delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
The appellants, by their bill in the Circuit Court, alleged that, being creditors of the appellee in a very large amount of money previously lent and advanced to him, they, in the year 1828, instituted then.- action for its recovery on the law side of the court, when it was agreed, by writing filed of record, that a judgment •should be entered against the. apрellee as of the 26th of November, 1827, in favor of the appellants, for the sum of $22,191.71. That this judgment, with a large accumulation of interest, remained unappealed from and unsatisfied, either in whole or in part. That, the appellants, after obtaining this judgment, believing that the appellee was possessed of concealed means-of satisfying it, and especially that when in a state of insolvency, and with a view of defeating his creditors, h*3 had settled upon his wife a large amount of property, and, as afterwards appeared, made transfers of property to her between the date of the judgment and of the execution thereon, they sued out upon the said judgment a writ of
capias ad satisfaciendum.,
returnable to the April term of the court, 183Q,' and in virtue of ■ that process caused to be taken into actual custody the body of the appellee. That under the exigency of. this process and arrest, the appellee would have been compelled to continue in close confinement, or could have obtained his release therefrom solely by the laws, of Pennsylvania passed for the relief of insolvent’debtors, which laws would have exacted of the appellee an assignment to his creditors of all estate, property, or interests whatsoever, held by himself or by others for him, or unlawfully settled upon his
That on the 19th of November, 1825, a marriage contract was executed between the appellee and Annis Stockton, his intended wife, and Richard Stockton, -the father of said Annis, by which agreement the said Richard Stockton was invested with a large amount of real and personal property in trust for the benefit of the appellee and his intended wife during their joint lives, and if the said appellee should survive his intended wife and have issue by 'her, in trust for his benefit and for the maintenаnce and support of his family, and if there should be no child or children of the said marriage, then after the- death of the husband or wife, in trust to convey the property to the survivor in -fee-simple.
That the appellee being arrested and in actual custody under the capias ad satisfaciendum, sued out as aforesaid, it was then and there agreed in writing between the appellants and the appellee, that the former should, without prejudice to their rights аnd remedits against the latter, permit him to.be forthwith discharged from custody under the said process, and that the appellee should go to the next session of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, and on the law side of that court make up an issue with the appellants, to try the question whether the appellee was possessed of the means, either in or out of the marriage settlement, of satisfying the judgment against him; the said issue to be tried without regard to form, or to the time when the jury for the trial thereof should be summoned, the appellee also giving security to abide the result of the.trial of said issue. That upon the execution of this agreement, the appellee was released. from custody, and the marshal for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, to whom the -writ of capias ad respondendum was directed, made a return upon the -writ that he had taken the body of the appellee into custody, and that he had been discharged by the consent and 'direction of the appellants. That the trial of the issue, \yhich was provided for in the said agreement, actually topic place, and resulted in a verdict by which, so far as concerned the purposes of the said trial, it was found that the appellee had not the means, either in or out of the said marriage settlement, of satisfying the judgment of the- appellants.
That the trust created, by the marriage settlement, and by which the above property comprised therein was adjudged to be protected against creditors, having expired by its own limitation, that property had become liable to the creditors of the appellee, who was bound to a full account of the value thereof and for the satisfaction of the rights and demands of the appellants out of the same. That the' appellants had accordingly applied to the appellee for payment of their judgment, to be made out of the property comprised in and protected by the marriage settlement or out of any other resources at his command, but had been met by a refusal on the part of the appellee, founded not upon his inability to satisfy the just claim of the appellants for money actually loaned, but upon an alleged exemption from all liability resulting from the facts of his having been once arrested under a
capias ad satisfaciendum,
and subsequently released from custody by consent of the appellants. The bill alleges this refusal, аnd the foundation on which it is placed, to be in direct violation of the written agreement, which explicitly declared that it was made for the accommodation of the appellee, and without any prejudice whatever to arise to the plaintiffs’ (the appellants’) rights, by the defendant’s (the appellee’s) enlargement. It charges the refusal and objection now interposed to be fraudulent, and made in bad faith, and as such, though it might avail at law to embarrass or prevent the enforcement of the judgment of the appellants, yet that a court of equity shoiild prohibit a resort thereto on account of its unconscientious and fraudulent character. The bill concludes with a prayer, that the appellee may be enjoined from setting up, as a discharge from the judgment against him, his release from' custody undef
To this bill the appellee (the defendant in the Circuit Cоurt) demurred, assigning, for causes of demurrer, that if the taking into custody of the body of the defendant under the capias ad satisfaciendum was a legal discharge of the alleged debt, the complainants are not relievable in equity from the effect thereof for or by reason of any act-, matter, or thing in the bill alleged; and if -the taking into custody was not such a legal discharge, then the'complainants have full, adequate, and complete remedy at law ; and farther that thе taking into custody under the said writ was and is to be deemed to have been a discharge and extinction of the judgment of the plaintiffs at law, and a discharge and extinction as well at law as in equity of the debt for which the same was obtained; and the cause coming on to be heard upon the demurrer, the court by its decree sustained- the demurrer and dismissed the complainants’ bill with costs.
The correctness, or incorrectness of the decree thus pronounced, are now the subjects of our consideration.
Extensive-or varied as may be the range of inquiry presented by the bill with respect to what is therein averred to appertain to the merits of this controversy, or to the character of the acts of the parties thereto, the view and the action of this court.in relation to that cause must be narrowed necessarily to the questions of law arising upon the demurrer. In approáching these questions there may be propounded as postulates or legal truisms, admitting of no dispute, the -following propositions:
1. That-wherever the rights -or the situation. of parties are clearly defined1 and established by law, equity has no power to change or unsettle those rights or that situation, but in all such instances the maxim equitas sequitur legem is strictly applicable. 2. That wherever there exists at law a complete and adequate power, either for the1 prosecution of aright or-the redressing of a-wrong; courts of equity, with the exception of a few cases of concurrent authority, have no -jurisdiction or powbr to ,act.
’ To the test of these rules the case before us, in common with every appeal to equity, should be-brought,-and if thé effect of such test should prove to be adverse.,-that effect should be sought in the character of. the appeal itself, and not in objеctions to maxims which judicial experience and’wisdom have long established. . Recurring now to the history of this cause, let us in
Many American cases may be avouched in. support of the same doctrine. In the case of the United States
v.
Stansbury,
In the case of Wendrum
v.
Parker,
Upon a collation of the authorities applicable to the acts and proceedings of the parties to this controversy at the time, and subsequently to the. judgment in favor 'of the appellants against the apрellee, we are led to the following conclusions, viz.: that by suing out a capias ad satisfaciendum upon their judgment, and by taking into actual custody the body of the appellee under this process, the appellants had obtained that complete and highest satisfaction of their demand, of which they could be deprived only by the act of God, by operation of law, or by their own voluntary acknowledgment, or by a release of their debtor; that by entering into the arrаngement stated in the bill, and by discharging the appellee from custody, the appellants have, in all legal intendment, admitted satisfaction of their demand, released the appellee from all liability therefor, and destroyed every effect of their judgment as the foundation of legal rights. Such being our conclusions upon this branch of the case, and the same conclusions being implied in the application of the appellants fоr equitable interposition,- the inquiry here presents itself, whether a court of equity can be called upon to abrogate or impair or in any manner or degree, to interfere with clear, ascertained, and perfect legal rights ? The simple statement of such an inquiry suggests this ready and only correct reply:
Equity may be invoke’d to aid in the completion of a just but imperfect legal title, or to prevent the successful assertion ■ of an unconscientious and incomplete legal advantage; but to abrogate or to assail a perfect and independent legal right, it can have no pretension. In all such instances, equity must follow, or in other words, be subordinate to the law. With the view doubtless of giving color to their application, the appellants have intimated (for they can hardly be said to have charged it positively and directly) that the marriage settlement of thе appellee was made in fraud of his creditors, and they have directly averred that the refusal of the appellee after the death of his wife to apply the property comprised in that settlement, in satisfaction of the judgment of the appellants, was at once fraudulent, and' in direct violation of the agreement in
With regard to the question raised by the demurrer as to the obligation of the appellants to pursue their remedy at law, under the allegation in the bill, that such legal remedy had been reserved to them by the terms of the agreement, there can be no doubt, upon the supposition that this remedy remained unimpaired, that the appellants could not arbitrarily abandon' it, and seek the interposition of equity in a matter purely legal. The' averment therefore by the appellants of the continuation of their judgment, and of their right to enforce it by execution in all their original force and integrity, is wholly irreconcilable with any known head or principle of equity jurisdiction, and their bill is essentially obnoxious to objеction on that account.
We are of the opinion that the decree of the Circuit Court, sustaining the demurrer to the bill of the appellants, (the complainants in the Circuit Court,) is correct, and ought to be, as it ■is, hereby affirmed, with costs.
Order.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the re-, cord from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, and was argued by counsel. On
