Jones v. Paul

9 Mo. 290
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 Mo. 290 (Jones v. Paul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Paul, 9 Mo. 290 (Mo. 1845).

Opinion

McBride, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complainant filed his bill on the' chancery side of the Platte circuit court, on the 26th August, 1844, against the defendants.

The bill states that Samuel Paul,, and Elmira Paul, his wife, on the 14th July, 1842, conveyed by deed to Frederick Marshall lot number 2, in block numbered 31, in Platte City, for the consideration of $110, as expressed in the deed. On the 10th October, 1843, the complainant obtained before a justice of the peace in Platte county, a judgment against the defendant Paul, for about $87, debt, interest and costs, upon which execution issued, which was returned instanter, “No property found of the defendant in my township whereon to levy this execution, 13th Nov. 1843.” On the 11th October, 1843, the complainant obtained a transcript of his judgment, and filed the pame in the office of the clerk of the circit court of Platte county, upon which an execution was issued by the clerk on the 13th November following, which was by the sheriff levied on the lot conveyed by Paul and wife to Marshall, and the lot sold by virtue thereof on the 9th April, 1844, when the complainant became the purchaser at the sum of $5, and received the sheriff’s deed therefor.

The bill further states that the lot and improvements thereon were [292]*292worth at the time of the conveyance from Paul and wife to Marshall, the sum of $400, and the yearly rent about $80; that the deed although absolute on its face, was only intended as a mortgage to secure a debt due from Paul to Marshall of $110. The bill then proceeds, “your orator further charges that Paul and wife conveyed said lot to said Marshall to defraud, hinder and delay the creditors of said Paul — said Paul being at that time insolvent, and having no other property subject to execution.” Since the 14th July, 1842, Paul assigned to Marshall a claim he held against Platte county, amounting to $400, to protect the same from the payment of his debts, and since the transfer, Marshall has received a large amount of said claim — that complainant notified Marshall of his claim against Paul, and requested him to retain in his hands an amount sufficient to pay complainant’s debt. The complainant has proffered to pay Marshall the balance due him from Paul, after deducting the payments made by Paul, the rents and profits of the house and lot, and the usury .charged in the transaction, should there be any balance, and concludes by propounding a number of interrogatories to the defendants, with a prayer for the foreclosure of the mortgage, the setting aside the deed for fraud, and for general relief.

To the bill, the defendants filed their joint and several answer, to which the complainant filed his exceptions. Afterwards by agreement the answer was withdrawn, and the defendants filed a general demurrer assigning special causes to the bill; whereupon the complainant obtained leave to amend his bill; the amendments sets out more fully the exhibits referred to in the bill and makes them a part thereof, and concludes by reiterating substantially ■ the interrogatories put by the bill. The defendants again demurred, which being sustained by the court, and the bill dismissed, the complainant has brought his case in this court by writ of error.

The counsel on both sides have presented many points which cannot legitimately arise on the demurrer, and which this court will not now examine in detail. Whether the judgment of the justice of the peace is regular — whether the return of the constable on the execution, is sufficient in law — within what time the constable may make his return so as to authorize the clerk to issue an execution from his office on the transcript — and whether the deed of the sheriff contains all the recitals required by our statute, are questions which will more properly arise on the trial and must first be presented to and decided ‘by the circuit court, before this court can entertain them. For those questions to be decided on demurrer would be almost equivalent to a trial of the cause upon its merits.

[293]*293The bill first charges the defendants, Paul and wife, with having executed a deed of conveyance to their co-defendant Marshall, which although unconditional on its face, was intended by the parties thereto as a mortgage to secure the sum of $110, due from Paul to Marshall. Pursuing this view of the transaction, until complainant obtains his judgment, files his transcript, and has an execution issued which will reach the real estate of Paul, the complainant then abandons the idea of a mortgage, and charges that the deed was made in fraud, to hinder and delay the creditors of Paul. In confirmation of this latter charge, the bills alleges that since the conveyance of the lot, Paul has assigned to Marshall a demand of some character or description, which he had against the county of Platte, amounting to about $400, to prevent his creditors from getting it, and that Marshall having received a large amount of that fund, refuses to render him an account thereof.

As an excuse for thus blending in one bill two distinct causes of action, the complainant urges that not knowing precisely the character of the transaction, which he calls upon the chancellor to unravel for him he has been driven from necessity to present his bill with a double aspect.

This court cannot recognize any such necessity, but holds it to be the duty of the complainant to ascertain his rights, and the means adopted by others to defeat or withold from him the exercise and enjoyment thereof before he applies to a court of equity for relief. Then he will be able to present his case with clearness and brevity. If he does not know what are his rights, how is he prepared to say that his rights have been violated ? Shall the mere vague belief or suspicion of a complian-ant, that he has been defrauded or wronged in one of two modes, be the basis of the action of a court of chancery ?

The bill in chancery answers to the declaration in a suit at common law; as at common law, so likewise is it desirable in chancery, that the matters in controversy shall be narrowed down to as few issues as practicable. This rule is not only beneficial to parties litigant, who thereby have an additional guarantee that justice will be afforded, but likewise due to the courts as it tends to divest causes of much of their complication and embarrassment. The rule should not be lost sight of in endeavoring to carry out another favorite object of a court of equity, the prevention of a multiplicity of suits.

In Mitford’s Chy. PI. 18!, it is laid down as a general principle that the court will not permit the plaintiff to demand by one bill, several matters of different natures against several defendants, and the reason assigned is that it would tend to load each defendant with an unneces[294]*294sary burden of costa, by swelling the pleadings with the state of the several claims of the other defendants, with which he has no connexion. The same principle is recognized in the case of Fellows vs. Fellows, 4 Cowen, 700; 2 Madd. Ch. 294; 2 Har. Ch. Pr. 289; 1 East 227.

In the case of Gaines, et ux. vs. Chew, et al., 2 Howard 642, the court say “that a bill which is multifarious may be demurred to for that cause, is a general principle, but what shall constitute multifariousness is a matter about which there is a great diversity of opinion. In general terms a bill is said to be multifarious which seeks to enforce against different individuals, demands which are'wholly disconnected. In quoting from the case of Campbell vs.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Mo. 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-paul-mo-1845.