Court Opinion

ID: 9320376
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-02 17:51:20.919837+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:14:34.495459
License: Public Domain

The Chancellor:
Bill filed February 20, 1877, bj *347several creditors of the defendant Harris Abrahams, by note, draft, or open account without judgment, against. Abrahams, several of the defendants as judgment creditors of Abrahams, and three other defendants, constables, having in their possession personal property of Abrahams,, under levies made by them of executions issued on the judgments of their co-defendants. The bill prayed and obtained an attachment of the property in question, upon, the ground that the said judgments (except one designated), “ or a part of said judgments, at least,” “ were recovered through collusion and a conspiracy with said Abrahams, and with a view to a secret trust for his benefit, and to assist him in covering up and concealing his property, so as to> hinder, delay, and fraudulently defeat his creditors from making their just claims ; that said Abrahams has, through collusion with said defendants, and other parties not known to your orators, within the last year or two, and particularly within the last few months, been making away with his property in a secret and clandestine manner; that he-has secretly removed portions of his goods from his said storehouse, at seasonable and unseasonable hours, for the-purpose of concealing the same, to hinder, delay, and fraudulently defeat his creditors.” A number of demurrers have-been filed to this bill.
Two of the constables demur, because the bill shows-that they are officers of Davidson County, and as such are-not necessary parties, and that no personal decree is sought against them. It has been decided in this state that a pro< confesso against an officer who is a nominal, not a material, defendant to a suit in chancery, will avail the complainant, nothing. McGavock v. Elliott, 3 Yerg. 373; Blanton v. Hall, 2 Heisk. 423. The rule is the same on pro confesso< against a private agent. Boyd v. Vanderkemp, 1 Barb. Ch. 287. And an officer who is merely made a defendant because he has process in his hands, as the agent of the other and material defendants, is improperly made a party». *348Montgomery v. Whitworth, 1 Tenn. Ch. 174. See, to the same effect, Lackay v. Curtis, 6 Ired. Eq. 199 ; Hext v. Walker, 5 Rich. Eq. 5. In Douglass v. Joyner (manuscript opinion of the Supreme Court, published in Commercial Reporter of December 22,1875), the reporter’s third head-note is, in substance, that the sheriff to whose hands an execution has come is a material defendant to a bill filed to -e/iioin the collection of the execution, under the Code, sec. 4311, subsec. 3, where he is the only defendant living in the county in which the bill is filed. The report as printed ■certainly does not justify this head-note. The court, in the mutilated paragraph at the end of the opinion, seems to have •answered the objection that there was no material defendant residing in the county in which the suit was brought, by saying sic lex scripta est, the statute authorizes it. The decision •does not hold any thing in conflict with the previous rulings. •See the case as reported in 1 Baxt. 32. The question raised by the demurrer in the case before us is whether the demurring defendants are material parties within the rule. And it seems to me they clearly are. The property sought to be reached is in their hands, clothed with a title, by-virtue of their levies, which would enable them to sue for its conversion, or for a trespass upon it, and which would ¡authorize them to recover damages, in certain contingencies, upon the attachment-bond executed by the complainants. If, moreover, they had undertaken to dispose of the property after their knowledge of the injunction sued out by the complainants, they would, perhaps, have found that a ■decree not only would have been sought, but would have been rendered against them. They were, probably, material parties, because in possession under title of the property in dispute. And, at any rate, they were proper if not indispensable parties, for a person may properly be made a party although no decree is sought against him. Story’s Eq. PL, sec. 153. The demurrer is, therefore, not well ■taken.
*349Julius and Max Sax have demurred because no relief is prayed against them, and they are not necessary parties. But they are alleged to be the officers and owners of the Nashville Savings-Bank, and, as such officers, the’ complainant was entitled to make them defendants for the purposes of discovery, even if no relief be sought against, them. Story’s Eq. Pl., sec. 235. The demurrer is, consequently, not well taken.
The defendant Abrahams demui's “to so much of said bill as is not authorized under sections 4288 and 4289 of" the Code, but purports to be an attachment bill under the general attachment laws,” assigning various causes. The demurrer does not designate what specific portions of the-bill fall within its purview, and I have myself been unable-to find any. The demurrer is bad for uncertainty, or as a. speaking demurrer, and must, in either view, be overruled.
The defendants Abrahams and Tracy & Cojde demur-to so much of the bill as seeks an account of usury, upon the ground that the complainants are not judgment-creditors. The statute (Code, sec. 1955) confers the right to reach usury upon judgment-creditors alone. The demurrer-is, therefore, well taken.
Tho same defendants and the defendant Bloomstein further demur because the bill is,—
1. Multifarious.
2. There is a misjoinder of parties.
3. The bill is unknown to the forms of the court.
4. The allegations of fraud are loose, vague, and uncertain.
Section 4288 of the Code provides that any creditor, without first having obtained a judgment at law, may file a bill in chancery for himself, or for himself and other creditors,, to set aside fraudulent conveyances and devices resorted to-for the purpose of hindering and delaying creditors. Under this provision, any number of creditors of a common debtor-may join in the bill when filed, instead of going through. *350the form of filing it in the name of one for the nse of himself and others, and afterwards coming in by petition. The bill charges that the judgments of the defendants Tracy & Coyle and Bloomstein were wholly or in part recovered through collusion with the defendant Abrahams, “with a view to a secret trust for his benefit, and to assist him in •covering up and concealing his property, so as to hinder, delay, and fraudulently defeat his creditors.” There is, therefore, no multifariousness, nor any misjoinder, in the ‘billj of which the demurrants can complain. The bill is not unknown to the forms of the court, as I have seen many such since I have been on the bench ; and the allegations of collusion and fraud, instead of being vague and loose, seem to me decidedly pointed, and exceptionally direct.
The demurrer must, consequently, be overruled in accordance with this opinion, except the demurrers going to so much of the bill as seeks a recovery of usury, which are ■sustained.