116 Ala. 119 | Ala. | 1896
1. On the 19th November, 1891, F, M. Prestwood conveyed to his wife, for the recited
The bill in this case was filed by said Georgia A. Prestwood in the chancery court of Pike county on the 9th of April, 1895, against the Troy Fertilizer Company, and W. D. and Charles Henderson. It seeks among other things, to enjoin that suit in the chancery court of Coffee county, and have the question of the validity of said deed, — whether it be void for fraud or not, — adjudicated by the chancery court of Pike county.
As between the appellant, the Troy Fertilizer Company, and Georgia A. Prestwood, the grantee in said deed, the subject-matter of the chancery suit in Coffee is the identical subject-matter, so far as said parties are concerned, as that of the cause in Pike chanceiy court, and the purpose is the same in effect, — that, on the part of the Troy Fertilizer Company in- the Coffee chancery court, to have said deed declared fraudulent and void, and that on the part of Georgia A. Prestwood, the grantee in said deed, in the Pike chancery court, to have it sustained as a bona fide, valid conveyance of the said lands to her. For this purpose, the chancery court of Coffee county, on the commencement of the said suit therein, acquired jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the parties in interest. The principle so well settled, that “where the jurisdiction of a court aud the right of
2. The fact appears, that on the 6th of December, 1893, before the Troy Fertilizer Company filed its said bill in the chancery court of Coffee county, — on the 29th of December, 1893, — the said Hendersons “sued out an attachment from the circuit court of Pike county against said F. M. Prestwood, based on his three promissory notes for about $1,200, each dated May 24th, 1893, falling due, respectively, on November 1st, 1893, 1894, 1895 ; that said attachment was sued out on the ground that the defendant, F. M. Prestwood, had fraudulently disposed of his property, and the attachment was levied on the lands embraced in said deed from him to his wife, the said Georgia A. Prestwood, and also on said 80 bales of cotton, and the attachment was returned to the circuit court of Pike county; that after said bill was filed and subpoenas thereon were served, said Hendersons dismissed their said attachment, and immediately sued out three others, one upon each of the aforesaid notes upon which the first attachment was based, and upon the same ground, and each of said attachments was levied on all of said lands, and one of them on 30 bales and the other two, each, on 25 bales of said cotton ; that said suit is still pending and undecided in the chancery court of Coffee county ; that said Georgia A. Prestwood claimed said cotton and has given claim bonds with sufficient security therefor, and for the delivery of the same if found adversely to her in said claim suits, and under said claim bonds she has possession of said cotton.”
It is further alleged that each of said debts was created subsequent to the date and recording of said deed by her husband to -complainant; that at the Fall Term, 1894,
3. The plaintiffs in attachment, by the injunction sought in this case, are to be restrained from collecting their judgment by a sale of the lands levied on, or otherwise. It is pertinent to inquire, then, why these claim suits should be enjoined, and the further consideration arising out of them, arrested by the chancery court, for its adjudication. The law courtis competent to try and determine every matter growing out of them, and unless some equitable ground be brought to light, further than is shown in this case, why the jurisdiction of that court should be arrested from further interference, it should be left untrammeled in the exercise of its jurisdiction by the injunction of the equity court.
The chancery court should be slow to interfere with trial of claim suits, when by so doing it might impair or destroy the rights of the plaintiffs in attachment on the claim bonds executed for their security by the claimant. What- was said in a kindred case, — Gunn v. Harrison, 7 Ala. 585, — is so applicable, we venture to quote it: “No reason whatever is shown in the bill, for compelling the creditors of Betts [the defendant] to litigate this matter in the court of chancery. If they improperly levy their judgments on property belonging to complainant, the statute which authorizes him to interpose his claim and arrest the progress of the execution, is a cheap and adequate remedy at law, where, for anything shown in the bill, the true question between the parties, — whether the sale from Betts to the complainant was fraudulent or not, — could be ascertained as well, if not better than in chancery. Or, if complainant did not think proper thus to interpose and arrest the sale of the property, he would have an adequate remedy at law against all the parties concerned in. the sale.”
4. All the parties to this bill, as we have seen, are before the court in said suit pending in the chancery court of Coffee county, with all their controverted rights and interests in the lands in question, sought by the
Reversed and remanded.