Conley v. Buck

28 S.E. 97, 100 Ga. 187, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 22, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 28 S.E. 97 (Conley v. Buck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conley v. Buck, 28 S.E. 97, 100 Ga. 187, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 25 (Ga. 1897).

Opinion

Bish, Justice.

1. The plaintiffs in error complain because the court below •overruled their demurrer to the petition as amended. That demurrer was: (1) no equity in the petition, plaintiff having .an adequate and complete remedy at law; (2) multifariousness; (3) misjoinder of parties defendant; (4) because of insufficiency and indefiniteness in the allegations of fraud and collusion between the defendants named in the petition, in. not setting out in what the fraud consisted, nor setting out .any facts showing in what the fraud consisted. While substantially this same demurrer was made to the petition as it .stood before the last amendment thereto, and was overruled by the court, as this last amendment struck therefrom all .allegations concerning the Plowboy Company, which in•cluded everything with reference to Mrs. Sarah H. Conley and Benjamin Conley, Jr., and the demurrer was then renewed to the petition as amended, and again overruled, in treating of this case we think it is not necessary to consider it as it stood before this last amendment was allowed, but we take the case as it appeared after the allowance of this ■amendment. Bor if the plaintiff’s petition as finally amended was good as against the demurrer, it can answer no practical purpose to now consider whether it could have withstood the •demurrer in its previous shape. The object of the plaintiff’s petition is to enable him to reach the property of the principal defendant John L. Conley, alleged to have been fraudulently transferred to the other defendants named in the petition, and to subject it to the execution held by the plaintiff against said Conley. In the language of Sutherland, J., in the case of Fellows v. Fellows, 4 Cowen, 699, a case very analogous to the case at bar, “the object is a legitimate one; and to the accomplishment of which a ■court of equity will readily lend its aid.” It is undoubtedly True that where suit is filed in equity concerning several [191]*191tilings of distinct natures, against several persons, it is demurrable. Marshall v. Means, 12 Ga. 61; Stephens v. Whitehead, 75 Ga. 294; Stuck v. Southern Steel Co., 96 Ga. 95; Story’s Eq. Pl. §291. But according to the view that we take of the case under consideration, this is not such .a suit. All discovery was expressly waived in the plaintiff’s petition; and we are therefore, for the purpose of passing upon the demurrer to the petition as amended, to take the allegations of the petition to he true, notwithstanding the •denials in the pleas of the defendants. So talcing them, the ■case presented is one where a judgment debtor and certain •of his near relatives “combined and conspired to aid him in hiding out his property from the plaintiff, and joined together to aid him in such purpose, and did so aid him,” in various fraudulent transfers- of different parcels of property, the same bfeing all of the property owned by the said principal defendant, by separate deeds made by him to each of these codefendants respectively; “and all of the defendants •entered into a general scheme to defraud the plaintiff and ■other creditors, . . and every fraudulent transfer described in the petition was in pursuance of such scheme,” said debtor having (after such fraudulent transfers of his property) “no visible effects” and being “totally insolvent.” Was the court right in overruling the demurrer on the .ground that there was no equity in the petition, as the plaintiff had a complete remedy at law? In DeLacy v. Hurst, 83 Ga. 223, the demurrer was on the ground that “ no equitable cause of action was set out in the plaintiffs’ petition, because they did not show that they had reduced their debt to judgment and had execution issued thereon and said execution returned nulla bona.” But in sustaining the judgment of the court below which overruled this demurrer, this •court held,, that “to a suit brought under the act of 1887, or put under it by amendment, a demurrer on the ground that complainants have a complete and adequate remedy at law is not sustainable.” If such demurrer was not sustainable in [192]*192that case, surely it is not sustainable in the present one, because here the petitioning creditor has a judgment lien and there has been a return of nulla bona upon the execution issued thereon. The case of DeLacy v. Hurst was examined and approved in Regenstein v. Tyler, 84 Ga. 277. In Stillwell v. Savannah Grocery Co., 88 Ga. 144, while it was held that “the uniform procedure act of 1887 does not make extraordinary remedies applicable or available where they were not so before,” the decision in DeLacy v. Hurst was expressly adhered to; and Chief Justice Bleckley, delivering the opinion of the court, said, “That ease holds that in. one and the same suit creditors may proceed for judgment-on their debts and to set aside fraudulent conveyances.” .And he said that the creditors in the case which he had under review were “recti in curia as to' the ultimate purposes of their action, these purposes being to establish their claim against Peacock, Peterson & Co. and to set aside an alleged fraudulent conveyance made by them to their codefendants, Stillwell, Millen & Co.” In Vaughn v. Ga. Co-operative’ Loan Co., decided by this court less than a year ago, and reported in 98 Ga. 288, it was held that, “under the uniform procedure act of 1887, both legal and equitable causes of action can be joined, and relief of both kinds prayed for in one suit;” and, following the decision in DeLacy v. Hurst, it was held that the plaintiff in the case then before the court could obtain a judgment at law against the principal defendant on his note, foreclose the latter’s equity of redemption in the land conveyed by him as security for the debt, and, if the sheriff’s sale was fraudulent and void, could have that sale set aside. In the.case which we have under consideration, the sole purpose of the plaintiff’s petition is to have the alleged fraudulent conveyances set aside and the property covered by them decreed to be subject to a judgment which he holds and upon which there has been a return of nulla bona; and insolvency of the judgment debtor is expressly charged. Certainly it would seem that if he could have-[193]*193come into court by an equitable petition, both for the purpose of obtaining a judgment against Conley and also for the purpose of having the fraudulent conveyances set aside, he can, as the owner of a judgment against Conley and the fi. fa. issued thereon, upon which there has been a return of nulla, bona, come into court in this way for the latter purpose only. We are therefore of opinion that there was no error in overruling the demurrer on this ground. This ruling will be further strengthened by what we shall say and what we shall cite in reference to the next two grounds of the demurrer, multifariousness and misjoinder of parties defendant, which we shall consider together. This court has repeatedly decided that multifariousness is an objection not favored by courts of equity. A leading case in this country, on these two subjects, which has been cited, approved and followed in numerous decisions by the courts of last resort in America, is that of Brinkerhoff v. Brown, 6 John. Ch. 139, where it was urged by way of demurrer that the bill was multifarious, first as to parties; second as to the objects of the bill.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E. 97, 100 Ga. 187, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conley-v-buck-ga-1897.