84 Ala. 274 | Ala. | 1887
There was a demurrer to this bill on the ground of multifariousness, in this: That the bill seeks to set aside a conveyance from John M. Wedgworth to his wife as fraudulent, and, in one and the same suit, seeks to condemn the land conveyed to the payment of John’s debt. The former branch of relief is only an incident — a necessary incident to the latter. There is not only no incompatibility in the two elements constituting the relief prayed, but, filed as this bill was by a creditor, the one is the indispensable complement of the other. Only a creditor can complain of such fraud, as an obstacle to the enforcement of a just demand, and he has no right to interfere, save as a creditor prosecuting a valid and lawful claim. The facts averred do not furnish material for two suits. — Stone v. Life Ins. Co., 52 Ala. 589; Wilkinson v. Bradley, 54 Ala. 677; Johnson v. Smith, 70 Ala. 108; 3 Brick. Dig. 389, § 359.
There is in this case no denial of the fact that John M. Wedgworth was and is indebted to the complainant, in the sum for which the latter recovered judgment. Nor is it denied that this indebtedness existed before and at the time John M. Wedgworth conveyed the land to his wife. These undisputed facts placed on Mrs. Wedgworth the burden of proving a consideration for the deed, not materially disproportionate to the value of the land conveyed to her. And the conveyance being from the husband, a clearer and fuller measure of proof was required, than if the transaction had been between strangers. In Pollak v. Searcy, 84 Ala. 259, we stated this principle very distinctly, and cited the authorities in support of it. We need not repeat what we there said.
Has Mrs. Wedgworth proved the consideration of the deed to her, with that measure of proof which is required in such cases? Her witnesses are herself, Nancy Wedgworth, her husband John M. Wedgworth, her mother, Jane Geydn, and her two brothers, John and Noah Gewin. They testified to transactions, which occurred from twenty to thirty years before they were examined as witnesses. The subjects about which they testified are, the number of slaves and quantity of money Mrs. Nancy Wedgworth received from the estate of her father, Christopher 0, Gewin, the property she ac
The transcript contains that part of the record of the administration of C. C. Gewin’s estate, which shows the division and distribution. It also contains the record of Mrs. Weclgworth’s administration of the estate of her first husband, Logan. The Gewin estate was settled and distributed about 1852 or 3. Mrs. Nancy Wedgworth, then Nancy Gewin, received four slaves, valued at $2,400, and in money $702.33. In February, 1855, Nancy intermarried with Logan, and in March afterwards her guardian, Harris, made his final settlement. There was decreed to her as balance due, $1,443.12, which, together with the slaves, was then and there receipted for by her and her husband Logan.
Logan died in September 1855, and his widow, the said Nancy, administered on his estate. He had five slaves, a horse and buggy, and gold watch. The horse and buggy and watch were appraised at two hundred and seventy dollars. Three of the slaves were sold under order of the court for the payment of debts against Logan’s estate, and were bought by Mrs. Logan, widow, for $1310. This sum she accounted for as assets in her settlement in 1858. She also accounted for $300 for hire of negroes for 1855, charged to her as assets. There was allowed as a credit, amount due Nancy Logan, voucher 26, $358.91. Whether or notthis was herself, we are not informed. On her settlement there was ascertained to be due her, excess of disbursements, $238.67. And she had exhausted in the administration the entire assets of her husband’s estate, except two slaves, the horse and buggy and watch. She had done more. She had exhausted her own money, $1443.12, in the purchase of slaves, and in
Mrs. Logan intermarried with John M. Wedgworth in November, 1858, and the lands embraced in this suit were conveyed directly from him to her in 1881, on the recited consideration of ten thousand dollars. The testimony offered in support of this alleged consideration is that of the five witnessess mentioned above. Four of them, John M. Wedgeworth, Nancy Wedgworth, Jane Gewin and Noah Gewin, swear that when Mrs. Logan intermarried with Wedgworth, she held notes payable to herself, amounting to sixty-eight hundred and seventy-five dollars, that in 1859 she lent these notes to her husband Wedgworth, and that he collected and used the money. They give the number of the notes, thirteen, give the names of the makers, and the amount secured by each, and the gross amount, $6,875, each of them precisely alike. It is out of the routine of ordinary affairs that these four witnesses should each have ever known all these facts. It is still stranger that they should all remember them after a lapse of twenty-five years, and stranger still that their recollections should exactly correspond in every particular. Tet, stranger than all, the sum of the several notes as described by eacli of these witnesses is $6,825; showing that each of them made the same mistake of fifty dqllars in the addition.
From Avhat source did she derivo so large an amount of solvent notes? She had four slaves of her own, two men, and two young Avomen, one of them with an infant. She had the hires of these for four years — 1855 to 1858 inclusive. She acquired from Logan’s estate five slaves — two men, Avliich came to her under his will, and three by purchase; an elderly woman and two boys. The Logan negroes hired for three hundred dollars for the year 1855. This Avent to Logan’s debts. She then had the hires of these slaves for three years, .1856 to 1858 inclusive. It is not shoAvn from what source she derived her support during these three years. She was again married in 1858, and marriages usually entail expense. It requires very liberal arithmetic to swell these hires to any thing approximating the sum claimed.
The five witnesses, whose testimony Ave are considering, all testify that Avhen Mrs. Logan intermarried with Wedgworth she owned fourteen slaves. Being asked to describe them, each specifies the five by name which came from the
Affirmed.