The bóna fides of the indebtedness which the mortgage in this case was given to secure is not questioned. The case of Ford v. Williams (24 N. Y., 359) is therefore an authority for holding that if the parties to the mortgage had agreed that the mortgagor should keep possession and sell the goods for cash, paying over the moneys to the mortgagees, the agreement would not have been fraudulent in law, and if in fact made with au honest intent would have warranted the conclusion that the mortgage was valid as against the claims of other creditors. To the same effect is Conkling v. Shelley (28 N. Y., 360).
The counsel for the appellant relies upon those cases, but we do not think they aid him. This case differs from them in some material particulars. By the agreement in this case, as we gather it from the testimony, the mortgagor was not restricted to sales for cash, but he was at liberty to sell on credit at his unlimited • discretion. That the parties so understood the agreement, and so acted upon it, is plainly to be inferred from the statement in the affidavit of the defendant that he assigned to the mortgagees “ accounts as fast as made by sales,” which statement is confirmed by the affidavit of Weicher, one of the mortgagees. Perhaps this would not have taken the case out of the doctrine of Ford v. Williams, if the agreement had provided that the accounts should be applied at their face in payment of the mortgage debt at the time of transfer. But that does not appear to have been the case. It is to be presumed that the parties to the agreement have stated it as favorably for themselves as they could do truthfully. We may therefore assume that the terms of the agreement did not require that accounts transferred to the *460mortgagees should be applied in extinguishment of their debt till actually collected in. If such was the arrangement with the mortgagees it enabled the mortgagor to sell his entire stock on credit, and keep his other creditors at bay. In that aspect the transaction was fraudulent per se. But the actual conduct of the parties was worse for creditors than even that arrangement would have been if it had been lived up to. There is evidence tending to show that in several instances accounts for sales on credit were not transferred to the mortgagees, but were kept by the mortgagor and collected by him. Furthermore, the evidence discloses certain other indicia of a fraudulent intent, which did not attend the cases above cited. . It showed that the mortgagor ostensibly carried on the business after the execution of the mortgage, in the same manner in all respects as before ; that he did not profess to be acting as the agent of the mortgagees, but conducted the business in his own name and apparently on his own account; that he paid his hands with money received from sales of goods ; and that the sales he made on credit were in his own name.
The acts and declarations of the mortgagor while in actual possession were competent evidence upon the question of intent, as part of the res gestae. (Newlin v. Lyon, 49 N. Y., 661.) Even treating the question of fraud as one of fact, depending on the intent, we think the evidence warranted the conclusion of the judge at Special Term. We lay out of view the statements in the affidavit, on the part of the plaintiff, that the mortgagor deposited moneys received from the business in bank, in his own name, and drew against them, and that he procured discounts at bank for his own credit, of notes given by his customers, as those statements seem to be based wholly on information derived from entries in the bank books, which are not evidence as against the parties to the mortgage. The order should be affirmed.
The like result in the case of Ignatz Thcdimer, respondent, against the same defendant, appellant.
MulliN, P. J., and Talcoit, J., concurred.Orders denying motions to vacate attachments affirmed, with ten dollars costs, and disbursements in each case.