109 Ala. 563 | Ala. | 1895
This bill was filed by the appellees, Steele and others, to have certain conveyances executed by C. B. Wooten to other respondents and by the other respondents among themselves declared fraudulent and void as to complainants’ debt against said Wooten, on the ground that all'of said conveyances were voluntary, and made and accepted to hinder, delay and defraud complainants and other creditors of said Wooten. It is insisted by demurrer that complainants had no right to file the bill because they were neither judgment creditors with a lien, nor creditors without a lien, but only judgment creditors upon whose judgment no execution had been issued and whose judgment itself had not been registered in the office of the probate judge. The statute under which the bill is filed provides: “A creditor without a lien may file a bill in chancery to discover or to subject to the payment of his debt any property which has been fraudulently transferred or conveyed, or attempted to be fraudulently transferred or conveyed by his debtor.” Code, § 3544. Unless we hold that a judgment creditor without a lien is not “a creditor without a lien,” we must concur with the chancellor that this bill was well filed; and we are not to be led into the absurdity of declaring snch a proposition by the expressions of this court to which our attention has been called which were made with reference to other questions, and really have no bearing upon this. This ground of demurrer was properly overruled.
All which is said in one way or another in the case with reference to this debt not being due to the complainants’ ancestor individually, but only as trustee, and, therefore, really to the beneficiaries in a trust deed, &c., &c., and as to complainants, on that account, and for the further reason that, as is contended, it was not sufficiently shown that all the debts of said Steele had not been paid, &c., &c., having no right to maintain this suit as his heirs and distributees, &c., &c., is of no possible consequence. All those questions were forever foreclosed by the judgment at law which these complainants, as plaintiffs, in the capacity and right of heirs and distributees of said Robert Steele, deceased, recovered of said Wooten, and which has been affirmed in this court. Wooten v. Steele, 98 Ala. 252.
The complainants having averred that they were creditors prior to and at the time of the execution of the conveyances which they attack, and the respondents having admitted the execution by Wooten of the undertaking to pay one-half the purchase money received by him for certain land, that the land was sold, and he received the purchase money, — facts which in law show that Wooten was indebted to complainants at and before the time of
Affirmed.