Hagan v. Walker

55 U.S. 29, 14 L. Ed. 312, 14 How. 29, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 424
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 21, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 55 U.S. 29 (Hagan v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hagan v. Walker, 55 U.S. 29, 14 L. Ed. 312, 14 How. 29, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 424 (1852).

Opinion

Mr? Justice CURTIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

John Hagan & Co. filed their bill in the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of Alabama, in which they state that, in the year 1834, they recovered a judgment at law in that court against Leroy Pope, for upwards of seven thousand dollars, which is wholly unsatisfied; that a writ of fieri facias, running against the lands, goods, and body of the debtor, was regularly issued, and, on the' 10th day of October, 1834, was returned nullá bona; and from that time to the filing of the bill, there has not been,' in that district or elsewhere, any. property of Leroy Pope out of which the judgment-debt could be. collected, except certain property afterwards mentioned. The bill further alleges that, about a month before the complainants recovered their judgment at law, Leroy Pope, intend? ing to defraud the complainants, and to .hinder them from obtaining payment, made conveyances, both of real and personal estáte, to a large amount, to his son, William PI. Pope, who was a party to the fraud, and is made a defendant in the bill; that Leroy Pope died in the year 1844, and Samuel Breck, who was appointed his administrator, is also a party defendant. The complainants are averred to be citizens of Louisiana, and William-H. Pope and the administrator citizens Of Alabama. The defendants having demurred to the bill, it was dismissed by the District Court, and the complainant, who is the surviving partner, appealed to this court.

•The principal ground upon which the demurrer has been rested.in this court is, that the bill does not show that the complainants are entitled to equitable relief. The- argument is, that the jurisdiction of a court of equity, to aid a judgment-creditor, *33 by remqving a fraudulent encumbrance on the property of his debtor, is ancillary merely; that this aid is not given unless the creditor' has obtained a lien at law upon the specific property sought for, if that be legal property upon which. an execution could be levied; or if it be equitable assets, not liable to a levy by execution; that the creditor must have exhausted his legal remedy, by á return of nulla bona, on his execution, and must also be in a condition to proceed at once at law to enforce his right, if the obstacle should be remo.ved. ' That if his judgment has become ineffectual to entitle him to an execution, so that he could not levy, even if the assets were legal, and not subject to any fraudulent encumbrance, equity will not exert itself to subject equitable property to the payment of his judgment. And it is further argued, that, according to the local law of Alabama, governing these proceedings at law, the judgment-creditors had lost their lien on the personal estate of the.debtor, because they had suffered more thari one- term to elapse without, issuing an alias execution; and upon the real- estate, because more than ten years elapsed after t£e return of their last execution, and before this bill was filed; and that the lien, both upon the- personal and real estate, was destroyed by the death of Leroy Pope, which suspended the. right to issue an execution. That, by reason of his death and the lapse'of more thari.ten years, the right to issue an execution being suspended, equity would not subject equitable assets to the payment of this judgment.

It does riot distinctly appear whether the property sought to be reached by this bill is. equitable or legal. There is reason to suppose, from some allegations in the bill, that' a part or the whole of the • property was conveyed by Leroy Pope, in 1831, to Louis McLane, as Secretary of the, Treasury, to secure a debt due to the United States by a deed of trust, and this conveyance is not impeached. If it embraced the whole or any part of the property now in question, only an equitable estate therein was left in Leroy Pope. ' The bill is not distinct in its allegations on this subject; but we do not deem it necessary that it should be; because we are of opinion that this case, is not to be treated as an application by a judgment-creditor for the exercise of the-ancillary jurisdiction of 'the court, to aid him in executing legal process, but comes under a head of original jurisdiction in equity. It is a bill bj a creditor of a deceased debtor, against the administrator and a party who is fraudulently holding all'the property of the deceased, which in equity should be applied to the payment of this debt., , and the bill prays that the debt may be paid out of this fund. That a single creditor may maintain a bjll against an administrator of a décéased *34 debtor, for a discovery of assets and the payment of his debt, there can be no doubt. That, in some cases, he may join with the administrator a third person, who is in possession of property which is amenable to the payment of the debt, is also clear. The instances in which it'has been actually held that such third person might be joined, are chiefly cases of collusion between the administrator and the third person possessed of assets, insolvency of the administrator, and where the third-'person was the surviving' partner of the deceased. Utterson v. Mair, 2 Ves. Jr. 95; Alsager v. Rowley, 6 Ves. 748; Burroughs v. Elton, 11 Ves. 29; Gedge v. Traill, 1 Russ. & M. 281; Long v. Majestre, 1 Johns. Ch. Rep. 306. But it will be- found that the equitable right Of the creditor to join a third person, and have' a discovery and an appropriation of assets held by him,* has never been limited to these particular cases.

For, while it is generally agreed that some special case must be made, it is also declared in all the cases, that what is to constitute it has not been limited by any precise and rigid rule. In Holland v. Prior, (1 My. &. K. 240,) Lord Brougham applied the rule to the case of a representative of a deceased representative, without any suggestion of collusion between him and the present representative.' In Simpson v. Vaughn, (2 Atk. 33,) Lord Hardwicke said-.: “ It. has been said at the bar, that .you may make any person a defendant that you apprehend has pdssessed himself- of assets upon which you have a lien. But this certainly cannot be laid' down as a general rule;' for it -would- be of dangerous consequence to insist that you can make any-person a defendant who has assets, unless you can Show to the- court he denies that he has assets, or applies them improperly.” Considering, then, that some special and sufficient reasons must be-shown'for proceeding against a third person, jointly with the administrator, the inquiry is, -whether this bill does not contain those reasons ; and. wc are of opinion it does.

It appears, from the statements in the bill, that William H. Pope is in possession, of all the assets of the deceased debtor, both real and personal, holding.-them under conveyances made to him by the. deceased, absolute, in form, but accompanied by secret trusts in favor of the- grantor, designed to defraud this particular -creditor, .and prevent him from obtaining payment of his" judgment, and that this fraudulent design has .thus far been successfully executed.

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Bluebook (online)
55 U.S. 29, 14 L. Ed. 312, 14 How. 29, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagan-v-walker-scotus-1852.