17 Ala. 20 | Ala. | 1849
By the will of Mrs. Elizabeih McIntosh, the slave In controversy, with others, is bequeathed to her son John McIntosh, and her daughter Farella Wright, “ to be equally divided between them, and to have the use of them during their natural lives, and at the death of John, living his wife, (who is the defendant in the execution,) she is to have the use of ¡one third part of his part for her support, during her widowhood, the ■other two thirds to the children of John. If his
The counsel for the plaintiffs in error insists that here was a joint interest in the mother and the children, not subject at law to the debts of the mother, and that her creditors can alone separate and subject her undivided third interest by proceeding in a court-of equity, and he relies upon the cases of Fellows, Wardsworth & Co. v. Tann et als., 9 Ala. Rep. 999, and Spear, trustee, v. Walkley, 10 Ala. 328, to sustain this view. In the first case, the effort had been made to subject the slave to the payment of the debts of the husband of Mrs. Tann, which slave had been conveyed by deed of gift to her, before her marriage with the defendant Tann, to her and the heirs of her body, to-be under her control and employment in the móst profitable way, .for the use and support of herself and her heirs, during their lives, and after her death, the property to be divided among her heirs. It appeared that the property, for more than twenty years, had been treated as the separate estate of the daughter and her children, she being a widow at the time of her marriage with Tann. It was held, that the deed vested the daughter and her children collectively with an interest, which the creditors of the husband could not divest, as it.respects the children, through
If this view of the case he correct, then I conceive that the case is analagous in principle to those cases where the interest of one of several joint proprietors of a chattel may be levied upon by execution at law: such, for example, as the levying upon partnership property for the separate debt of one of the partners. — Winston v. Ewing, 1 Ala. Rep. 129, where the authorities are collated; Moore & Co. v. Sample, 3 ib. 319; Story oil Partnership, 373, et seq. Upon the same principle, the interest of the mortgagor who is in possession may be sold. — McGregor & Darling v. Hall, 3 S. & P. 397; McGehee v. Carpenter, 4 Por. 469.
As in this case Mrs. McIntosh does not hold the property as trustee, and as the interest of the other joint proprietors will not be affected by the sale of her one third interest in the property during her widowhood, we see no reason why her interest may not he sold under execution at law.
Our conclusion is, there was no error in the charge of the court, and the judgment is consequently affirmed.