56 S.C. 385 | S.C. | 1900
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff is a judgment creditor of Henry M. Hunter, deceased, and the defendants are the heirs-at-law and administrator ’ of said deceased. The main abject of the complaint is to' set aside as fraudulent a confession of judgment by Henry M. Hunter to his brother, Robert C. Hunter, and the sale of a 500 acre tract of land by the sheriff to Robert C. Hunter under said judgment, and a subsequent conveyance thereof to the defendant, J. H. Hunter, by J. H. T. Hunter, the only heir-at-law of R. C. Hunter, deceased.' The Circuit decree sets aside the said judgment and sale thereunder and the subsequent conveyance as fraudulent and void. The complaint further sought and the Circuit decree adjudged a sale of this 500 acre tract and three other tracts, designated as the 150 acre tract, and the 130 acre tract, and the 50 acre tract, as the property of said Henry M. Hunter, with a view to distribution among creditors. The real question in the case on t'he merits is whether the confession of judgment was made with intent to defraud the creditors of Henry M. Hunter; for if the confession was bona tide, and R. C. Hunter was the bona tide purchaser at sheriff’s sale, the creditors of Henry M. Hunter are in no wise concerned with the subsequent transfer of the heir-at-law of R. C. Hunter to the defendant, J. H. Hunter. Furthermore, if said confession and sale thereunder was not fraudulent, then the 500 acre tract is beyond the reach of Henry M. Hunter’s creditors, and plaintiff has a plain and adequate remedy at law to sell all the interest of Henry M. Hunter in the other tracts. We, therefore, treat the case first on its merits.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed and the complaint dismissed, without prejudice, however, to any rights which the children of Henry M. Hunter may claim to have in said land, as among themselves.