delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal by Thomas H. Allen and two other persons, partners under the 'name of Allen, Nugent & Co., and Thomas IL Allen individually, from a decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Arkansas, dismissing their bill in a suit in equity brought by them against Benjamin H. Smith and the'heirs-at-law-of William H. Todd, deceased, and Levi IT. Springer, administrator of, Todd, to set aside, as fraudulent and void as against the plaintiffs, as creditors of Todd, -a"judgment recovered by- Smith against Todd, and the sale of certain lands of Todd to Smith on execution on that judgment, and for a sale of those lands under judgments obtained by the plaintiffs, and the payment of those judgments out of the proceeds of such sale.
The substance, of the bill is, that, in January, 18T5, Todd executed three promissory botes,’ payable in one, two and three years respectively from their date, in favor of one Cohen, each for $1666.66, with 10 per cent interest; that Allen, Nugent
&
Co..became the owners of those notes, and brought
The bill, further alleges, that at the time of the execution of the four notes, and afterwards, and up to and after the 1st of August, 1876, and at the “time of the levy of the three attachments, Todd was the owner of a.n undivided half interest- in a plantation called the Bellevue plantation, in Chicot County, with certain exceptions, which plantation contained the land mentioned as having been so attached,. and other 'land; that at the July tgraa, 1876, of the Circuit Court of Chicot County, judgments were obtained against Tódd in .favor of J. McMurray
&
Co. and "of Jurey & Gillis; that a decree in favor of. one Halliday,- enforceable by execution.
■, The bill further alleges that the property on which the liens of the plaintiffs are declared tq rest is reasonably worth a large sum, say $20,000, and more than enough to pay off their demands, if the fraudulent judgment in favor of Smith, and the sale thereunder, should be set aside, and the property be sold at a fair price. .
Smith filed an answer to the bill, taking issue on its material allegations, and denying that there was anything collusive .or fraudulent in .his obtaining his judgment and buying under it'the lands in question. The answer also árers that the suit was vigorously contested by Todd; that Smith was justly
The heirs of Todd also put in an answer, taking issue as to the. material allegations of the bill,- and averring that Smith had had continuously, from about the 1st -of January, 1868, the supervision and management of the Yellow Bayou and Bellevue plantations, as long as Todd owned or controlled them, and had never received any compensation for his services before the suit for the $8000 was brought; and that-they and each of them‘ believed that the- judgment, was just; and that the sum was due to Smith from Todd.
Springer, the administrator of Todd, also put in an answer to the same effect as that of Smith.
The bill did not waive an answer on oath, and all three answers were sworn to.
Subsequently, Smith and Springer filed a sworn amendment to their answer, setting up that letters of administration were granted to Springer on the estate of Todd ■ by the Probate Court of Chicot' County, on the 4th of August, 1879, and that the demands of ■ the plaintiffs against .the estate were n'ot exhibited to the administrator, as required, by the statute, before'the end of two years from the granting of/the letters.
The question to be decided in this case is exclusively óh’e of fact, and concerns the'honesty and validity of the claim of Smith against Todd.. The claim is supported by a judgment* a copy of which is contained in the record. The complaint in the suit was sworn to by Smith on the 4th of August, 1876. The account filed with the complaint states that the $8000 are due for services rendered in the supervision and management of Todd’s Yellow Bayou plantation and'his half interest m the Bellevue plantation, from January, 1.869, to date, at $1000 per annum, and interest. The attachment was levied on the 5th of August, 1876, on cotton and other personal
Much comment is made on the fact that Todd did not plead the statute of limitations of the State to a part of Smith’s claim. But this is not an objection of which the plaintiffs can avail themselves. Todd was at liberty to waive the plea, and there was evidently sufficient in the relations of the parties and in the circumstances of the case to warrant him in doing so.
We have carefully considered the evidence, and the various propositions advanced by the counsel for the appellants in regard to the facts, and are of opinion that the decree of the Circuit Court was right, and that it must be
Affirmed.
