Trippe & Slade v. Ward
This text of 2 Ga. 304 (Trippe & Slade v. Ward) 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.
Opinion
By the Court
delivering the opinion.
This was a bill filed in the Court below, by the creditors of William J. Lowe, deceased, against Uriah Ward, his administrator, and William V. McGehee et al. to subject certain property therein specified to the payment of their debts. It appears from the record, [305]*305that the complainants have obtained judgment against Lowe’s administrator for their respective demands, guando acciderint, and the sheriff has returned on the executions issued thereon, “ no property of the defendant.” That subsequent to the contracting of the debts due the complainants, Lowe, the intestate, executed a deed of trust to said McGehee as trustee for his wife Elizabeth, and Anna Frances, child of said William J. Lowe and his wife Elizabeth, by which deed he conveyed all his visible property, without making any provision whatever for the payment of the debts then due the complainants; and that, at the time of the execution of said deed of trust, the said William J. Lowe was nearly or quite in a state of insolvency. It is also charged, that said deed was ■voluntary and without any valuable consideration moving from the said McGehee, or from any one else, to the said Lowe, and was executed for the purpose of defrauding his creditors. The complainants pray that McGehee may be decreed to pay their debts out of the property so conveyed to him in trust as aforesaid.
The defendants filed a demurrer to the complainants’ bill, on tfre ground that they had an ample and complete remedy at law.
There was another ground of demurrer mentioned in the record, but it was not urged before this Court.
The Court below, on hearing the demurrer, sustained it, and dismissed the complainants’ bill, on the ground that they had a full, complete, and adequate remedy at law, inasmuch as William V. McGehee was liable to them as executor de son tort of the estate of William J. Lowe; to which decision of the Court the complainants excepted, and now assign the same for error in this Court.
Taking the charges in the bill to be true, as the demurrer
From the view we have taken of this case, we are of the opinion that the Court below erred in its judgment in sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the complainants’ bill. Let the judgment of the Court below be reversed and the cause reinstated.
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