106 So. 784 | La. | 1926
These are actions to annul two transactions made by William E. Gray, a debtor of the plaintiff. She holds a judgment against William E. Gray and William Page Gray, in solido, rendered by the district court of St. Mary parish, for a sum exceeding $20,000, dated the 20th of June, 1921. The debt was originally represented by promissory notes dated the 22d of November, 1919. On the 23d of December, 1920, William E. Gray sold to J. Nunnery Gray certain lands in Acadia parish, where the Grays resided. The price stated in the deed was $6,929, of which $4,373 was said to be paid in cash, and the balance was said to be accounted for by the buyer's assuming a debt secured by mortgage on the property. On the 24th of December, 1920, William E. Gray mortgaged to H.W. Lackey other lands in Acadia parish to secure an alleged indebtedness of $3,300, for which William E. Gray then gave his promissory note secured by the mortgage.
The first of these suits, being No. 25586, is to annul the sale to J. Nunnery Gray; and the second suit, being No. 25587, is to annul the mortgage to H.W. Lackey. In the petition in each case it was alleged, first, that the transaction was a simulation, and, in the alternative, that the transaction, if not simulated, was made to defraud the plaintiff, as a creditor of William E. Gray, and to give an unfair preference to the other creditor; *205 namely, J. Nunnery Gray in the first suit and H.W. Lackey in the other suit. It was alleged in the petition in each suit that William E. Gray was insolvent at the time of the transaction complained of, and that the other party to the transaction, J. Nunnery Gray in the one case, and H.W. Lackey in the other case, knew that William E. Gray was insolvent.
It was not alleged in the petition in either suit that William Page Gray, who was liable in solido with William E. Gray for the debt due to the plaintiff, was insolvent. Because of that omission, the defendant in each case pleaded that the petition did not allege a cause of action. The plea or exception of no cause of action was referred to the merits. The defendants in each case then answered, admitting that there was a large balance due to the plaintiff on the judgment against William E. Gray and William Page Gray in solido. They admitted that the transaction complained of in each case was made, but denied that William E. Gray was insolvent at the time, averred that the transaction in each case was for a pre-existing debt, but denied that there was any intention in either case of committing a fraud upon the plaintiff or of showing an undue preference to the other creditor, J. Nunnery Gray in the one case, and H.W. Lackey in the other. The cases were tried on those issues, resulting in a judgment for the defendants in each case rejecting the plaintiff's demand. She has appealed from the decision.
The defendants in each case have answered the appeal, and pray, first, that the judgment appealed from be amended by our maintaining the exception of no cause of action, and, in the event that the exception of no cause of action should be overruled, that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed.
The answer to the appeal was not necessary, because, if we amend the judgment by *206 sustaining the exception of no cause of action, the result will be to change the judgment appealed from, which absolutely rejected the plaintiff's demand, into a judgment of nonsuit, which change would be favorable to the appellant, not the appellees, in either case.
As we have said, the plaintiff alleged in her petition in each suit that William E. Gray was utterly insolvent and unable to pay his debts, and that, if the transaction complained of should not be annulled, she would not be able to collect her claim against William E. Gray; but she did not allege that William Page Gray, who was liable in solido on the judgment which she held, was insolvent, or that she could not collect or execute the judgment against him.
Article
Except for the appellees' answer to the appeal, it would not be necessary in either of these cases to maintain the exception of no cause of action with regard to the action en declaration de simulation, because the evidence shows that the transaction complained of in each case was made for an antecedent debt, and was therefore not simulated, though it may have been subject to revocation at the instance of any complaining creditor of William E. Gray. The exception of no cause of action, however, should have been maintained against the plaintiff's alternative demand, or so-called revocatory action.
The plaintiff did not offer any evidence in either of these cases to prove that William Page Gray was insolvent or had not property sufficient to pay the debt due to the plaintiff. It is true that the judgment held by the plaintiff against William E. Gray and William Page Gray in solido was produced by the plaintiff, in answer to a prayer for oyer, filed by the defendants in each suit, before they answered or excepted to the petition. But it cannot be said that the production of the judgment and the defendants' admission in their answer that there was a large balance due on the judgment was a sufficient or prima facie showing that William Page Gray was insolvent, because the judgment was admissible in evidence as the basis of the plaintiff's suit and as a prima facie showing that William E. Gray, whose insolvency was alleged, was insolvent.
The judgment appealed from in each of these cases is amended thus: The exception of no cause of action in each case is maintained, and the suit is dismissed as of nonsuit. The appellees in each case are to pay the costs of appeal, and the appellant the costs incurred in the district court.
ST. PAUL, J., concurs in the decree. *208