116 Ala. 224 | Ala. | 1896
This is an appeal from a decree sustaining a demurrer to a bill of complaint filed by appellants, creditors of B. Somers & Co., which seeks to have declared void a sale of personal property, which had been seized as the property of said B. Somers & Co. under a writ of'attachment sued out by the Berney National Bank, and sold under an order of the court, in advance of judgment, as “perishable property,” and purchased at the sale by the Berney National Bank ; and to have the latter declared a trustee of said property, or the proceeds thereof, and compelled to account as such. The property consisted of a stock of dry goods, of the alleged value of $15,000, a complete set of store fixtures, valued at $2,000, and a leasehold interest in the storeroom, valued at $1,500; all of which were bid in and purchased by the bank for the sum 'of $5,500.
A demurrer to a bill confesses only matters of fact which are well pleaded, and not conclusions or inferences of law or fact. When, therefore, fraud is averred in general terms, and no facts are alleged constituting the fraud, the court can not consider the averment in passing on the demurrer, for such averments are mere conclusions of the pleader. — Flewellyn v. Crane, 58 Ala. 629; Loucheim v. First Nat. Bank, 98 Ala. 524; Fort Payne Furnace Co. v. Fort Payne Coal & Iron Co., 96 Ala. 476; McDonald v. Pearson, 114 Ala. 630. Such are the allegations that the purpose of appellee in obtaining the order for the sale of said property was, “to buy it at a great sacrifice before other creditors could have an opportunity to bid at the sale,” and that “the sale was for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding creditors of B. Somers & Co.”
Eliminating these averments, therefore, and dismissing them from consideration,, the only theory that can'be ofered in "support of the bill is, that the property ordered by the court to be sold was not “perishable” within the meaning of section 2958 of the Code of 1886 (Code of 1896, §
It will be seen, therefore, that the subject-matter cannot affect the question of jurisdiction to order the sale, when the property levied on is subject to attachment. If the evidence adduced in support of the motion satisfies the court that it will be to the interest of all the parties to sell the property in advance of judgment, this evidence cannot be reviewed, and its sufficiency questioned, in a collateral proceeding, for the purpose of defeating the title of the purchaser at the sale. It necessarily follows that when property subject to attachment is levied on, and a motion is made in the proper manner by either party for an order of sale, on the ground that the property is perishable, the jurisdiction of the court to order the sale attaches, and.the validity of the sale if ordered, cannot be drawn in-question collaterally. Whatever may be the character of the property, if the court is sa-tisfied that, either by reason of its perishable nature, or because of the expense of keeping it until the termination of the litigation, it will prove, or be likely to prove, fruitless to the creditor, and that the purpose of its .original seizure will probably be frustrated, its judgment is conclusive until reversed in some direct proceeding. And it necessarily results, also, that a sale made under such an order vests a perfect title in the purchaser as against the parties plaintiff and defendant, and all others not having a paramount title or lien.
The appellants rely on the case of First Nat. Bank v. Consolidated Electric Light Co., 97 Ala. 465, in support of the contention, that a sale of property which is not in fact perishable, although found to be so by the court, is absolutely void ; and, in particular, that a sale of a leasehold interest in land, in advance of judgment, is void
We find no error in the decree sustaining the demurrers, and it must be affirmed.
Affirmed.