The only grounds upon which the defendants resist the payment to the plaintiffs of the debt due by them for money lent, (Com. Bank of Albany v. Hughes, 17 Wend. 94; 2 Seld. 412,) which is termed d deposit with them as a bank, are three-fold.
Eirst. That such moneys, so deposited or lent, are still the property of the firm of Lanes, Boyce & Oo.; and the defend
Secondly. That the defendants are judgment creditors of Lanes, Boyce & Co. who, by having exhausted their remedy by execution, are in a position to attack the bona fides of the assignment by that firm to the plaintiffs, and are entitled to have, it avoided, by way of affirmative relief) as claimed in their answer, in order to reach the property fraudulently assigned, its proceeds, either in the hands of the assignees, or in the shape of the debt from the defendants themselves.
Thirdly. That they are bound to respond to the sheriff for such moneys, under the attachment issued in their favor against the property of Lanes, Boyce & Co. and not to the plaintiffs.
These three grounds must be viewed separately, in considering the rights of the parties. It is also not to be lost sight of, that the action is not for moneys having an earmark, which could not be appropriated without a conversion, but simply for money lent. It is true that if such moneys had been the fruit of a felonious or fraudulent appropriation of any person’s property,' the true owner might follow such proceeds into the hands of any one into which they might come, (Bank of America v. Pollock, 4 Edw. 215,) thus making the party by whom such property was so appropriated, in fact, the agent of the original owner. The moneys in question, however, could in no sense, after the assignment of “Lanes, Boyce & Co.” be termed their property, except so far as by law they plight be pursued and reached by their creditors.
The answer in this case contains the whole of all the affidavits on which the attachment under which the defendants claim was issued, with all their allegations of mere probative facts, averring that all such allegations are true. After setting forth the issuing of. such attachment, and its service on the defendants, it further alleges other matters to show that the assignment by Lanes, Boyce & Co. was fraudulent. But it only claims that the defendants have a right to apply the balance of the moneys deposited by the plaintiffs with them as part payment of their judgment against the members of the
In reference to the first of the modes in which the defendants so seek to take advantage of their claim against Lanes, Boyce & Co. it is clear that they could not set off their claim against that of the plaintiffs in this action. They could only make that set-off where such firm had a right to the moneys claimed. The assignment cut off all such right, until it was adjudged to be void as against creditors. For that purpose certain steps must be taken by the latter, such as obtaining judgment and exhausting all ordinary remedies by execution, before they could be placed in a situation to attach such assignment and remove it as a barrier to reaching the proceeds of the assigned estate in the hands of assignees.
The second of such modes presents a more embarrassing question. The Code authorizes a defendant to set up new matter constituting a counter-claim connected with the subject of the action. (§ 150, subd. 1.) Such counter-claim has been held to be more broad and comprehensive than a set-off or recoupment, while including both. (Vassear v. Livingston, 3 Kernan, 256. Pattison v. Richards, 22 Barb. 146.) It has been held in this court to include every relief to which a defendant would be entitled in a separate action at law or in equity, or in a cross action. (Gleason v. Moen, 2 Duer, 642.) It is also fully settled that a defense purely equitable may be set up against a claim strictly legal, (Foot v. Sprague, 12 How. 355; Hunt v. Farmers’ Loan and Trust Co., 8 id. 418,) and cannot be taken advantage of in any other way. (Id.) Such defenses include every thing for which relief must formerly have been sought in a court of equity. (Dobsen v. Pearce, 2 Kernan, 156.) And although counter-claims, which are not merely defenses, but admit of affirmative relief beyond dismissing the plaintiffs’ complaint, are not lost by not being set up, nothing prevents their being set up if connected with the subject of the action. The Code expressly provides for giving by judgment to the defendant, “any affirmative relief to which he may be entitled.” {Code, § 274, subd. 2.) This
Fraud in the assignment to the plaintiffs, whereby, upon an assault thereupon by creditors of the assignors, who had exhausted their remedy at law, they would hold the assigned property in trust for such creditors, clearly constituted a cause of action connected with the subject of the present one, which consisted of a liability to refund proceeds of such fraudulently assigned property lent to the defendants. There would be no obstacle to the commencement by the latter, as such creditors, of an action to set aside such assignment, and have all the proceeds of the assigned property in the hands of the plaintiffs, including, of course, the moneys deposited with the former, applied to' the payment of their claim, and incidentally to enjoin them from prosecuting such an action as the present. The Code evidently intended to prevent circuity of action, by allowing defendants to resist an action brought for moneys, which they might substantially recover back in another form. It uses the most general terms when it merely requires the cause of action in a counter-claim to be “ connected with the subject, of the action.” Such a phrase, in order to prevent multiplicity of litigation, should be liberally construed. (See McNamara v. McNamara, 9 Abb. 18.)
Some little difficulty arises upon the question whether the defendants have, by a proper demand of affirmative relief, irrevocably elected to pursue their remedy in this action, by setting aside the assignment in question, and procuring a judgment to that effect, which shall also direct the application of the moneys sued for in satisfaction pro tanto of their claim. Of course, where affirmative relief as a counter-claim is sought, although the Code does not expressly require that it'should be asked for, it would seem more proper that it should be so in some way (Bridge v. Payson, 5 Sandf. 210,) but how far that which is sought must be specified in detail, is not so clear. If the matter, which constituted such counter-claim, were the subject of a cross action, as well as of such counter
The great objection to the plaintiffs’ right of recovery is that all the facts stated as a counter-claim in the answer, were neither demurred to nor controverted, and were consequently ■admitted, and no issue of fact was raised upon them to be tried, and the defendants became entitled to all the relief which such facts required should be given. The judgment itself is incomplete without some disposition of the issue raised by the statement of such counter-claim in the answer, and either that must be corrected or a new trial had to dispose of it.
But for the purpose of determining whether any jury trial is necessary, it will be proper to examine the nature of the defense.
So far as the right of the sheriff to' prosecute for the debt due the plaintiffs is concerned, it must depend entirely on the statutory provisions of the Code, (§§ 227 to 243,) respecting attachments. Those provisions are very precise and special,
The provisions just recited in regard to attachments in actions and against absent debtors, add to property leviable upon under an execution, debts, credits and effects of the defendant or debtor, provide for the mode of levy by notice to the debtor, and for discovery by him of the amount due, and enable the sheriff or officer to reduce them into possession by actions either in his own name or that of the defendant. The plaintiff is empowered to prosecute the actions so authorized to.be brought by the sheriff in case of attachments against a defendant, upon giving an undertaking to indemnify the sheriff from all damages, costs and expenses on account thereof, (Code, §239,) which undertaking (by the next section) is not to be delivered up to the defendant in case he recover judgment, so that it becomes entirely a personal indemnity to the officer for any liability incurred in such action.
It is very evident that the first of such two last mentioned sections (§239) was intended to be confined to actions brought by the sheriff, under section 232, and probably to those brought in his own name, as the indemnity is against all damages, costs and expenses on account thereof, which he never could incur except in suits brought by himself. The prosecution by the plaintiff, mentioned in such section, was evidently the mere conducting and supervision of the proceedings, not the bringing of a suit in his name, as it is contrasted with such bringing of the suit, and has the alternative of “ under his direction ” added, which alone would not give him power to determine in whose name the suit should be brought. It is clear, therefore,
It is by no means clear in what form, or on what principle, the proceeds of goods, fraudulently assigned, in the hands of assignees, can be so reached. To reach' dioses in action, not leviable upon at law, an equitable execution might be issued, by a bill in equity, whose lien attached from the time of filing it. (Butler v. Stoddard, 7 Paige, 163.) A bill to remove obstructions to the levy of an execution upon goods liable thereto, it seems, would also relate backwards, and take effect' as a lien from the time of issuing such execution. (Id.) The remedy of a creditor is, however, extended, on certain conditions, to all the property, and things in action, of a debtor, by the Revised Statutes and the Code, (2 B. S. 173, § 28 ; Code,
It would be difficult to conceive how a sheriff, or a debtor, could be plaintiff in an action to set aside a fraudulent assignment, or rather to convert the assignee into a trustee for an alleged creditor, in order to reach the proceeds of assigned goods before the creditor has established his claim, when the latter could not do it himself. (Mills v. Block, 30 Barb. 549.) It is true, it has been held that under the Revised Statutes, upon an attachment against an absconding debtor, a creditor could file a bill to remove fraudulent obstructions, but it must be on behalf of all the creditors. (Falconer v. Freeman, 4 Sandf. Ch. 565.) But the provisions of the Code, before referred to, confine the right of the sheriff to the collection of debts due to the defendant also. I do not perceive how, by any artificial reasoning, a debt due to his assignees for the loan of the proceeds of goods sold or moneys collected, can be said or considered to be in any manner a debt due to him, or any part of his credits or effects, until the assignment is set aside or proceedings are taken by some one entitled to set it aside. As to him, such debt belongs to the assignees. The result of permitting the sheriff to commence an action in which he would be obliged to set forth the assignment and its fraud, as the foundation of his claim, since he could not recover the debt upon a mere allegation that it was due to the defendant in the attachment suit, might lead to a long litigation in which all the equities of the assignees would require to be settled, and yet, after all, the plaintiff in such suit might not ultimately recover therein. If goods or debts of the defendant were alone concerned, no such equities need be settled, and the sheriff, after collecting the debts, could return the proceeds to him.
I am aware that in the case of Skinner v. Stuart, (15 Abb. Pr. 391,) it was incidentally stated that upon complying with the terms of section 232, a plaintiff who had obtained an attachment might sue in his own name, but it was not necessary for the decision of that case, and the learned judge who made
In the case last cited, in which the assignors of the present plaintiffs were defendants, the prevailing opinion seems to disregard the words of the statute, “ debts, credits and effects of the debtor,” and reads them as if they were “ that which remains the property of the debtor, so far as creditors are concerned.” It assumes that the property sought to he seized was the debtor’s, and being so, the assignment formed no barrier to its possession by creditors, and that the sheriff represents the creditor, who, until his debt was established, could not reach such property by a principle analogous to that by which a court of equity removes obstructions to the operation of an execution. But it has already been shown that such a principle is entirely different from that by which courts of equity reach the proceeds of property fraudulently assigned ; that the money lent was not the debtor’s ; and that the debt claimed was not due to him. The dissenting opinion in that case, held the sheriff could bring no such suit, because, (1.) He had no interest in the subject matter of the action to entitle him to be plaintiff therein. (2.) He was not trustee of an express trust. (3.) Under section 232 of the Code, the debt attached did not belong to the judgment debtor, but to the assignees ; and (4) No such right could be exercised until the assignment had judicially been declared void, which could not he done until judgment, which had not been obtained. Such opinion relied upon the previous decision of a general term of the same court that a depositary or borrower of moneys belonging to assignees, however fraudulent, could not file a hill of interpleader between such assignees and creditors. It seems difficult to reconcile the two decisions, and loth as I am to differ with a co-ordinate tribunal of equal jurisdiction, upon
I am, therefore, in favor of setting aside the verdict and judgment, with costs to abide the event.
(a).
Since the delivery of the foregoing, the doctrine contained in such dissenting opinion has been reiterated by the same learned justice, in another case, and announced by him as the doctrine of the court whose bench he adorns.