Cannon v. Hudson

6 Del. 21
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 5, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Del. 21 (Cannon v. Hudson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cannon v. Hudson, 6 Del. 21 (Del. 1880).

Opinion

THIS case came up on appeal from the decree of the Chancellor sitting in and for Sussex County on bill and answer filed by the said complainants and respondents, and heard before him without depositions having been taken, and upon which he ordered the bill to be dismissed. The facts alleged and admitted in the case will be found sufficiently stated in the opinion upon it in this court to dispense with any further reference to them here. The appeal was heard before Comegys, C. J., and Wootten, Houston and Wales, J.J. THE bill in this case states, in substance, that, on the 14th day of April, 1865, Manaan Gum recovered a judgment D.S.B. in the Superior Court of Sussex County against Robert Hudson, for the real debt of one hundred and forty-seven dollars and twenty-seven cents, with interest from the 13th of March, 1863, the same being No. 15 as of the April Term, 1865, of the said court: That on the 13th day of March, 1866, he recovered against him, in the said court, another judgment D.S.B. for the real debt of one hundred and twenty-one dollars and fifty cents, with interest from the 12th of March, 1866, being No. 195 to the October Term, 1865, of the said court; and that, on the 4th day of December, 1867, Elisha W. Cannon and George W. Cannon, two of the appellants, as assignees of Lemuel Derrickson, recovered against the said Robert Hudson, in the said court, another judgment D.S.B. for the real debt of one hundred and forty-six dollars, with interest from the 24th of May, 1866, being No. 58 as of the October Term, 1867, of the said court: That at the time of the recovery of these judgments, respectively, said Robert Hudson was the owner in fee-simple, and possessed of a tract of land in Dagsborough Hundred, in said County of Sussex, containing one hundred acres, upon which the said judgments were liens: That, on the 24th day of February, 1869, the said Robert Hudson conveyed the said tract of *Page 23 one hundred acres to his father, Seth Hudson, one of the respondents, for the consideration or sum of twelve hundred dollars: That, after the sale of that tract, the said. Robert Hudson bought another tract, containing fifty acres, from John T. Long, which was also in Dagsborough Hundred: That, on the 8th of March, 1869, Henry W. Long, as the assignee of the said John T. Long, recovered against him a judgment D.S.B. in the court aforesaid, for the real debt of thirteen hundred dollars, with interest from the 23d of February, 1869: That, on the 7th day of March, 1872, and after the death of the said Robert Hudson, but before the term of the said Superior Court next succeeding that event, the appellants, Elisha W. Cannon and George W. Cannon, recovered a judgment D.S.B. against said Robert Hudson, in the court aforesaid, for the real debt of one hundred and thirty-two dollars, being No. 189 as of the October Term, 1871, of the said court: That, the said two last-mentioned judgments are liens against the last-purchased tract only: That the said Robert Hudson recovered a judgment D.S.B. for the real debt of four hundred dollars in the said court against his said father, Seth Hudson, one of the respondents aforesaid, on the 2d of March, 1869, with interest from the 24th of February, 1869, the same being No. 313 as of the October Term, 1868, of the said court: That afterwards, the said Henry W. Long, as assignee as aforesaid of the said John T. Long, sued out of the said court a writ of fierifacias, upon his aforesaid judgment, against the said Robert Hudson, to satisfy the same, the said execution being No. 519 to the April Term, 1872; and it appears that he also sued out what is called afi. fa. attachment against the said Seth Hudson as garnishee of the said Robert Hudson [this was probably a fi. fa. against Robert Hudson with a clause of attachment which was laid in the hands of the said Seth Hudson]: That before the return of the said fi.fa., the said Robert Hudson died intestate, leaving all five of said judgments unsatisfied and unpaid: That under his said writ offi. fa. the said Henry W. Long, as asignee as aforesaid of said John T. Long, recovered out of the proceeds of the sale of the personal property of the said Robert Hudson the sum of *Page 24 six hundred and three dollars and thirty cents, and that the said Seth Hudson, on or about the 20th day of May, 1871, paid to him, as such asignee, the sum of one hundred and three dollars and sixty-seven cents, and also, on the 4th of July, 1872, the further sum of seventy-five dollars, leaving yet unpaid a balance which is in the Superior Court, and which is supposed to be about the sum of three hundred and five dollars: That afterwards a writ of venditioniexponas to sell lands, being No. 433, to the October Term, 1872, of the said court, was issued at the suit of the said Henry W. Long, as assignee as aforesaid, and that under the same the aforesaid tract of fifty acres was sold on the 27th of September, 1872, to one John M. Mumford for the sum of eight hundred dollars, of which due return was made, showing costs of ninety-eight dollars and ten cents: That there are no other liens against the tract of fifty acres than the five judgments above stated: That no execution has ever been sued out upon either of the three first-mentioned judgments: That application was made to the Superior Court at the then last Term (October Term, 1872) to set aside the aforesaid sale of the said fifty-acre tract, which was denied; and, second, to apply the proceeds, after deducting the costs, to the balance due on the said judgment of the said Long, and to the judgment of the orators, Elisha W. Cannon and George W. Camion, No. 189, as of the October Term, 1871, so as to leave the holders of the said first three judgments to proceed against the one hundred-acre tract sold as aforesaid by the said Robert Hudson to his father Seth Hudson, on the principle of marshalling securities, which application was also denied on the ground that resort for relief under such a claim must be to a Court of Equity, and directing the sheriff and respondent, Josiah P. Marvel to hold the money arising from the said sale till application for its disposal could be made to the Chancellor: That the said Manaan Gum, the plaintiff in the first two judgments against the said Robert Hudson, assigned the same for value received to the said complainants, the Messrs. Cannon: That if the proceeds of the sale of the said tract of fifty acres be applied to the said first three judgments, it will pay them off and also pay a part of the first of the last two *Page 25 judgments, that is, the judgment of Henry W. Long, assignee of John T. Long, but will leave wholly unpaid the last one, that is the judgment of the complainants, Cannon and Cannon, for the real debt of one hundred and thirty-two dollars recovered as aforesaid after the death of said Robert Hudson, but before a term had elapsed. The bill then discusses the equitable question of marshalling securities, claiming that as the first three judgments can be paid by a sale of the one hundred-acre tract, upon which they alone bind as liens, they ought not to be allowed to have applied to them any of the proceeds of the sale of the said fifty-acre tract, until the last two judgments have been fully satisfied and paid thereout, and that they should be compelled to resort in the first instance to the said tract of one hundred acres, and exhaust the proceeds of its sale in or towards the satisfaction of their said three judgments before claiming any part of the proceeds of the sale of the fifty-acre tract held by the sheriff. It is then shown that a part of the first of the last two judgments has been realized from the proceeds of the sale of said Robert Hudson's personal property.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Del. 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cannon-v-hudson-del-1880.