19 Ala. 653 | Ala. | 1851
The suit was brought in this-case to-recover damages for the alleged wrongful .and,malicious suing out of an attachment.
The bill of exceptions contains-this statement: “The defendant offered to prove by .the .sheriff th.at another attachment against the plaintiff was in his hands at the same time that he levied Hudson’s, (the defendant)) in favor of Hardie & Co.,
We think it was clearly proper to introduce the deed in evi- - dence and also any proof going to show that it was fraudulent, such as the evidence that it contained-*allplaintiff’s, property. The several judgments mentioned in the bill of exceptions were also competent evidence, as going to show the embarrassed con- • dition of the plaintiff, and a motive for fraudulently disposing of his property. Although the deed was made some time previous to the issuance of the 'attachment, it authorizes conditionally a. further sale of the property which had been left in the possession of the plaintiff. -The deed may have been.part only of a plan to enable the plaintiff thereafter to dispose of his property fraudulently, &c. It was competent to show the subsequent running off of the property to Georgia, and that it was in the : possession of Littleton Yarbrough, the beneficiary in-the deed, .as circumstantial evidence going to show that the execution of the deed was not intended as the only act to be done towards the fraudulent disposition of the property.
The declaration of Littleton Yarbrough as* to the bill of sale, í (as proven by the witness Wilson,) .-was inadmissible. Yar-
The plaintiff asked the judge to charge, “ that if the deed in trust had been executed previous to the issuance of the attach-'-■ ment, and no other act intended to be done by the plaintiff in purpose of fraud, then as the act had been consummated, the after suing out of the attachment would be wrongful.” The judge declined so to charge, but charged “ that if the deed had been recently executed, and only heard of by tho defendant shortly before the attachment, the fact that it may have been consummated and nothing more intended, Would not make the issuance of tho attachment wrongful.”
At the date of this attachment tho statute authorized the issuance thereof, when affidavit should be made “ that the party is about to dispose of his property fraudulently, with tho intern; to evade the payment of the debt sued for.” It is obvious, therefore, that a fraudulent disposition of the party’s property, con * summated previous to the issuance of tho attachment, did not justify the suing out of the same, and that the court erred in ru; ling to the contrary.
diet the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded.