The bill in this case was filed to wacate a judgment in attachment and sale thereunder of. the property attached to defendant Adams and also a sale by him to the defendant Shaw. The attachment proceedings were admittedly regular, and the title which passed was good in law. The bill also attempts to charge the defendant Adams, as trustee of a fund of $192, received of F. W. Read & Co., as hereinafter stated.
The theory of the complainant appears to be that there was concealment'of the fact of the pendency of the attachment suit at a time when defendant Adams had an opportunity to communicate the fact, and that there was in fact mo valid claim existing in favor of the defendant Adams (plaintiff in attachment) on which to base the attachment proceedings.
The facts are involved. It appears that in December, 1887, the complainant was convicted of the murder of his wife, and sentenced to the State prison at Jackson for life. That at the time of his incarceration he left two minor sons, 14 and 16 years of age, respectively, and he also •owed some small debts. His property consisted of the lot in question, then of small value, not exceeding $300, and a claim against F. W. Read & Co., of $192, for money which had been deposited with them in the expectation that it would be repaid in lumber with which complainant expected to build a house on the lot in question.
Upon discovering, in 1893, that these entire proceedings were void, defendant Adams visited the complainant in prison, and stated to him the facts as to the expenditures made by him, and asked that the complainant deed the land to him to answer his demand. This complainant declined to do. Adams secured an assignment of the claims from most of the parties who directly furnished the necessaries to the two boys, and brought suit in attachment, causing a levy to be made upon the land in question. The suit proceeded to judgment. A sale of the property was made, and Adams became the purchaser. It appears that the attachment proceedings were instituted before Adams’ visit to complainant, and that they were not referred to in the interview.
It is the contention of the complainant that Adams had no claim against him, and that if he (complainant) had been notified of the suit he could have successfully defended against him. If the claim asserted by Adams in the attachment suit had been wholly unconscionable, there would be much force in this contention. If, on the
But it is insisted that Adams’ money did not pay for these necessaries, and that, therefore, he had no claim, although others may have had. This is stating the form, rather than the substance, of the transaction. Adams in
Is complainant entitled to recover the $192 received by defendant of Read & Co.? The circuit judge held that he was not, and on the ground that there was no privity between complainant and defendant. The complainant contends that this view is mistaken, and that the money was received by defendant as money coming through the-complainant. We are not able, however, to distinguish this case from Corey v. Webber, 96 Mich. 357; for while-the defendant, when he received this money, did so in recognition of the fact that the claim against Read & Co. had once belonged to complainant, it was received by him upon the claim that the right had passed to defendant as guardian of complainant’s children, and was paid by Read & Co. in recognition of that claim. Complainant’s remedy against Read & Co. was in no way affected or postponed. No specific fund of complainant was diverted. The caséis within the principle of Corey v. Webber, and cases cited.
The decree dismissing the complainant’s bill is affirmed, with costs.