12 Ala. 499 | Ala. | 1847
The loan to Mrs. Maull, was in legal estimation a loan to the husband, and the slave having come to his possession it will be in effect the same as if the loan had been made directly to him.
The question then is, whether, as the slave remained in the possession of the husband more than three years, without demand, or pursuit by due course of law, on the part of the lender, she is liable for the payment of his debts, after she
The statute does not confer the title on the borrower, after the lapse of three years, without demand made, &c., but subjects the property in his hands to the payment of his debts. It is then his possession, after the lapse of three years, on which the right of the creditor attaches, and if that is parted with, before the creditor acquires a lien on the property, he can no more follow it into the hands of the owner, than he could pursue property which the debtor had sold previous to his acquiring a right to levy an execution. This result must follow, because the resumption of possession by the owner, divests the right of the loanee, and invests him with the possession.
It is a necessary corrollary from these propositions, that the suing out execution against one, who has loaned property in possession, before the three years have elapsed, creates no lien upon it, because it is not subject to levy and sale for his debts. The first execution therefore, gave the creditor no lien on the slave, and the second could confer no right, because, before it issued, the owner had regained the possession, and the right to sell the slave, as the property of the defendant, being dependent on the possession, was lost when that was parted with. These principles are in effect decided in Boyd & Swepson v. Steinbach, 5 Munf. 305; see also, Myers v. Peck, 2 Ala. 648, and the cases cited.
The subsequent possession of the .defendant, did not subject the property to sale for his debts, unless the conveyance by Holmes, to the son of the defendant, was merely colora-ble, not intended to vest the property in the son, but by the means of a pretended conveyance to the son, to give the defendant the right to use, and control the property. If the gift to the son was bona fide, he being an infant, residing with his father, the possession will be referred to the title of the son. [Sewall v. Gliddon, 2 Ala. 52.]
Let the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded.