105 So. 588 | Ala. | 1925
A decree was rendered in favor of the complainants to this bill in their suit against the Perrine Sawmill Company and others, and a lien declared in their favor upon all of the property contained in the conveyance from the Ensign Yellow Pine Company, Inc., to said Perrine Sawmill Company, attached as Exhibit B to the original bill in that cause. The decree fixing the liability and declaring the lien was affirmed by this court in Perrine Sawmill Co. v. Powell et al.,
Pending this litigation, the bill in the instant case avers the Perrine Sawmill Company sold and conveyed all of the property described in said Exhibit B to the Ark-Ala Lumber Company, and that, after the rendition of the last decree declaring the lien thereon, the said Ark-Ala Lumber Company conveyed said property to the Wisconsin Alabama Lumber Company, and that both of these corporations had notice of complainants' lien. Part of the property upon which this lien existed was an entire sawmill plant, described in the bill, which the Wisconsin *592 Alabama Lumber Company is charged with having removed and having disposed of a large portion thereof. The bill in this cause was filed for the purpose of having these respondents account for the property so disposed of upon which complainants had the declared lien, and for the enforcement of the decree rendered.
It is insisted respondents were not parties to the original cause wherein the lien was established, and that the bill only discloses an action in tort, for redress of which the remedy at law is adequate and complete. A lis pendens under the statute was duly filed and recorded, and the bill expressly avers respondents dealt with the property with notice of the lien.
In considering the cause of Perrine Sawmill Co. v. Powell,
"It took the timber by the purchase at that time with notice of the suit, and subject to the future decree of the court. It purchased the property subject to the hazard of this litigation."
The fact, therefore, that respondents were not parties to the original cause is not here a material question. They dealt with the property "subject to the hazard of this litigation." The bill is filed for the enforcement of the decree rendered by the court in favor of complainants in the original cause, and its equity rests upon the inherent power of a court of equity to effectuate its own decrees. For such purpose the successful party is not remitted to a court of law, and the authorities cited by counsel (among them U.S. v. Bitter Root Co.,
"The authority of a court of equity to enforce its judgments or decrees when obstacles have arisen since the rendition of same is well recognized, and is usually invoked by a bill for that purpose." Sollie v. Outlaw,
In the more recent case of Bartee v. Matthews,
The bill was not subject to the demurrer interposed thereto, and the decree overruling the demurrer will be here affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and MILLER, JJ., concur.