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Appeal from special term, Monroe county. Action by Joseph Schlitz Brewing Company against Henry J. Ester and Christiana A. Ester. The complaint was dismissed on the merits, and plaintiff appeals. Reversed in part.

The plaintiff, a judgment creditor of the defendant Henry J. Ester, charges that a conveyance by him through a third party to the other defendant, his wife, of certain premises known as "Lot No. 111," in "Beechwood Tract," in the city of Rochester, was made in fraud of creditors; also that a chattel mortgage and a bill of sale made by him to her of certain personal property were fraudulent as against his creditors; and that the wife obtained and appropriated to her own use the sum of $600 belonging to her husband in fraud of his creditors. The relief sought is that such conveyance, transfer, and appropriation be adjudged fraudulent and void as against the plaintiff, etc.

Argued before DWIGHT, P. J., and LEWIS and BRADLEY, JJ. Henry M. Hill, for appellant.

Abraham Benedict, for respondents.

BRADLEY, J. The defendants became husband and wife upwards of 20 years ago. The deed of the lot in the Beechwood tract was made to both of them. There is evidence tending to prove and the court found that Mrs. Ester was then the sole beneficial owner of the premises, and that her husband was made a grantee in the deed without her consent or knowledge. It was made by the Beechwood Homestead Association, of which she was and her husband was not a member. The trial court found that the purpose of conveyance through the third person to her was made to correct the mistake in the first deed. This finding of the court has the support of evidence. The defendant Henry J. Ester was for some years the proprietor of a saloon and hotel, grocery and meat market, and on the same premises persons were entertained as boarders. The wife claims that the latter was her separate business. In August, 1890, Mr. Ester went abroad, and was absent about two months. During that time his wife had charge of his business, and received from the proceeds of it $600, more or less, which sum the plaintiff alleges she retained, and has not accounted for to the other defendant. While there is some confusion in the proof upon the subject, the evidence warranted the conclusion that whatever amount Mrs. Ester did receive from the business of her husband during his absence was paid to and received by him from her after his return. The more substantial charge of fraudulent infirmity has relation to chattel mortgage of date April 7, 1892, made by Mr. Ester to his wife, and the bill of sale of the same personal property made by him to her on April 25, The indebtedness upon which the plaintiff's judgment was recovered arose in 1889, and was against the defendant Henry J. Ester and Charles F. Schroeder, in the name of Charles F. Schroeder & Co. The action was commenced against them in 1890. The defendant Ester appeared and answered the complaint. The other

defendant, Schroeder, did not appear therein. The action was reached upon the calendar in October, 1892. The defendant did not appear, and judgment was then directed and entered for the plaintiff, and execution thereon against the property of both of the defendants was returned unsatisfied. The apparent title to all of the personal property was then in Mrs. Ester, by reason of the bill of sale. The evidence tends to prove that at the time of the marriage of the defendants the wife had $1,300 or $1,400, and that she let her husband have a portion of the money; that afterwards two lots on Anderson avenue, in the city of Rochester, were purchased, and the deed was taken in the name of both of them as grantees, a building was erected upon the lots, and there were the meat market, grocery, saloon, and hotel and boarding house before mentioned. In 1884, through a third person, Mr. Ester made conveyance of his interest in those premises to his wife, which was made to and taken by her in satisfaction of all claims she then had against him. Thereafter the husband carried on the business of the grocery, meat market, saloon, and hotel until the bill of sale of April 25, 1892, was made. Since then the entire business has been conducted in the name of the wife. While for many years prior and up to that time the defendants assert by their testimony that the boarding was the separate business of the wife, supplies for the table came from the meat market and grocery as freely as required, and no account whatever between them was made or kept of such supplies, and the husband participated in the service of entertaining the boarders by waiting upon the table, etc. They severally had bank accounts, and by the consent of the wife her husband's name was inserted in the books of the bank, so as to enable him to also draw against her account, which he did more or less. In fact they seem to have been working together in harmony, and their business transactions appear, as between them, to have been in common. They did not deem it necessary to have entries or memorandum made of any accounts between them. This was the situation until in April, 1892, when the chattel mortgage and bill of sale in question were made, by which Mr. Ester transferred to his wife a quantity of property, consisting of cows, horses, wagons, furniture, tools, implements, liquors, and other personal property in and about the premises. About the same time he assigned to her a real-estate mortgage held by him, and transferred to his two sons of minor age certain certificates of stock in brewing companies. When those sales and transfers were made, he was left without title in his name to any property, as he testifies, nor had he any money. The testimony of the defendants was to the effect that the real estate mortgage to Mr. Ester was the product, to a considerable extent, of the money of the wife; that it was with her money that the brewing company stock was obtained by him; and that all the furniture included in the chattel mortgage and bill of sale was her property. When a husband and wife live and work together, the presumption is that her services are performed in her relation of wife, and that the business is that of the husband. Reynolds v. Robinson, 64 N. v.33N.Y.s.no.2—10

Y. 589; Coleman v. Burr, 93 N. Y. 17; Porter v. Dunn, 131 N. Y. 314, 30 N. E. 122. She may, however, engage in a business separate from that of her husband, conduct it on her own account, and bave the benefit of it. This, it is claimed, she did in keeping boarders, and it may be that she was permitted to treat it as her separate business. But the facts fairly derivable, and which may be inferred from the evidence, are that notwithstanding the supplies for that business were largely furnished by him, and the debts contracted in that behalf were mainly treated as his, the defendants seek to treat the proceeds derived from it as her money. This is well enough as between themselves, but it is hardly consistent with the rights of his creditors to thus permit the appropriation of his property and services by his wife to their exclusion. The trial court found that a portion only of the property included in the chattel mortgage and bill of sale belonged to the husband, and that the transfer of it to his wife "was made in consideration of her agreement to pay all of his indebtedness existing at that time." If the debt in question of Charles F. Schroeder & Co. to the plaintiff came within such indebtedness, it may be that the consideration would make the sale effectual and valid as against his creditors, as she must be deemed responsible and able to pay. Therasson v. McSpedon, 2 Hilt. 1; Barker v. Bucklin, 2 Denio, 45; Seaman v. Hasbrouck, 35 Barb. 151. But it may be that such expression of indebtedness would be construed to embrace only the individual debts of the defendant Henry J. Ester, and not to include the partnership debt due to the plaintiff. At all events, Mrs. Ester has, so far as appears, indicated no purpose to pay it. It is suggested that some of the property embraced in the bill of sale was exempt from levy and sale on execution. As to such property the sale is not fraudulent, because it would not have been available to the plaintiff if it had not been transferred by the defendants. If, as the court found, the title of Mrs. Ester to the property of that character was not dependent upon the bill of sale, no question as to its exemption will arise. In view of all the circumstances, as represented by the weight of the evidence, the conclusion is fairly required that the chattel mortgage and bill of sale were made and taken by the defendants with the intent to hinder and delay the plaintiff in the collection of its debt.

The charge against the validity, as against the creditors of Mr. Ester, of the deed from him, through another, to Mrs. Ester, of the lot in the Beechwood tract, and the charge that the money received by her from his business during his absence was retained by her in fraud of his creditors, are not sustained by the evidence. They are alleged in the complaint as causes of action distinct from that relating to the chattel mortgage and bill of sale, and, as this is an equity action, no reason appears why a new trial may not be confined to the latter cause of action alone. The statute requir ing the production by a foreign corporation of a certificate is applicable only to actions upon contract. Laws 1892, c. 687, § 15. This is not such an action. The judgment, so far as it relates to the issue arising out of the alleged cause of action founded upon

the charge that the chattel mortgage and bill of sale of the same property were made in fraud of the defendant Henry J. Ester, should be reversed, and a new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs, and in other respects the judgment should be affirmed. All concur.

(85 Hun, 517.)

CARTWRIGHT v. ROME, W. & O. R. CO. et al.

(Supreme Court, General Term, Fifth Department. April 12, 1895.) CARRIERS OF GOODS-DELAY-REPAIRING CARS.

Where defendant railroad company received from a connecting line, with which it had a traffic arrangement, perishable goods, and detained them in the cars in which they were received until repairs ordered by defendant's inspector were made, during which time the goods spoiled, defendant is liable.

Appeal from Monroe county court.

Action by Charles B. Cartwright against the Rome, Watertown & Ogdensburg Railroad Company and another for injuries to goods. while in transit. From a judgment of the county court affirming a judgment of the justice's court in favor of plaintiff, defendants appeal. Affirmed.

Argued before DWIGHT, P. J., and LEWIS, BRADLEY, and WARD, JJ.

George L. Walker, for appellants.
Hugh McKay, for respondent.

WARD, J. The trial was had in a justice's court of Monroe county on the 20th of July, 1893, before the justice without a jury. Judgment was rendered against the defendants (now appellants) for $84.02. The complaint alleged that on the 13th of October, 1892, the defendants received from the Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburgh Railway Company, for the plaintiff, 114 sacks of milkweed pods, of the value of $85.50, property of the plaintiff, which they, for a reasonable compensation to be paid to them, agreed to carry and deliver to Webster, N. Y., within a reasonable time after the receipt; that the defendants had failed to so deliver, but had so negligently and carelessly treated the property that it had become decayed and worthless, as well as the sacks containing the same, to the plaintiff's damage, etc. All the allegations of the complaint were denied by the defendants, except the facts of their incorporation.

There was evidence before the justice tending to establish these facts: That the plaintiff resided at Webster, N. Y., which is upon a line of the defendants' road, and was engaged in the manufacture of milkweed balls and artificial flowers from milkweed pods; that on the 12th of October, 1892, he caused to be delivered to the Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburgh Railway Company, at their Pearl Creek station, and at a distance of about 50 miles from Charlotte, 75 sacks of milkweed pods, containing 3 bushels in a sack, for which he took receipts of the company for shipment to Webster, N. Y.,

over their line to Charlotte, and thence by the defendants' road to Webster. The freight was in good order when delivered to this company, and on account of its being perishable the plaintiff was charged for first-class freight; being an increase over ordinary freight, not perishable. Forty of these sacks were shipped in one car to Charlotte, and 35 in another. The two cars reached Charlotte on the 14th of October, at 3 p. m., having been shipped on the 13th. The cars were placed upon the siding where deliveries are made from this Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburgh Railroad to the defendants, the defendants connecting their road at that place with the Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburgh. The conductors having charge of these cars immediately reported, on the 14th, to the proper officer of the defendants at Charlotte, and delivered what is called a "through waybill" of the freight of each car from Pearl Creek, N. Y., to Webster, N. Y., stating the time of shipment from Pearl Creek; the time of arrival at Charlotte; the name of consignee and point of destination; the weight of the articles; the rate of freight, which was first-class, and described the articles as "Sks. milkweed pods, O. R.," and number of sacks, and gave the divisions of earnings between the Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburgh Railway Company and the defendants for carrying this freight, which were equal. Without removing the freight from the cars, the defendants directed an employé, who was a car inspector, to examine these cars, which he did, and pronounced them in need of repairs; and they were ordered for repairs, which, under the arrangement between the two companies, was to be done by the Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburgh Railway Company. This it took

from the 14th of October to the 19th of October to accomplish, and then the defendants passed those cars, with the freight, over their line, about 11 miles, to Webster, where they were delivered to the plaintiff on the 20th of October. The pods and the sacks in which they were contained were then found rotten and valueless. The plaintiff paid the freight $12, and recovered that, with the value of the pods in good order. Upon appeal the justice's judgment was sustained by the county court, and the defendants again appealed, and are here with two objections: First, that the destruction of the freight was not due to the defendants' negligence, but the delay was caused by the action of the initial company, the receiving company not being liable therefor; second, that the proof does not disclose that the freight decayed while in the possession of the defendants. The appeal, therefore, is purely upon questions of fact, which has rendered a somewhat extended statement of the facts and evidence necessary.

The justice's court found as a fact that this loss was due to the negligence of the defendants; and if the evidence, or the inferences therefrom, tend to support the conclusions of that court, they cannot be disturbed here. Assuming that the defendants became responsible in regard to this freight at the time that it reached Charlotte and the waybill was passed to the defendants, and they took charge of the cars and inspected them, it is apparent that six of the eight days which occurred from the time of the delivery of

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