9 Wend. 548 | Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors | 1832
The following opinions were, delivered :
The only question left for examination and review is as to the correctness of the decision of the court below upon the demurrer to the supplemental bill. Whether the assignment of the property of the defendants Willis and Robinson to the assignees, the other defendants, was legally fraudulent or not, on the ground that some of the trusts created therein were incompatible with the rights of the creditors, need not now be examined or decided, because the original bill, which is substantially incorporated in the supplemental bill, contains an express and positive averment Qf',f'aud in fact in the assignment, and which, for the purpose of this etc'cisión is admitted by the demurrer.
The as5Ú>if. then being fraudulent, and in judgment of law conveying no' interest in the property of the assignors so far as the right of the ¿‘editors were concerned, was the complainant iñ a situation at thv time of the filing of his bill, entitling him to the aid of the court v? chancery in enforcing the collection of his debt out of the prope^y ? The solution of this inquiry will be found to depend upon tm take of the object, language and scope of the bin.
If there could have been any doubts heretofore as to tu" tent to which the creditor must pursue his remedy i n a com%
It is said that the complainant has accounted for the non-return of the execution, by charging in the bill facts which shew that it would be mere matter of form. Admitting the fact to be so, it cannot avail him under this view of his case» If the court of chancery, before the enactment in the revised statutes, in the liberal exercise of its equitable powers, and in its practice of disregarding matters of form,, and placing its relief upon the substantial merits of the case, might have deemed itself warranted in dispensing with the return of the execution upon the strength of the matters set forth in the bill, since thosestatutes no such liberality or practice can be indulged. It would be a virtual repeal of the provision under consideration-, 'which in express terms requires the return of the execution unsatisfied by the sheriff preliminarily to the relief. On this ground, then, the demurrer is well taken, if the bill is to be viewed as filed to reach property of the defendants not subject to be levied on by an execution. It is
There is another class of cases besides the one already noticed, in which the aid of the court of chancery may be invoked in behalf of the judgment creditor in the collection of his debt. It is to remove some fraudulent or inequitable obstruction interposed by the defendant to the collection of the judgment, independently of which the remedy would have been ample at law. In such cases the property, out of which the judgment creditor is seeking to satisfy his debt, must be subject to the judgment if real, and to the execution if personal property. The jurisdiction of the court rests upon the right or title of the complainant to the property in question acquired by the proceeding at law upon the judgment of execution,and consequently the return of the latter by the officer is not only not essential, but would be fatal to the relief. The only j ground of objection to the remedy sought, under this aspect of ! the case, is the want of a sufficient allegation in the bill that the property, out of which the complainant seeks to collect , his debt, was subject to his judgment or execution. There is Í no express averment that the defendants had any real property, and whether the personal property was liable to execution or not, is left wholly to inference or conjecture. As this : fact is essential to give jurisdiction to the court, it should have been specifically and formally alleged ; and without it, no right to the remedy sought is shewn in the bill. It is a well settled principle in pleading that the facts which give jurisdiction to the court, and when that is shewn, give a right or title to the particular relief prayed for, must be plainly and succinctly stated in the bill ; and if not, the defendant may demur. Cooper’s Pl. 5, 181. The allegation that the per- . sonal property of the defendants was liable to be levied on by execution, was not only essential to give jurisdiction, but constituted a part of the title of the complainant to the relief sought in this case. I have looked carefully through the bill to ascertain if there are any averments which will fairly meet this objection within the above principle of pleading, and am satisfied there are none. It is alleged that after the eom
In every view of the case the demurrer is well taken. If it was designed as a creditor’s bill, under the revised statutes, it is defective in not showing that the remedy at law was exhausted by a return of the execution unsatisfied. This was essential to give jurisdiction to the court, and cannot be dispensed with. If as a bill filed under the common law powers of the court to remove an impediment in the way of a perfect remedy at law, interposed fraudulently or inequitably by the debtor, then it should have clearlyshewn that there was property upon which the judgment was or might have been a lien if
In the present state of this appeal, the only question upon which the judgment of this court is required is, whether the chancellor decided correct]) in confirming that part of the decree of the vice chancellor which allowed the demurrer put in by the respondent Willis to the supplemental bill of the complainant, and dismissed that bill as to him with the costs of the demurrer and of the argument thereon.
On the argument the counsel occupied a good deal of time, and displayed much ingenuity and learning on a question supposed'to arise, whether the deed of assignmeut from Willis and Robinson to the other respondents was not, from its terms and provisions, fraudulent and void as against their creditors. But the agitation of this question was uncalled for, and the research and argument in respect to it unnecessary, inasmuch as the fraudulent design of the assignment is explicitly alleged in the bill and admitted by the demurrer ; the complainant directly charging “ that the pretended insolvency of the said Willis and Robinson was without foundation, and that the said alleged assignment was made and executed with a view to defeat his judgment, and to delay and hinder him and other creditors, and to cover and protect the property of the said Willis and Robinson for their own benefit; and for that purpose they obtained the assent of the other respondents, the assignees, and executed and delivered the said deed of assignment in collusion and fraud.” All this being confessed by the demurrer, we certainly need not stop to settle the intricate and much litigated question as to what reservations and conditions in voluntary deeds of assignments by insolvents make them fraudulent and void against their creditors, but- we may proceed directly to the single enquiry whether the complainant, on his own showing, has made out in the supplemental bill, sufficient to entitle him to relief in the court of chancery against the respondent Willis.
It is now necessary to inquire whether the complainant shows enough in his bill to bring his case within the other class of relief, which is given in aid of a judgment or execution at law which has acquired a lien on specific property of the debtor, but which lien cannot be made operative to the satisfaction of the debt, in consequence of some fraudulent or inequitable obstruction or embarrassment which is interposed. In cases of this description, the aid of chancery is not sought, strictly speaking, for a new process, or to enlarge the functions of the legal process, but to remove some extraneous impediment by which its functions are crippled or deranged. For this latter relief a party rightfully applies to the court of chancery, but in his application, he must show that the relief, if granted, will be effectual ; that is, that it will enable him to pursue and obtain the satisfaction of his debt, by means of the legal rights and remedies to which he is already entitled. Of course it is not necessary in this case to show, by the return of an execution unsatisfied, that he has exhausted his remedy at law; for that execution may be the very instrument by which, when the court has removed the impediment to its operation, he will obtain the perfect satisfaction of his rights; and a judgment creditor may file a bill in respect to his lien on freehold estates without proceeding to execution, but not if his lien be on leasehold and other personal proper
Before examining particularly what was necessary for the complainant to allege in his bill, and comparing it with the allegations which he has made, it may be well to settle the question as to the effect of the respondent’s demurrer upon these allegations.
By a demurrer, a respondent admits the allcgations'of the bill, but he admits nothing more ; for a demurrer confesses matter of fact only, not matter of law. 1 Ld. Rym. 18. He does not admit inferences or deductions that do not follow necessarily from facts distinctly alleged, and whatever is necessary to entitle the plaintiff to relief, must be alleged positively and with precision. Milford’s Eq. Pl. 41. A party seeking the aid of a court of chancery must show distinctly and unambiguously all the facts necessary to entitle him to that aid. Shephard v. Shephard, 6 Conn. R. 37. In ordinary cases, where the complainant has a plain and adequate remedy at law, the court of chancery will not interfere ; for the jurisdiction it exercises in relation to legal demands is merely ancillary to that of the courts of law. It is in this character that it sustains a bill of discovery to aid the plaintiff in the prosecution of his suit, or the defendant in his defence, or to prevent the setting up of an inequitable defence as an outstanding term attendant upon the inheritance ; and upon the same principle, after a judgment which is a lien upon land, the court will aid the plaintiff by removing a fraudulent assignment which is a cloud upon the title, and prevents the plaintiff from enforcing the lien of his judgment, or to redeem a mortgage which prevents the-sale of the property, as where the mortgagee is in possession, or the amount due on the mortgage not being ascertained, it prevents a fair sale upon the judgment. But in cases of this kind, the complainant must show distinctly in his bill that the land is within the jurisdiction of the court of law where his judgment has been obtained, and that it is a lien at law on the land. The like principle is applied to personal property 5 and as a lien on that is not obtained by the judgment, the plaintiff must show that he has issued an execution into the county where the property is situated, and obtained a specific
Upon examining both the supplemental and original bills in this cause, there can be found in them no allegation which distinctly states, nor none from which it can be legitimately inferred that the complainant, by means of his judgment or execution, has obtained a lien at law on any property. From
This being the unanimous opinion of the court, the decree of the chancellor was thereupon affirmed.