Ratliff v. Nowery, Admrx.

136 So. 895, 102 Fla. 1072
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 1, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 136 So. 895 (Ratliff v. Nowery, Admrx.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ratliff v. Nowery, Admrx., 136 So. 895, 102 Fla. 1072 (Fla. 1931).

Opinions

Appellees, as complainants below filed their creditors' bill in the circuit court of Polk County against appellants, as defendants below, which seeks a decree adjudging that each of the conveyances made by *Page 1074 J. A. Ratliff and wife to the Ratliff holding Co., a corporation, was made to the said company without consideration, that grantee acquired no title thereto, and that in equity the said company should be decreed to be holding said property in trust. The bill alleges that J. A. Ratliff is also the owner and holder of a mortgage executed by W. W. Chase and wife and Frank H. Thompson and wife in the sum of $3750.00, also the owner and holder of a certain mortgage given to him in the sum of $19,800.00 covering four named blocks in the city of Lakeland executed by the Baker Holmes Realty Co. The bill seeks to have such interest as may now be owned by defendant J. A. Ratliff in said mortgages applied by the court to the payment of complainants' judgments.

The bill of complaint alleges that Samuel E. Nowery, now deceased, brought suit against J. A. Ratliff on the first of the series of said notes aggregating $3500.00 and interest thereon; that there was a return nulla bona on the execution issued on the judgment entered on said first note; that complainant Sarah J. Nowery, as administratrix of the Estate of Samuel E. Nowery, brought suit on other notes of the same series against J. A. Ratliff and at the time of filing creditors' bill herein, these notes had not been reduced to judgment; that complainants are now the owners and holders of judgments on the notes referred to and that same remain in full force and effect, and that the same with interest thereon are still unsatisfied.

The two complainants joined in this suit seek to have the court declare void as a fraud against them as creditors, the deeds executed by J. A. Ratliff and wife without consideration to the Ratliff Holding Co., also to have subjected to their judgment any amounts due J. A. Ratliff on the said mortgages above-referred to.

To the creditor's bill, a demurrer was filed jointly by J. A. Ratliff and wife and Ratliff Holding Co. and a separate demurrer was also filed by Baker-Holmes Realty Co. The *Page 1075 demurrers were each overruled, from which appeal was taken.

Appellants state that the main question presented here for review, upon which appellants rely for reversal, is that the bill of complaint is multifarious (1) as to parties complainant; (2) as to causes of action and (3) as to parties defendant.

In the case of Murrell v. Peterson, 57 Fla. 480, 49 So. 31, this Court said:

"While the rule as to multifariousness may, generally speaking, be said to be 'one very much of convenience,' and while there may not be 'any positive inflexible rule as to what, in the sense of a court of equity, constitutes multifariousness, which is fatal to a suit on demurrer,' yet, broadly speaking, multifariousness in a bill may be defined as 'the improperly joining in one bill distinct and independent matters, and thereby confounding them.' There are at least two general and distinct forms of multifariousness, one consisting in uniting in the same bill distinct and disconnected subjects, matters or causes, the other consisting in joining in the same suit, either as complainants or defendants, parties who are without a common interest in the subject of the litigation and have no connection with each other. Whenever multifariousness plainly appears in a bill it is ground for demurrer."

Where complainants in an equity proceeding have a common interest in the subject of the litigation and have some relation to each other growing out of the common interest, and the allegations of the bill are of a single distinct equity as to which the specific relief is prayed against a single defendant the bill is not multifarious. Arcadia Mercantile Co. v. Branning, 59 Fla. 428, 52 So. 588; Richardson v. Gaither,70 Fla. 145, 69 So. 699.

In the case of Murrell v. Peterson, supra, in speaking of what may constitute multifariousness in equity proceedings this Court quoted with approval from Shields v. Thomas, 18 Howard, 253, 259, that

" 'There is perhaps no rule established for the conducting *Page 1076 of equity pleadings with reference to which there has existed less of certainty and uniformity in application than has attended this relating to multifariousness.' "

The opinion then quotes from Mr. Justice Story:

"The conclusion to which a close survey of the authorities will conduct us seems to be that there is not any positive inflexible rule as to what in a sense of a court of equity constitutes multifariousness, which is fatal to a suit on demurrer."

The above decisions of this Court have reference to bills in chancery generally. The rule as to creditors' bill is even more relaxed.

Whether or not it is multifarious as a creditors' bill as toparties complainant — it is observed that the complainants each had filed actions at law on promissory notes and obtained judgments at law against J. A. Ratliff and that executions issued thereon had been returned nulla bona. It is well settled that creditors of the same debtor, each of whom is entitled to resort to equity although their claims are several and distinct, may join in a creditors' bill, provided all creditors so joining stand on the same footing and have judgments. 15 C.J. 1413, and 1414, Section 114. See cases there cited.

In fact the very nature of a "creditors' bill" as its name implies may often negative the claim of multifariousness that might ordinarily apply to other bills in chancery as to parties complainant, as its very purpose is to allow several creditors, although having unrelated claims, to join in one suit in order to prevent a multiplicity of suits, provided only that the relief sought by them is substantially the same and the same defenses are applicable to each. 8 R. C. L. 31, Sec. 35; 15 C. J. 1424, Sec. 143.

As to multifariousness as to causes of action: It is observed that the creditors' bill is brought to set aside deeds made by J. A. Ratliff and wife to Ratliff Holding Co.; also to subject to the payment of these judgments the notes *Page 1077 and mortgages made by the Baker-Holmes Realty Co.; also mortgages executed by Chase and wife and Thompson and wife to J. A. Ratliff.

In the case of Mountein v. King, 75 Fla. 12, 77 So. 630, this Court said:

"To render a bill in equity multifarious for misjoinder of causes it must contain two or more distinct and independent causes of action that cannot properly be joined in one bill of complaint." See also Johnson v. Benbow, 93 Fla. 124, 111 So. 504. (Italics supplied).

It was also held in the above cases that the particular matter involved is the convenience in the administration of justice and if this can be accomplished by the mode of procedure adopted an objection for multifariousness should not be sustained. The judgment debtor is ordinarily a necessary party defendant to a creditors' bill to reach property of the debtor not subject to execution and to subject the same to the satisfaction of the judgment and in such proceeding personsindebted to the defendant, or holding money or property inwhich he has an interest, or holding evidences or securities

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Cohen
271 F. Supp. 709 (S.D. Florida, 1967)
Tennessee Pub. Co. v. Carpenter
100 F.2d 728 (Sixth Circuit, 1938)
Yates, as Trustee v. Pen. Securities Corp.
144 So. 664 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 So. 895, 102 Fla. 1072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ratliff-v-nowery-admrx-fla-1931.