Plaintiff brought an action against defendant, Williams, on a note, by attachment. While that was pending he brought an action against defendants to set aside deeds made by defendant William Ankrum to his son-in-law and by the latter to Ankrum’s wife, on the ground that they were voluntary and made to defraud Ankrum’s creditors. The present
Generally a common creditor cannot attack a conveyance of his debtor in an independent action to set it aside for fraud. He should first have his claim ascertained and vouched by a judgment. [Martin v. Mitchell,
But in the instance of either a judgment creditor or an attachment creditor, the petition should allege that the plaintiff is one or the other. Otherwise it fails to state an essential requisite to a cause of action. In this case it appears from the petition that plaintiff was a creditor, but there is no allegation whatever that it was an attachment creditor.
It is plain that if there is no cause of action set out in the petition, no ground is laid for a receiver and none should be appointed. [Cantwell v. Columbia Lead Co.,
Plaintiff seemingly urges, as a cure for the deficiency in the petition) that the application for a re
