Court Opinion

ID: 7367029
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:52:39.721017+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:47.821371
License: Public Domain

de GRAFFENRIED, J.
This opinion, be it understood, must be read in connection with the opinion which was rendered by this court in the case of W. D. McCurdy v. Sallie B. Kenan, 178 Ala. 344, 59 South. 489.
*186So far as the questions involved in this case are concerned, we desire to say that it is admitted by all parties that the deed’ which was executed and delivered by John Dudley, Sr., to four of his children, viz., Joseph R. Dudley, Bolling Dudley, Sarah Reese, and Julia Dudley, was valid as to the world, except as to Mary D. Witter. It was binding on the other children of John Dudley, Sr., and, when John Dudley, Sr., died, his other children, as hews, took no interest by inheritance in said lands. It was void as to Mary D. Witter, because she was a creditor of John Dudley, Sr.; but, in so far as the questions that we have to consider are concerned, it was valid as to every other person.
2. The above conveyance, good as to- all the world, except as to Mary D. Witter, but void as to her, vested in said Joseph R. Dudley a life estate in an undivided one-fourth interest in the lands involved in this litigation, and only a life estate. The remainder in fee simple in said undivided one-fourth interest in said lands, under said conveyance, good as to all the world, except as to Mary D. Witter, but void as to her, vested in the children of Joseph R. Dudley.
3. When a conveyance is void as to a creditor, the creditor must do something manifesting an election on his part to treat the conveyance as void. He may, if he sees proper, obtain a judgment against the debtor, and, treating the conveyance as null and void, have the property described in the conveyance sold, under execution issued upon the judgment, as the property of such debt- or. He may, also, if he sees proper to do so, file a bill in equity, and have the property subjected to the payment of his debt. The thing which he must, in all cases, no matter to what forum he addresses himself, do, is to manifest an election on his part to treat the property as the property of the debtor. He must seek the title of *187the debtor to the. property, and, in doing so, can, of course, by such proceeding, obtain no better rights, no greater interest in, and no higher title to the property than the debtor himself had in the property when he made the conveyance. A judgment creditor cannot, by virtue of his debt merely, take possession of his debtor’s property. He must get possession in the manner provided by law, and, to acquire title thereto, he must acquire it in the manner which the law has provided. We take it that these statements need no citation of authority to sustain them.
4. It is also a familiar proposition that a party cannot claim both under and against the same conveyance. He cannot, in one breath, say that a conveyance is valid, and, in the next breath, say that it is invalid. A creditor who has the right to avoid a sale of a particular piece of property, made by his debtor cannot acquire rights to that property both under and against the conveyance which he has a right to avoid. If he elects to treat the sale as valid, and to acquire, under the conveyance, the rights which the grantee acquired to the property by virtue of the conveyance, then he cannot, at the same time, say that the grantee acquired no rights under the conveyance. If he sees proper to disaffirm the conveyance, then, as to him, the conveyance is as if it had never existed — no rights of third parties intervening — and in that event he acquires the title which the grantor had in the property at the time the conveyance was made. In such a case the title to the property is, in so far as the creditor is concerned, just as if the conveyance had never been made. If, on the other hand, he sees proper not to disaffirm the conveyance, and actually acquires rights under, and in recognition of, the conveyance, then, in such event, the conveyance, as bH ween the creditor and the fraudulent vendee, oc*188cupies the same position as if the conveyance was in no way tainted with fraud. — Bump on Fraud. Con. (3d Ed.) 460, 461; Robins, Frye & Co. v. Wooten, 128 Ala. 376, 30 South. 681.
5. In the instant case Mary D. Witter had the right, if she had seen proper so to do, to declare that the conveyance to which we have above referred was void, and by appropriate proceedings, amply provided by the law, to subject the lands described in the conveyance to the payment of her debt. In that event the property Avould have been treated by the court as the property of John Dudley, Sr., or, he being dead, as the property of his estate; and in that event, the conveyance being held to he void, the legal title to the land would have been treated, in so far as Mary D. Witter was concerned, as having descended to the heirs — not four of them, but all of them — of John Dudley, Sr. Treating the conveyance as void, Joseph B. Dudley did not inherit from his father an undivided one-fourth interest in said lands. John Dudley, Sr., had more than four heirs, and when he died, treating the conveyance as void, the title to the land descended to the heirs. When, however, Mary D. Witter sold the land as the property of Joseph B. Dudley, she claimed to have bought — and W. D. Mc-Curdy through her now claims — not that interest which descended to Joseph B. Dudley as heir, treating the conveyance as void, but an undivided one-fourth interest, that interest which Joseph B. Dudley took for life in the lands under the said conveyance. If we were to concede that Mary D. Witter, after the death of John Dudley, Sr., was in a position to sell the title which descended, treating the conveyance as void, to the heirs of John Dudley, Sr., under execution, for the payment of her debt, then in that event, as Joseph B. Dudley owned less than one-fourth of that title, she could not *189have laid claim, through him, as a purchaser at said sale, of a greater interest in the land than descended to him as such heir.
“Courts of equity, in affording relief against fraud, seek simply to restore the parties, as near as may he, to the positions they would have occupied had no fraud been perpetrated.” — Kennedy v. First Nat. Bank of Tuscaloosa, 107 Ala. 170, 18 South. 396, 36 L. R. A. 308.
In this case, if no fraud had been perpetrated, less than an undivided one-fourth interest in the land would have descended to Joseph R. Dudley upon the death of his father. The execution ran against Joseph R. Dudley, and his interest in the land was sold under that execution. Joseph R. Dudley, as grantee under the deed which Mary D. Witter had the power, at her election, to avoid, had an undivided one-fourth interest for life in said lands. Mary D. Witter took possession of that undivided one-fourth interest, and in so doing, we think, clearly indicated an election on her part not to avoid the sale.
6. It was pointed out in the opinion rendered on the former appeal in this case (178 Ala. 344, 59 Southern Reporter, 489, supra) that the common-law rule that enabled the creditor by specialty to sue the heir for the debt of the ancestor does not prevail in this state. When Mary D. Witter, through her execution, sold Joseph R. Dudley’s interest in the land, she sold it because Joseph R. Dudley owed the money for the collection of which the execution was issued. While that debt was also the debt of the ancestor, the land was sold, not as the property of the mcestor, but as the property of Joseph R. Dudley, and all that the purchaser at that sale could possibly have acquired was Joseph R. Dudley’s interest *190in the land. The law of the'state gave Mary D. Witter no remedy whereby she could reach the title of the ancestor, as such, by levying upon and selling the property of the heir. — W. D. McCurdy v. Sallie B. Kenan, supra.
Suppose, as an illustration, that a son became the surety for the father; suppose that the father then made a will, whereby he gave a life estate in a plantation to said son, with remainder in fee to the children of said son; suppose that the father then died, and léft ho property save the plantation so disposed of by will; suppose the creditor then obtained a judgment against the son upon the note of the father, and, under an execution, issued on that judgment, then sold said plantation as the property of the son. It seems plain that in such a case the purchaser would obtain only the life estate of the son. In that case, however, the creditor might well have treated the will as nonexistent in so far as his indebtedness was concerned, and by appropriate proceedings might well have had the property sold as the property of the estate of the father, and at such sale the purchaser would have obtained the title which resided in the father at the time of his death.
There is not, in reality, any difference between the case which we have above supposed and the case now. under consideration.
7. For every wrong there is a remedy, and, in law, there is no right unless there is a remedy for its enforcement. The right and the remedy are so inseparably connected together that the legal recognition of the one. is a plain, unmistakable guidepost to the other.
“No right without a remedy has long been the shibboleth of the common law, and it is needless to say that, if there Avere such a thing, it would be valueless.”— Sims’ Chancery Practice, appendix C, p. 525.
*191Of course it is but a truism which all must recognize that, to enforce a right, either legal or equitable, the remedy provided for its enforcement must be pursued. When a man dies, the title to his lands, if he leaves no will disposing of them, descends to his heirs, subject to the dower and homestead rights of his widow. These lands are subject, however, to administration, and, in default of personalty, to the payment of debts. Our laws point out definitely how the title which descends to the heir may be reached for the payment of the debts of the intestate.
In the instant case, as between the administrator of John Dudley, Sr., and Joseph B. Dudley and the children of Joseph R. Dudley, the title to the lands, by virtue of the conveyance to which we have above referred, was in Joseph R. Dudley and his said children. The lands, therefore, were not subject to administration in the ordinary way. Mary D. Witter had no right, when her execution issued, to sell the lands as the property of John Dudley, Sr., because John Dudley was then dead, and the title to the land was out of him. She did have a right, however, by a bill filed for the purpose, with the fraudulent grantees as parties, to have, through a court of equity, the lands condemned to the payment of her debt. Equity was there, ready to furnish her with an ample remedy; but she did not see proper to invoke that remedy. On the contrary, she proceeded to have the lands sold as the property of Joseph R. Dudley, and she necessarily bought only the interest which Joseph R. Dudley had in the land. If John Dudley, Sr., had lived, and an execution had been issued against him, and returned “no property,” and then the lands had been sold under an alias execution issued against Joseph R. Dudley, we do not think that it would be seriously contended that Mary D. Witter had not elected *192to treat the conveyance as valid, and not as null and void. The fact that John Dudley, Sr., was dead did not, we think, destroy the necessity which the law placed upon Mary D. Witter to manifest, in a way provided by law, her election to treat the conveyance as void.
Nothing seems to be plainer than that a creditor, as to whose debt a conveyance is fraudulent and void, must by some affirmative act, disaffirm the conveyance. In other words, to claim rights against the conveyance, he must, by some affirmative act, as by a sale under execution of the property as the property of the fraudulent grantor, or by a bill in equity to cancel the conveyance because of the fraud, show that he elects to treat the conveyance as null and void.
In this case the lands were sold as the property of the alleged fraudulent grantees to satisfy a debt for which they, along with the fraudulent grantor, were liable. It seems clear, therefore, that the purchaser at the sale acquired that title which the grantees in that deed had acquired by virtue of the deed, and only that title.
8. This appeal is, in reality, an application to this court to overrule its decision in W. D. McCurdy v. Sallie B. Kenan, supra. The case has been ably argued, and it has received careful consideration. We see no reason to depart from the decision of this case announced in the above-entitled cause, and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Dowdell, C. J., and Anderson and Mayfield, JJ., concur.