109 Ala. 220 | Ala. | 1895
This bill was filed by simple contract creditors, the appellees, — whose debts were due and unpaid on the 5th of March, 1895, the date of the filing of the'bill, — against the appellant, W.'T. Comer, who was, as is alleged, insolvent on the dates of the':attachment and of the filing of the bill. - ’The object-of 'the-bill was to set aside, as- collusive and fraudulent, a writ of attachment which had been, on the day specified abóve,
There was a demurrer to the bill, and a motion made by defendants to dismiss it for want of equity. The demurrer was overruled, and the motion to dismiss denied. The grounds of demurrer were, that the bill was not sufficiently specific in its allegation of fraud as alleged ; that the bill charges no fact from which the alleged collusive and fraudulent character of the attachment can b.e legally inferred, and that the bill does not aver that the attachment was sued out upon a fictitious or simulated demand, and that the amount it was sued out for was not justly due from the defendant to the .plaintiff in attachment, nor that there was in the transaction a reservation of a benefit or- secret trust in behalf of defend-' ant, W. T. Comer. . .
Section 3544 of the Code' provides, that “a creditor without á lien may file a bill in chancery to discover, or to subject to.the payment of his debt, any property which-has been fraudulently transferred or conveyed, or attempted to be fraudulently transferred or conveyed by his debtor.!’ Section 1735 makes the provision that ‘/•all conveyances or assignments in writing, or otherwise, of any estate or interest in real or personal property,'and every charge upon the same, made with intent to hinder, delay, or.defraud creditors, or other persons, of their lawful suits, damages, forfeitures, debts or demands, and. every bond, or other evidence of debt, given,
It can m'ake no difference that the bill does not aver that the alleged indebtedness of the defendant to' tlie plaintiff in attachment was fictitious or simulated and nothonafide. If the plaintiff and the defendant in-at-, tachment colluded together for the 'purpose of transferring the property of the latter, the effort to resort to such judicial machinery, as was said in the case we have just cited,.may be characterized as an “attempt”-to make such fraudulent transfer. It is the collusion and fradulent use that is attempted to be made of the processes of the court-in such cases, so opposed to the whole spirit and policy of the statutes, which the law abhors and denounces. If an attaching creditor fairly and honestly outstrips other creditors in a race of diligence, in s.uing
If the debt of such a collusive creditor on which he bases his attachment is. simulated, it but adds another, but not the only, ground of fraud in such instances. The averments of collusion and fraud’ as made in the bill, are, we apprehend, sufficiently specific. The demurrer was properly overruled, and the decree of the Chancery Court is affirmed.
Affirmed.