28 A. 662 | R.I. | 1894
This is a bill in which the plaintiff is endeavoring to subject the equitable interest of the defendant, Nathaniel W. Westcott, in the fund held by the executors of the will of Penelope N. Westcott, to the payment of a judgment debt of said defendant. The bill sets forth, amongst other things, that the plaintiff recovered judgment against said defendant Westcott, on the 25th day *518 of February, 1893, for the sum of $125 debt, and costs of court taxed at $12.85, which judgment is wholly unsatisfied, and that at the time of said recovery, and since then, said Nathaniel W. Westcott has never had any personal property or real estate upon which execution could be levied to satisfy said judgment.
The defendants have demurred to the bill because it is not alleged therein that execution on said judgment has been issued and returned unsatisfied; and the only question now before us, therefore, is whether the bill can be maintained. That the bill is demurrable is settled in this State by Smith v. Millett,
The plaintiff's remedy at law, then, has not been exhausted, and the case remains in uncertainty, to say the least, as to what would have resulted from the use of an execution if one had been issued. National Tradesmen's Bank v. Wetmore,
The issuing of the execution and the return of the officer thereon that no property or estate can be found to satisfy the same, is the best evidence — in fact, is conclusive evidence — that the plaintiff's remedy at law has been exhausted. And until this is done the rule is well settled, subject to the exceptions above mentioned and one or two others not pertinent to this case (see 4 Amer. Eng. Encyc. Law, 575, Note 1), that a court of equity has no jurisdiction.
Demurrer sustained.