Court Opinion

ID: 3252386
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:22:52.054322+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:20:50.449225
License: Public Domain

The bill in this cause was filed more than two years after the principal defendant, M. F. Gant, had taken a conveyance of the property described in the bill from her husband, K. P. Gant, who also is made a party defendant. The conveyance was executed on the day after service of the summons hailing the grantor to court to answer an action of malicious prosecution brought by complainant. That action at law subsequently resulted in a judgment for substantial damages for the complainant, and, a few days later, this bill was filed. Complainant was therefore a creditor of the grantor at the time of the conveyance, and, as such, had a right to file his bill under the statute of this state denouncing fraudulent conveyances. Galloway v. Shaddix, 197 Ala. 273, 72 So. 617.
As we read the bill, the pleader's purpose, and the effect of his language, is to charge that the conveyance in question was voluntary, that the recited consideration was simulated and fictitious and therefore fraudulent and void as to then existing creditors of the grantor. Such a conveyance is, as to existing creditors, fraudulent without regard to the financial condition of the grantor or his intent in making the conveyance. Wood v. Potts, 140 Ala. 431, 37 So. 253, and cases there cited.
The bill hardly gives evidence of an intention to state complainant's cause of action in an alternative aspect. It does, however, allege, as if to reinforce the equity before stated, that the conveyance between the parties defendant disposed of "substantially, if not all, of the real and personal property owned by him (the grantor) at the time," and was made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud complainant in the collection of his claim, which the grantee knew or "she had knowledge of facts and circumstances that would put her on inquiry." The averment that the conveyance was "voluntary and without consideration" is repeated. Of course the averments first quoted in this paragraph detracted nothing from the equity already averred; but even if the proof should fail to establish the alleged voluntary character of the conveyance and even though the bill be considered as framed in a double aspect, proof of the added averments will entitle complainant to the relief sought. London v. Anderson Brass Works, 197 Ala. 16,72 So. 359.
It follows that the court correctly overruled the demurrer to the bill so far as concerns its stated grounds.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.