By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
Well the bill has been amended to meet this new aspect of the case, and it is now insisted that St.' George and Bracewell
That the property in the possession of James M. Bracewell in 1842, would have been sufficient to have paid one third of the execution, although there -was a cloud over the title, it being claimed by Peter E. Love as the property of his wife, the daughter of said Bracewell; and that when complainant alleged, in his original bill, that the property was more than sufficient to pay one third of the debt, at the time Bracewell left the State, he only used that term to show, clearly, there was enough to pay one third; and further, that this fact was only alleged as an equity, predicated upon the contract made with Rawls, who after making the same, permitted Bracewell to leave the county, with property in his possession, without attempting to subject it, and then attempted to enforce the payment of the whole out of your orator. For in truth and in fact, Bracewell was under serious pecuniary embarrassment,, and was held, considered and esteemed insolvent, notoriously. Debts against him were of very little value, and he had no credit on his own account.
And further: that at the date of the agreement, between complainant, Collier, and John Rawls, Edward St. George Was laboring under very heavy pecuniary liabilities; and if not absolutely insolvent, his condition was very critical and uncertain. There were judgments, to a large amount, open and outstanding against him, and which were pressing for collection, within the knowledge of Rawls. The whole country groaned under a financial crash, threatening a general bankruptcy, and which so depressed the price of property, of all kinds, that men who were nominally possessed of a large quantity of property, in kind, and who, in better times, would have been abundantly able to pay their debts, yet, had they been
That in February and May of 1841, St. George executed two mortgages to Rawls, to secure the payment of two several promissory notes, amounting, together, to $6,733-?-^, which mortgages embraced all the lands and all the negroes that St. George owned, in his own right — besides, four slaves which were the separate estate of his wife; that at this time, theB’k of Hawkinsville held against St. George a judgment amounting to-$16,000; and that Rawls was the principal stockholder in-said bank; that, in fact, Rawls must be considered as owning and controlling the whole of these demands, and that knowing of the indebtedness of St. George, and the extreme low price-of property, and that the judgment in favor of Edward Molyneux against complainants, the said Bracewell and St. George,. was older than the mortgages, it put these junior claims in-great jeopardy, he entered into this contract, &c.
St. George and Bracewell being thus circumstanced, was the contract between Rawls and Collier, that the latter might pay his third of thejfc fa. in services, good? It is well settled, that if there be any benefit to the creditor or detriment to the debtor, resulting from the new contract, that will be a-consideration sufficient to support it. And Mr. Smith, as the result of his review of the whole doctrine upon this subject, says, that if there be a legal possibility of benefit to the creditor, it is sufficient to sustain the agreement. (Note to Camber vs. Wayne, 1 Smith’s Leading Cases, p. 149.)
Can any one doubt, admitting the charge - in the amended bill to be true, that Rawls was in danger of losing the whole - or some part of his debt? As to Bracewell, we think his inability to pay is made very apparent; and so far as St. George-is concerned, while it may be conceded that the partnership debt could have been collected out of him, that being one of' the oldest, if not the very oldest, lien against St. George, still, had satisfaction of these prior liens been coereed out of the-effects of St. George, the danger was, that the younger mort
Of course the case made by the bill, upon all the points,, must be supported by proof.
