70 Tenn. 729 | Tenn. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 6th of October, 1874, the defendants, E. Kirby Smith and Bushrod R,. Johnson, recovered a judgment at law against their co-defendant, Joseph A. Mabry, for $347.97. On the 3 9th of February, 1875, the defendant, V. F. Gossett, recovered another judgment at law, by confession, against the said Mabry, for $792.75. Executions, issued on these judgments, were levied on certain personal chattels as the property of Mabry, under which a sale was advertised to be had on the 3d of April, 1875. On the 2d of April, 1875, the original bill in this cause was filed by Laura
Pending the litigation, on the 27th of September, 1876, Joseph A. Mabry presented to the court a cross-bill against V. F. Gossett and others, and asked leave to file the same. The substance of' this bill was that Gossett’s judgment was based upon a note, executed on the 8th of March, 1872, by Joseph A. Mabry as principal, and G. W. Mabry and L. C. Houk as his ■ sureties; that the consideration of this note consisted of the anticipated - commissions of Gossett, as sheriff, on the sale of certain property pf Mabry, then in his possession under execution against Mabry levied thereon; that the note “under an arrangement between the holders of the judgments, said Mabry and said Gossett,” was executed to said Gossett “in settlement of his commissions and costs upon said expected sales”; that, ■ since the rendition of judgment thereon, to-wit, on the 27th of April, 1876, the property was sold, not by Gossett, but by a deputy of his successor in office, who has collected the commissions and costs, and, therefore, there has been a failure of consideration of which Mabry could not have ’availed himself in the suit at law. The bill further alleged that, pending the suit on said note which was instituted against Mabry and Houk, the plaintiff dismissed the suit as against Houk, and executed to him, for a valuable consideration, a formal release, knowledge of which release has only recently been obtained by complainant. And the cross-bill insisted that the release of Houk •operated a release of complainant Mabry. The Chan
It is too clear for argument, and is now conceded,, that the release of a surety, although the co-maker of a promissory note, cannot be set up in a court of equity as a release of the principal. In no possible aspect could such a release injuriously affect the principal, whose legal obligation is to indemnify his surety from all loss by reason of his suretyship. The Chancellor ought to have refused the leave asked to file the bill on this ground, and was right in sustaining the demurrer subsequently put in.
The failure of consideration was a good defense at law. Code, sec. 1806. And it was not necessary to wait until an actual sale of the property to set it up. The termination of the execution lien or Gossett’s right to sell would have been sufficient. The bill shows that the note was given on the 8th of March, 1872, and Gossett’s answer, which is expressly referred to by Mabry’s cross-bill for a description of the judgment, shows that the recovery was had on the 19th of February, 1875. It does not appear that the defense relied on, if available, might not have been made at law. Eor is any excuse offered for the delay of five months after the time when the bill concedes that the defense fully accrued. Under the circumstances, the law requires good cause to be shown for any delay, and such a statement of facts as will exclude any conclusion adverse to the right sought to be set up.
The complainants in the original bill demanded a jury, and tendered issues on which to try the matters •in controversy between them and the judgment creditors. The trial before the jury seems to have turned, •and the argument before this court has been almost entirely rested upon the question of the power of a ••married woman to charge her separate estate. The presiding judge charged the jury thus: “A feme covert, the owner of a separate estate, may charge it without •the execution of a deed of trust or any paper writing, and whether there is a trustee or not.” If his Honor meant to say, that a married woman might, in any case where she was the owner of a separate estate, whether the instrument creating it limited her power ••of disposition or not, charge that estate orally ad libitvm, he was clearly in error under the laws and judicial rulings of this State. Our coui’ts have uniformly held that the power of a married woman over her separate ■estate cannot extend beyond the plain meaning of the deed creating the estate, and the intention of the ■grantor to be ascertained by a fair construction of the language used. Morgan v. Elam, 4 Yer., 375, and cases cited in third head note of the new edition. And the act of 1870, ch. 99, even where it enlarges ■the power of a married woman over her separate es
Eor another reason, the decree in this case cannot stand. The facts upon -which the original bill is made to rest are denied by the answers of the judgment creditors, and the answer of the wife and trustee to the cross-bills of the creditors is not evidence for them, the oath being waived. The issues raised by the pleadings, between these parties, are:
1. Was the money borrowed from McIntosh and Johnson the separate estate of the wife?
2. If so, was any part of it used in the purchase of the chattels in controversy for her separate use?
3. Was the sale of these chattels, and the purchase as made, intended as a fraudulent device to protect the husband’s property from his creditors?
Upon the first two issues, the burden of proof was upon the original complainants. Upon the last, on the creditors, in the event a prima facie case was made oxrt against them.
In this state of the pleadings, the original complainants demanded a jury, and tendered, to be tried by them, the following issues:
1. That the chattels in controversy are the property of the wife.
2. That the money that was borrowed to pay for said property was borrowed on the wife’s separate estate.
3. That Joseph A. Mabry had no interest in the property.
Treating the verdict of the jury as if the facts were found by the Chancellor, the decree below must be reversed.
By the Code, either party to a suit in chancery may have a -jury to try issues of fact in the case, the finding of the jury having the same force and effect as on a trial at law. Code, sections 4465, 4469. Under these provisions, the verdict of a jury in chancery upon a material issue will have the weight of a verdict at law, and errors in the proceedings must be corrected in the same mode. James v. Brooks, 6 Heis., 150; Morris v. Swaney, 7 Heis., 591. But this court has held, under the original statutes subsequently brought into the Code, that it is the duty of the party ap
Trying this case upon the issues made by the pleadings, and the evidence in the record, it presents no. serious difficulty. The burden of proof is on the complainants to show title by purchase with particular funds. The funds designated are not traced into the-hands of the wife or her trustee, nor is' it shown that any part of the funds was so used. It is not shown that the wife had any separate estate which she was authorized to charge, nor that she did charge it. The original bill says that money was borrowed by the wife “by rendering her separate estate liable, and on the faith and credit thereof.” The answer to the cross-bill says the money “was borrowed for her, and for which she is responsible, and for which she intended to charge her separate estate.” The bill says that a