114 Ala. 506 | Ala. | 1896
This bill is filed by Warren & Co. and others, as simple contract creditors of L. A. Hunt, against said Hunt and F. M. Cordeman. The bill alleges the following facts : Complainants’ debts were in existance and, in large part, were due and payable on or before November 16, 1896. Hunt was, at that time, and for long prior thereto had been, insolvent. On the date named, which was Monday of the second criminal
The affidavit of Cordeman, above referred to, if proper to be considered at all in such a case as this on motions for injunction and receiver, which probably it is not, is insufficient to overturn any of the averments of the verified bill, which it undertakes to controvert; and we shall leave it out of view.
The fate of the present appeal turns, therefore, upon the inquiry whether the bill contains equity; whether its averments, if proved, would authorize a decree setting aside as fraudulent the judgment which Hunt confessed to Cordeman, and subjecting the property now under levy of execution to the payment of complainants’ debts. And to that inquiry we will address ourselves. At the outset, it is to be observed that the averment of the bill to the effect that the judgment was confessed and taken with the intent and for the purpose on the part of both Hunt and Cordeman to hinder, or delay, or defraud complainants and other creditors of Hunt, in and of itself amounts to nothing in the way of imparting equity to a bill which is wanting in the statement of substantial facts themselves affording an inference of the existence of the alleged covinous intent. — Coal City Coal & Coke Co. v. Hazard Powder Co., 108 Ala. 218, 222.
What are the substantive facts laid in the bill? It is, in the first place, averred that Hunt was and had long been insolvent. But it is not averred that Cordeman had knowledge or notice of such insolvency. Then there is the averment that Hunt confessed the judgment to Cordeman. If Cordeman’s debt was real and not simulated, the fact of confession of judgment for the amount of it standing alone raises no presumption of fraudulent collusion for the unlawful hindrance or delay of other creditors. The bona fide.s of Cord'eman’s debt to the amount of the judgment is not at all challenged. He, therefore, had a perfect right to bring Hunt before the court by summons and have him there adjudged to pay
The cases of Cartwright v. Bamberger, Bloom & Co., 90 Ala. 405, and Comer v. Heidelbach, 109 Ala. 220, are readily distinguishable from the case at, bar. In each of them the bill averred facts from which the intent to hinder, delay and defraud creditors was a natural and necessary conclusion, apart from the further averments in terms that such intent existed and tainted the attachment proceedings.
The present bill, we therefore conclude, is without equity; and the chancellor properly overruled complainants motions for injunction and receiver.
Affirmed.