Redmond v. Wemple

The Vice-Chancellor :

If this bill had been filed earlier and while the goods remained unsold and the proceeds not paid over, I am inclined to the opinion that the complainant might have succeeded (on filing a replication to the answer) in setting aside the assignment. But he waited a year and a half, after he had recovered his judgment before he filed his bill; and, even then, he did not attempt to impeach the assignment for fraud, but rather went against *222the conduct of the assignees. It was not until the month of August, one thousand eight hundred and forty-one, that he amended his bill, so as to make a case for setting the assignment aside. And, in the mean time, the assigned property had all been disposed of and the proceeds paid over and distributed under the assignment. And, now, the cause is brought to a hearing on bill and answer, without a replication and without giving the defendants an opportunity of supporting their denials of fraudulent intent, by proofs. As the case now stands, there is nothing to show that the assignment is conclusively fraudulent, nor is it fraudulent per se ; and an all the badges of fraud are either explained or are-negatived by general denial of fraudulent intent, the case is within the principles settled in Cunningham v. Freeborn, in error, 11 Wend. 240.

The worst feature of the case, as it appears to me, is that the assignors, the judgment .debtors, were permitted, by the assignees, to retain, at different times, considerable sums out of the proceeds of the assigned property, on the idea of compensation for services rendered as agents of the assignees in disposing of the goods, «fee.; and if 'the bill had been prosecuted in behalf of all the creditors of the debtors for an account of the assigned property, and with - a view to make the assignees or the acting assignee liable for that money as for a misapplication or waste, it is probable the acting assignee might have been held personally liable to make it good to the creditors. But, such is not the aspect or purpose of the present bill; and no decree, to that effect, can be made upon it.

The bill must be dismissed without reservation; but, from the remarks of Chief Justice Nelson, in the. concluding part of his opinion in Cunningham v. Freeborn, supra, on the subject of costs, and which apply with peculiar force to the case in hand, I am disposed to leave each party to bear his and their own costs of the suit.

Decree accordingly.