on the property thus acquired. * * * ”
The same position is asserted, and in substantially the same language, in Bisp. Eq. § 91; Bigelow, Frauds, 437; Story, Eq. Jur. § 1263.
But when these authors undertake to support the general rule thus laid down by presenting the different classes of cases in which courts of equity have made use of the principle of a division between the legal estate in one and the equitable estate in another, to construct a trust where none was intended by either party, they am obliged to and do cite cases growing out of transactions in real estate almost exclusively. A practical reason for the distinction, in addition to that suggested by the quotation taken from the New Zealand case, supra, may be found in the fact that, when contracts relating to or conveyances of real estate have been procured through fraud, resort must be had to the courts to set aside the contracts, or to cancel the deeds, and reinvest the defrauded vendors with the title; whereas a sale and delivery of personal property, vesting title and possession in a fraudulent vendee, may be rescinded by the vendor, whereupon the title is restored to him, and the right accrues to recover possession of the goods. While the cases cited by the text writers, as we have said, in the main, involve questions relating to real estate, there are two classes of cases where the equitable doctrine of constructive trusts has been applied to personalty, and the proceeds followed, neither one of which, however, includes a case like the one under consideration: First, where a person, having possession of the property of another, towards whom he sustains a fiduciary relation, wrongfully disposes of it; second, where there is an absence of title in the wrongdoer ab initio. The first class extends to trustees, executors, and administrators, directors of corporations, guardians, committee of lunatics, agents using money of their principals, partners using partnership funds, husbands purchasing property with money belonging to their wives, parents buying property of their children, guardians of their wards, trustees of their cestuis que trustent, attorneys of their clients, and all persons *486who stand in fiduciary relations towards others. The following-cases, cited on this appeal, are within this class: Holmes v. Gilman, 138 N. Y. 369, 34 N. E. 205; Knatchbull v. Hallett, 13 Ch. Div. 696. Respondent strongly urges that the case of Bank v. Peters, 123 N. Y. 272, 25 N. E. 319, supports this judgment. Everett Bros., Gibson & Co. deposited with the Exchange Bank at Norfolk a sight draft on M. & Co., of New York City, indorsed by the drawer in the form in which, by agreement and custom of the parties, drafts for collection only were to be indorsed. The bank forwarded the draft to the Importers’ & Traders’ Bank, Avho collected it, and placed the proceeds to the credit of the Exchange Bank. Immediately thereafter, the last-named bank suspended payment, the fact being that it had been hopelessly insolvent for six months, to the knowledge of all the managing directors. Both the receiver of the insolvent bank and Everett Bros., Gibson & Co. claimed the proceeds of the draft from the Importers’ & Traders’ Bank, the latter upon the grounds—First, that the Exchange Bank was their agent only for the purpose of collecting the draft; second, that the agent had been guilty of fraud in not disclosing its insolvent condition. The trial court found, in substance, the facts to be as claimed. The judgment was affirmed at general term, and the court of appeals, in its opinion, says that there was some evidence to support the first proposition of fact, and abundant eAÚdence to support the second. Under the rule which obtains in that court, therefore, both propositions of fact were necessarily treated as established. An express fiduciary relation between the bank and the drawer of the draft therefore existed. The drawer and the bank were principal and agent, not vendor and vendee. The Exchange Bank never had title to the draft. Everett Bros., Gibson & Co. continued to be the owners of it down to the moment of its payment, when the proceeds were substituted in its place, and the title thereto became vested in the original owner of the draft. This case, therefore, comes under the classes already referred to. Newton v. Porter, 69 N. Y. 133, is within the second class. The plaintiff’s bonds were stolen, and afterwards sold by the thief, and it was held that the plaintiff could follow the proceeds received by the thief into the hands of a transferee with notice. The title to the bonds was, of course, never in the thief, and he never acquired from the owner any right to use them as his own. The plaintiff waived, not the theft, but the wrongful disposition of the bonds, adopting the thief’s act in disposing of them as his own act, and was therefore permitted to follow the proceeds. Had the plaintiff rescinded the contract before the merchandise in question was disposed of, thus restoring to itself the title to it, and thereafter Burkhalter & Co. had disposed of it before the plaintiff could regain possession, a different question would be presented. Instead, it waited until the persons having title and possession, and the absolute right of disposition of the merchandise as its own property,—a right conferred upon them by the plaintiff’s OAvn act,—had disposed of it. Then, to -obtain an advantage over the other creditors of the insolvent firm, it asked the court to spell out a constructive trust as to the property sold before rescission,—a *487request neither supported by authority, nor, as we think, by the rules governing the raising of trusts by construction of equity. If the plaintiff’s position could be sustained, then it would be difficult to conceive of a case in which a vendor might not come into equity, and follow the proceeds of merchandise, because the original contract was tainted with fraud. The court of appeals said in Bosley v. Machine Co., 123 N. Y. 550-555,25 N. E.,990:
“It is not in every case of fraud that relief is to be administered in a court of equity, and it is a well-settled rule that wherever a matter respects only a sale of personal chattels, and lies merely in damages, the remedy is at law-only. If this had been a sale of a horse to the plaintiff procured by fraud, it would not have been proper for her to resort to an equitable action for relief, because an action at law would furnish her an ample remedy, and give her all the relief to which she could, under any circumstances, be entitled.”
The judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted before another referee, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.