By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
This was a bill filed by Thomas Stocks for himself and in behalf of all the creditors of the Chattahoochee Rail Road & Banking Company of Georgia. It alleges, that in July 1841, the complainant held and owned the notes and bills of said corporation, amounting in all to $580; that he instituted suits and obtained judgments for the same, upon which executions were issued on the 14th day of January, 1842 ; that the corporation being insolvent, a return of “ noproperty to he found” was made thereon by
By leave of the Court, several amendments; a't-sundry, times, were made to the bill, in one of which it is stated, that application was made in the Spring of 1846, by William" Dougherty, as
To the bill, a general demurrer was filed, for want of equity, on the 10th of June last, by a portion of the defendants, namely : Hampton S. Smith, Harper & Holmes, Geo. W. B. Towns and William W. Garrard. There was also a plea of the Statute of Limitations interposed at the same time, and William W. Garrard insisted on his discharge in bankruptcy.
On the 20th of June, the cause coming up for argument, the solicitor for the complainant moved the Court to strike said demurrer and pleas from the record, on the ground that they were not filed at the proper time. As a reason and excuse for the delay, the defendants, by their solicitor, showed that the usual rule had not been taken in the case ; and that the Court, at the November Term, 1849, did not sit but a few days, in consequence of the indisposition of the Judge, and was adjourned over to the Spring Term. The Court overruled the motion to dismiss the demurrer and pleas, and the solicitor for the complainant excepted.
The Court then proceeded to consider the demurrer, and after argument had thereon, sustained the demurrer and dismissed the bill; and to this decision, counsel for the complainant excepted, and now assigns the same as error.
Preferring, as we do, to have questions of practice determined by a full Court, we shall pass over the first exception taken in the Court below, especially as the adjudication of it is rendered unnecessary, for the present at least, by the view which we have taken of this case.
So far as the demurrants, who were the debtors of the corporation, are concerned, their liability is that of persons who deal with others holding a fiduciary character, and collude with them in violation of tlieir trust. All such are deemed in equity participes fraudis; the trust is forced upon them, and they are compelled to perform it in the same manner as the trustee himself. The same doctrine is applied to them which governs the cases of executors and administrators, confederating with the debtors of the estate, either to retain or waste the assets. In such cases, the creditors will be allowed to sue the debtors directly in Equity, making the representative also a party to the bill, although, ordinarily, the executor or administrator only can sue for the debts due the deceased. Gilbert vs. Thomas et al. 3 Kelly, 575, and authorities there cited. Worthey et al. vs. Johnson et al. 8 Ga. Rep. 239.
The judgment of the Court below must, therefore, be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
