88 Ga. 427 | Ga. | 1892
Judgment affirmed.
On January 28, 189,1, W. H. Bass, of Baldwin county, made a deed of assignment for creditors to T.’T. Windsor. The deed recites that Bass is financially involved and unable to pay his indebtedness, and wishes to turn over all his assets to his creditors and to wind up and discontinue the mercantile business in which he is engaged ; and therefore he conveys to Windsor, in trust for the purposes hereinafter expressed, all of the stock of goods, store fixtures, etc., of Bass in Milledgeville, and
On February -25; 1891, five of the creditors named in the schedule attached to the assignment,'brought their petition in which they alleged that the schedule lien in favor of Davis, trustee, ought not to have preference or even pro rata satisfaction from the assets, it not being a proper lien nor valid judgment, nor even a proved account ; for that on February 15, 1890, Mrs. Emma P. Burge, of Tennessee, filed in Hancock superior court a bill against W. H. Bass of Baldwin county and four others of Hancock county, three of them being minors without guardian; that no semblance of substantial relief was sought against any of said defendants except Bass, and the names of the others could have been inserted for no other purpose than to give jurisdiction to the court away from Bass’s residence where vigilant creditors would have notice to resist the creation of this consuming lien; that the verdict and decree therein were made by consent and collusion of parties, without proof of claim ; that thefi.fa. issuing therefrom was withheld from record in Baldwin county ; and that, as petitioners have learned through the assignee, and through R. H. Lewis who seems to represent the assignment and the decree also, they intend to levy the fi. fa. “and sell the same under it,” regardless of the assignment, whereby the assets, already insufficient to pay preferred debts, will be sacrificed to the further damage of creditors. Petitioners pray for decree vacating the assignment and lodging the assets of Bass in the custody of C. B. G-ause as receiver, with instructions to convert the same into cash to be distributed by subsequent order; that the decree of Davis, trustee of Mrs. Burge, be decreed void for
The defendants filed their answers on March 17,1891. At the trial, July 20, 1891, they demurred on the grounds, among others, that the petition fails to allege such grounds as would entitle the petitioners to the relief asked for ; that it is not verified; that it fails to set out any specific amount which any of the petitioners claim against Bass, and does not allege that any of their claims are due or when they will become due; that the petition attacks the judgment from Hancock superior court without making Mrs. Burge or the other parties interested in that litigation parties to this suit; that the petition attacks the Hancock county judgment for fraud and collusion without setting out in what the same consisted or the parties thereto, and also seeks to attack the Judgment collaterally; and that the petition seeks to enjoin and restrain the receiver appointed by Hancock superior court in the performance of the duties of his receivership. This demurrer was overruled, and this ruling forms one of the exceptions.
Another exception is to the ruling of the court that .the Hancock county decree was not a legal lien as to creditors and not entitled to priority in the distribution
Upon issues of fact submitted to the jury they found that the assignment was valid, and that the mortgage from Bass to Davis was delivered before the deed of