Sawyer v. Harrison

Decision Date19 May 1890
Citation45 N.W. 434,43 Minn. 297
PartiesCharles E. Sawyer v. Harvey J. Harrison
CourtMinnesota Supreme Court

Appeal by defendant from an order of the district court for Polk county, Mills, J., presiding, overruling his demurrer to the complaint.

Order reversed.

Knute Nelson, for appellant.

A. A Miller, for respondent.

OPINION

Mitchell, J.

In an action to set aside a conveyance executed in fraud of creditors, the plaintiff must, in his complaint, state facts showing that he occupies a status entitling him to assail the conveyance on the ground of the fraud; that he himself is a creditor, or that he occupies a representative capacity which gives him the right, in behalf of creditors to assail it. None but creditors, or those whom the law recognizes as their representatives, can assail such conveyances. The grantor himself cannot do it. Neither could his heirs, assigns, or personal representatives do so, being considered as merely standing in his shoes. But by statute the executor or administrator of an insolvent estate, the assignee of an insolvent debtor under a general assignment for the benefit of creditors, or the assignee or receiver of the property of such a debtor under the "insolvent law," and a receiver appointed in proceedings supplementary to execution are authorized to maintain such actions; they being considered, for such purpose, the representatives of the creditors prosecuting the action in their behalf. But they must allege the facts giving them this right. In the present case the only allegation in the complaint, in that regard, is that the plaintiff was, "by order of this court made and now on file in the office of the clerk thereof, appointed receiver of all the property of every kind belonging to Fred Buse," the grantor in the conveyance assailed. But the word "receiver" is a very general term. There are a great many kinds of receivers, appointed in a great variety of suits and special proceedings, for many different purposes, and clothed with very different powers. Prima facie, and as a general rule, a receiver succeeds to and is vested with only the rights and property of the person over whose estate, or some part thereof, he is appointed, and does not hold or acquire the right to maintain an action to set aside a conveyance made by the person over whose estate he has been appointed which the grantor himself could not have maintained. If he is a receiver of such a kind...

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