137 So. 30 | Ala. | 1931
The original bill was filed by Anderson, Clayton Co., claiming to be a creditor of R. G. Cortner, against said Cortner and his alleged grantees, seeking to set aside conveyances to certain property therein specifically described, as in fraud of complainant as such creditor. Service was duly had upon the defendants on May 14, 1930. The bill was not a general creditor's bill, but filed solely for the benefit of complainant. Subsequent thereto, and on October 6, 1930, appellee, Daisy Galyon, upon first securing leave of the chancellor, filed her petition of intervention, to which defendant R. G. Cortner interposed demurrer, and, from the decree overruling his demurrer, said Cortner has prosecuted this appeal.
So far as testing the sufficiency of such petition is concerned, we think the lawmaking body has evinced an intention that in this respect it is to be treated as an original bill, for it is provided in section 9485, Code of 1923, that the parties may demur thereto "as if it were an original complaint." So considered, therefore, we conclude the decree overruling the demurrer is such an interlocutory one as comes within the influence of section 6079, Code of 1923, and will support an appeal.
Preliminary to all other questions, the point is taken by demurrer and stressed in brief that petitioner has failed to show such an interest in the subject-matter of the original suit as to justify an intervention. We think the point well taken. By the original bill Anderson, Clayton Co. acquired an equitable lien on the property which, so far as here appears, prevails over petitioner's claim. McCarty v. Robinson,
"But complainant's bill is not a general creditors' bill and complainant had the right to file a bill for its exclusive benefit, and so the cause should have proceeded until complainant or some other creditor by proper proceeding may have brought defendant grantor's estate into court as a fund for the equal benefit of all." Merchants' Bank of Mobile v. Parrish,
Our statute (section 9485, Code) has been held as merely cumulative to the common-law remedy of intervention (Awbrey v. Estes,
The record as it here appears discloses a superior equitable lien in favor of the original complainant, with which petitioner has no right to interfere. But it is suggested that, so much conceded, petitioner would still be interested in any surplus that may remain after satisfaction of the claim of the original complainant, citing Carothers v. Weaver,
There is no indication or intimation of any surplus, and the most liberal construction of the petition would not justify any such interpretation of the petition. As for petitioner's intention to assail conveyances other and different from those attacked in the original bill, it would seem such new and independent matter should more properly be presented by "an original bill in the nature of a cross-bill." Ex parte Gray,
The petition failed to show such an interest on petitioner's part in the subject-matter of the litigation as to justify intervention, and the demurrer thereto should have been sustained.
Let the decree be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and BOULDIN and FOSTER, JJ., concur. *407