8 Ala. 694 | Ala. | 1845
This bill presents several distinct features, which it is proper to advert to, previous to the consideration of the questions raised upon the record. One of them is, that the complainant asserts an absolute title to four of the slaves involved in this controversy, and as to them seeks no ultimate disposition by the décree; but only to restrain the creditors of a
From these principles it seems clear that a creditor’s right to
The levies, which it is the principal object of the bill to-enjoin, seem, all of them, to have been made after the expiration of the term fixed by the trust deeds for the payment of the debts ; but it seems to have been supposed the property must necessarily have been condemned without reference to the question of fraud, from the circumstance that the deeds of trust both provide,-not only that Herndon, the debtor, should remain in possession of the property until the law day, but also until the trustee should be required, in writing, by the complainant, to proceed and sell. Under ordinary circumstances, the trustee is considered as representing his cestui que trust, and rarely, if ever proceeds in opposition to his will; the insertion of this stipulation was probably intended, at least such is the presumption, considering the deeds to be bona fide, to save the debtor, from the captious or vexatious interference óf the trustee; but we think it has no effect to open the law day of the deed from a definite to an indefinite period. It follows then, that the trustee was authorised, under the deeds, to interpose'his claim to the property; and at the time he did so there was no interest remaining in the debtor which could sustain the levy, always supposing the deeds as bona fide. [P. & M. Bank v. Willis, 5 Ala. Rep. 770.]
The application of these principles will enable us to ascertain what and how much equity the bill under consideration contains.
Whatever may be the rule elsewhere, and in Courts which permit a demurrer separate from an answer, we think, according to our practice, when a demurrer for this cause is interposed and sustained, the complainant should be put to an amendment of his bill; or, at least, to an. election for which cause he will proceed. , "
It is difficult to say what the proper practice is in an appellate Court, when the cause has been heard after a demurrer for this cause overruled, and'determined upon both the distinct matters. As this matter is immaterial in this case, we shall leave it open, and proceed to the examination of the decree upon the merits.
It is not material to consider what influence evidence like this, in relation to one’branch of the cause, will have upon the other, if that is apparently fair ; because, in our judgment, the deeds of trust were executed by Herndon as a cloak to cover his property, and if the complainant was innocent in the first instance, of a participation in that intention, it is more than questionable if he has not made himself a party to it by attempting to carry out the unlawful purpose.
Without entering into the question, whether the complainant might avail himself of deeds executed with such a purpose, if in point of fact he was ignorant of it, we think he is entitled to no benefit, when he has been a party to the attempt to carry the purpose into effect, by pretending to be a larger creditor than he really is, or what produces the same effect — than he is able to prove himself to be. No rule is better established, or is more salutary in its effects, than that which declares it the imperative duty of the grantee in a deed attacked by creditors for fraud, to remove any suspicion of unfairness from the transaction. [Struper v. Eckart, 2 Whar. 302.] This has not been done in the present case, and the effect of such suspicion is to pronounce against the validity of the deeds.
Here our task, necessarily a painful one, ends, as the other questions are unnecessary to be determined; inasmuch as the supposed incumbrance of Bright & Ledyard cannot be tacked to an invalid deed; and the question arising out of Herndon’s bank
Such is our conclusion, and the decree here will be, that the Chancellor’s be reversed, and the bill dismissed.