Court Opinion

ID: 6121117
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-04 18:46:42.479188+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:23:18.096310
License: Public Domain

Beady, J. :
The p1a.int.ifFR seek by this action to set aside certain conveyances executed by William Geery and others, including the defendant Georgiana F. Webster, and by which the apparent title was in the wife of said William, as part of a scheme by which the said William designed to defraud his creditors. The complaint herein, among other averments, contains a statement that an action to accomplish substantially the same purpose was commenced against William Geery and Louisa, his wife, in the Court of Common Pleas, and proceeded to judgment, but that on appeal to the Court of Appeals the judgment was set aside and a new trial ordered. It also avers that after the commencement of that action the defendant Georgiana again accepted a deed of the property affected by the fraudulent transfer from William Geery and his wife, and that she, in union with her husband, subsequently transferred the premises to different
*430grantees. It appears, also, from the complaint that the lis pendens, which was filed when the former action was commenced, included all the property, but the name of Georgiana does not appear in it. It was not necessary, perhaps, that it should, because she had no title then to the property. It will be perceived from this statement that another action for the same cause was pending, except that the last conveyance to Georgiana was not set forth, nor were the conveyances from her to her grantees. These conveyances, as already shown, were subsequent to the commencement of the action in the Oommon Pleas, and could not have been included in that action when it was begun. The prior conveyances, which might affect the title of Georgiana, were assailed, it is true, but the last conveyance to her was not, and it would not be directly affected by that action without an amendment of the complaint in some form. The pendency of the action was, however, under the circumstances, deemed a good reason why the complaint herein should be demurred to. A demurrer was consequently interposed by her and overruled. She now appeals. Was the judgment of the court below correct ? The rule in equity is, that it must appear that the whole effect of the second suit would be attainable in the first (1 Barb. Oh., 125); and this rule is founded in reason. In this case the whole effect could not be obtained without an amendment of the complaint in the first action, and there is no rule of law which compels a party to file a supplemental complaint. It is not compulsory. (Cordier v. Cordier, 26 How. Pr. R., 187.) He may resort to another action; and as to the defendants in the original action, if others be made parties, as suggested in the case of Cordier v. Cordier (supra), it comes within the provision authorizing a stay in one action till the other is finished. When the causes are identical, and the plaintiff can accomplish all in either action, the result must be different. It is not considered necessary, in order to dispose of this appeal, to enter into any disquisition upon the meaning of the word “ parties,” or the effect of the filing of the Us pendens. It is enough for the purposes of this appeal that this action is clearly shown to embrace more than the former action, and that the additional relief demanded rests on events occurring' after the former action was commenced. The defendant’s remedy, if any she have, is by a stay. It may be said, in addition, that Georgiana is not, for the reasons assigned, in the *431position requisite to protest by demurrer against tbis action. She was not a party to tbe former action, and could not have been, necessarily. Sbe is not prosecuted tbe second time. Tbis is tbe first action as to ber, and although sbe is a privy in estate by tbe conveyance from Geery, yet tbe Us pendens, if it affected ber rights at all, did so indirectly. In other words, conveyances in existence might be fraudulent and hers good, except so far as it might be prejudiced by tbe notice given to tbe world through tbe Us pendens. We think tbe decision rendered was correct, therefore, and tbe order entered is affirmed, but with costs to abide tbe event.
Davis, P. J., and Daniels, J., concurred.
Order affirmed, costs to abide event.