165 Ga. 479 | Ga. | 1928
On August 14, 1926, the Security Plumbing Co. filed an action in Fulton superior court against E. E. Gallimore, H. EL Turner, and L. L. Jones, seeking to secure a general judgment for certain material alleged to have been furnished and work performed under certain contracts between the plaintiff and Gallimore, copies of which are attached to the plaintiff’s petition, and further to establish a lien for material and labor on certain properties referred to in the petition, the legal title to which properties was alleged to be in the defendants Turner and Jones. In the same suit was set. up a claim for damages resulting from an alleged contract between the plaintiff and Gallimore with reference to furnishing and installing certain plumbing on ohe of the pieces of property referred to in the petition. Plaintiff prayed for injunctions restraining and enjoining the defendants from disposing of the properties referred to, and restraining and enjoining Turner and Jones from foreclosing their retention-of-title contracts on said properties, and asked that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the properties, to sell them, and to distribute the proceeds of sale to the creditors holding liens thereon. Upon the filing of the petition a temporary receiver was appointed on ex parte hearing, without notice to the defendants. An interlocutory
Prior to the filing of this petition E. R. Gallimore filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the district court of the United States for the northern district of Georgia. In his schedules he listed as his own the properties heretofore referred to, subject to certain outstanding conditional contracts of sale by Turner and Jones, covering the purchase-price of the properties.
Plaintiff’s petition sots up an alleged conspiracy as existing between Gallimore on the one part and Turner and Jones on the other part, under which it is claimed that certain contracts of sale were executed by Turner and Jones to Gallimore on certain described properties; that these contracts, while purporting on their face to be valid and subsisting, were not such in reality; that Gallimore upon the execution of such contracts went into possession of the properties, and as the purported owner thereof made with the plaintiff certain contracts which are attached to the petition as exhibits; that Gallimore represented himself to be the owner of the properties, and the plaintiff, relying upon this representation, entered into the contracts; and that as a part of said conspiracy, after the procurement of the contracts from the plaintiff and the furnishing of the material and equipment thereunder, Gallimore was to go into bankruptcy, and Turner and Jones would then foreclose on the properties under their contract of sale, and would thereby defeat the plaintiff’s claim through the legal process of law. There are various other allegations in the petition with reference to schemes, devices, fraud and deceit.
On September 24, 1926, Turner and Jones, subject to their special plea to the. jurisdiction theretofore filed, and without waiving it, filed general, and special demurrers to the petition. These demurrers were sustained in part and overruled in part. To the latter part of the order Turner and Jones excepted.
The general and special demurrers embrace some fifty or sixty grounds. The first eleven grounds are general in their nature, Whether the court erred in overruling them depends to' a large extent upon whether the petition set up an equitable cause of action. Considering all the-allegations and the accepted definitions of conspiracy, we have reached the conclusion that the petition as amended sets forth a conspiracy upon the part of Turner,
It is argued by counsel for plaintiffs in error that the allegations of the petition make it apparent that there was no conspiracy, “because there is entirely lacking any allegation showing a combination between two or more persons to do a criminal or unlawful act, or a lawful act by a criminal or unlawful means.” With this contention we can not agree, for it is distinctly alleged in the petition that Turner and Gallimore “entered into a conspiracy to defraud the materialmen who furnished the material for said houses, and that it was a general plan between them which applied to all of said houses, and was one general scheme and conspiracy covering the entire building operations on-said lots,” which was carried out in this maimer: Turner and Gallimore entered into a contract for the sale of the lots by Turner and Jones to Gallimore. No record of this contract appears, but the purported contract provided “that Gallimore should build a house on each of the lots, and that Turner and Jones should advance money for the pay-rolls thereon, and that Turner and Jones were to convey title to said lots only when they were paid the full purchase-price of each lot and all money advanced for pay-rolls.” It is further alleged that the contracts between Turner and Jones and Gallimore were not made in good faith and were never intended as bona fide agreements, but were made for the distinct purpose of enabling the parties to carry out a scheme and conspiracy to defeat and defraud materialmen; that as a part of this conspiracy it was the agreement and intention of Turner and Gallimore: “(1) That in the building of said houses they would delay payment of as many of the bills for labor and material as possible, so that when said houses were completed no materialmen would have been paid except when it seemed necessary to make some payments to keep the work going on and to induce them to furnish materials on
It is further alleged that pursuant to this fraudulent conspiracy Turner and Gallimore represented to petitioner that Gallimore was the owner of the lots, and contracted with petitioner in the name of Gallimore for material and labor, the items of which the petition specifies; that the amount of material furnished by petitioner and other materialmen was as set out in the petition; that
The above-recited facts, as given by the petition, are sufficient, in our view, to set up a conspiracy on the part of Gallimore, Jones, and Turner to defraud creditors. The scheme alleged may be rather awkward, but. that does not prevent a court of equity from taking jurisdiction to give relief to creditors like the petitioner and those who might properly join with it. The petitioner is well in a position to invoke the aid of equity, and in such a court its rights may be asserted for their establishment, as could be also the rights of others similarly situated, by intervention in this suit. Therefore the court did not err in overruling the general demurrers.
The rulings made in the headnotes 3 to 11, inclusive, require no elaboration.
Judgment affirmed.