Hall & Farley, Trustees v. Alabama Terminal & Improvement Co.

143 Ala. 464
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 143 Ala. 464 (Hall & Farley, Trustees v. Alabama Terminal & Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall & Farley, Trustees v. Alabama Terminal & Improvement Co., 143 Ala. 464 (Ala. 1904).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, C. J.

The statute of 13 Elizabeth, entitled “An Act against Fraudulent Deeds, Gifts, Alienations, etc.,” was, in a sense, the progenitor, and is the prototype of our statute on the same subject, which is now embodied in section 2156 of the Code.

By that statute — 13 Elizabeth — it was “Declared, ordained and enacted * * * * * that all and every feoffment, gift, grant, alienation, bargain and conveyance of lands, tenements, hereditaments, goods and chattels, or any of them, or of any lease, reht, common or other profit rr charge out of the same lands, tenements, hereditaments, goods and chattels, or any of them, or of any lease, rent, common or other profit or charge out of the same lands, tenements, hereditaments, goods and chattels, or any of them, by writing or otherwise, and all and every bond, suit, judgment and execution at any time had or made sithence the beginning of the Queen’s Majesty’s Reign that now is, or at any time hereafter to be had or made, to or for any intent or purpose to hinder, delay or defraud creditors and others of their just and lawful actions, suits, debts, accounts, damages, penalties, forfeitures, heriots, mortuaries and reliefs, shall be from henceforth deemed and taken (only as against that person or persons, his or their heirs, successors, executors, administrators and assigns and every of them, whose actions, suits, debts, accounts, damages, penalties, forfeitures, heriots, mortuaries and reliefs, by such guileful, covinous or fraudulent devices and practices, as is aforesaid, are, shall, or might be, in any ways [469]*469disturbed, hindered, delayed or defrauded) to be clearly and utterly void, frustrate and of none effect; any pretence, colour, feigned consideration, expressing of use, or any other matter or thing to the contrary notwithstanding.”

At the time of this enactment — 1570,—and for more than two centuries afterwards, choses in action were not leviable by execution or other process under English law. Nor was that species of property strictly within the letter of the statute. Upon these considerations, and mainly upon the first, the act being intended to aid creditors to the subjection only of fraudulently conveyed or transferred property which could have been levied upon in the hands of the debtor, it was uniformly held, so long as there was no right or remedy given the creditor against the choses in action of the debtor, that such property was not within this statute, and, of consequence, that transfers of choses in action were in no wise affected by it.

It was while this state of law obtained, and with reference to this immunity of choses in action from process for the payment of debts, that Lord Thurlow, declining to annul as fraudulent the transfer of a chose in action, used the expression quoted in the opinion of the chancellor in this cause: “It would be preposterous and absurd to set- aside an agreement which, if set aside, leaves the stock (indebtedness) in the name of the person where you could not touch it.” The justness of this declaration is obvious in view of the then non-liability to the debt of the choses in action, even in the hands and name of the debtor. That was the consideration which constrained the Lord Chancellor to refuse to set aside the transfer, and, in doing so, he acted in consonance with the settled doctrine of the English courts in the premises.

So the law stood in England, till the reign of Victoria. But, by the “Judgment Act” of 1 & 2 Victoria, choses in action of the debtor were made liable for his debts, and provision was made to reach and subject such property by a special sort of levy and return, and “A charging order” of the court thereon. Since this enactment it has, with like uniformity, been held that choses in action are to be considered as “Goods and chattels” under the [470]*470act- of 13 Elizabeth, and that covinous transfers of them are “Void, frustrate and of none effect” against creditors of the transferror. hThis- conclusion was reached and has been steadily adhered to-, notwithstanding such property is neiiher “Goods” nor “Chattels” strictly speaking, upon the consideration that the broad purpose of the act of 13 Elizabeth was beneficent to the supprestion of fraud, and the conservation of the rights of creditors against- all property subject to execution in the hands of the debtor by giving them a remedy to pursue and subject all such property which shall be fraudulently conveyed or transferred by the debtor, and that to- these ends the statute should be liberally construed so as to extend its operation to any species- of property not leviable at the time of its enactment, but made so by subsequent acts of Parliament. Thus, it has been said of this act- — 13 Elizabeth — that “Its simplicity and — if the expression may be allowed — -its expansiveness have enabled the judges to bring within its scope, and extend its operation to, almost every kind of transaction resorted to by debtors to the prejudice of their creditors,” and that it “Cannot receive too liberal a construction, or be too much extended in suppression of fraud.” So, in Tvyne’s caso, it was r( solved that “Because fraud and deceit abound in these days more than in former times, all statutes made against fraud should be liberally and beneficently expounded to suppress fraud.” And the doctrine of the extension of the statute has been thus concretely stated: “The principle is, that to convey away any property, against which execution can issue, is a fraud on creditors, but not a conveyance of that which they could not (but for the conveyance) have touched; so that, by successive statutes giving creditors poAver over different kinds of property, the operation of the statute of 13 Elizabeth c. 5, has been gradually extended.”

This intangible property — choses in action — being thus brought within the act of 13 Elizabeth through the leviable quality attached to it by the act'of 1 & 2 Victoria, the remedy of the judgment creditor upon the fraudulent transfer of such property Avas and is in the law of England the same remedy that he had and has to the subjection of tangible property — goods and chattels, [471]*471strictly so called — fraudulently transferred by the debt- or, namely, by bill in chancery, — upon the return of an execution “No property,” — to set aside the transfer and subiect such dioses in action to the satisfaction of the judgment. Nor was it ever supposed, but the ruling has been to, the contrary, that the existence of a remedy, by special statutory proceeding at law for the subjection of such property, operated to exclude the remedy in equity for its application to the judgment.

It is also' the settled law in England that, under the Statute of 13 Elizabeth, since choses in action were made leviable by the act of 1 & 2 Victoria, “The forgiveness by a debtor of a debt due to him,” that is, the covinous cancellation and surrender as paid of a bond or' note, for example, by the judgment debtor to his debtor, involving as between them the.discharge of the latter from the obligation, is a fraudulent transfer which the judgment creditor may have set aside in equity, and thereupon hold his debtor’s debtor to account for the amount of said debt. .Each of the foregoing propositions is supported by the text .and citations of Worthington on Fraudulent Conveyances and Statutes of Elizabeth, pp. 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22-3-4, 33, 555.

It is of no importance to us whether the statute of 13 Elizabeth was the ordination of original law, or merely declaratory of existing common law in England.

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Bluebook (online)
143 Ala. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-farley-trustees-v-alabama-terminal-improvement-co-ala-1904.