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De Vendell v. Doe ex dem. Hamilton.

inferred from all the circumstances, it involves an inquiry into a matter of fact, which we can no more revise than if it had been found by a jury; the court having tried it by consent of the counsel in lieu of the jury.-Malempre v. Etheridge, 18 Ala. 565.

5. Neither can it be maintained that the lien of the Bank was lost by not issuing executions, the judgment itself not having become dormant.-Turner v. Lawrence, 11 Ala. 426; 20 ib. 427; 12 Wheat. R. 177.

6-7. Nor was the judgment rendered dormant by the acts of the general assembly putting the Bank in liquidation. The power to proceed to collect in the name of the Bank was expressly reserved to the assignees, or trustees, appointed to settle its affairs; and authority given them to dispose of the judgment by sale and assignment is an implied power conferred by the act on the purchaser to have execution of it. Where a sale is required to be made, the right to enjoy the purchase and render it available to the purchaser passes as an incident. Again:-The statute should receive such construction as would carry out the design of the legislature in its enactment. It could not have been the design of the legislature to depreciate the assets of the Bank, by changing their character, and destroying liens which may have attached for the satisfaction of them, by rendering judgments dormant as soon as sold, and putting purchasers to the expense of new proceedings for their revival. This expense would, of course, lessen their value to the Bank. The enforcement of a judgment, already obtained in the name of the Bank, is unlike the institution of a new suit to recover upon the assets of the Bank, which, as we have decided, can only be done in the name of the Bank by the trustees appointed to take charge of the assets. Jemison v. Planters & M. Bank, 17 Ala. 754.

8. It is objected by appellant, that there was no proof of the demand on which the judgment was rendered. The answer is, that no such proof is required of the purchaser under execution. He produces his sheriff's deed, and the record of the judgment and execution conferring upon the sheriff full authority to make the sale. This is sufficient to pass all the legal title the defendant in the execution had at the time the judgment was rendered.

Gerald and Wife v. McKenzie et al.

Whether the appellant would not, as against such purchaser, be required to prove the existence and bona fides of some of the demands provided for in the trust deed, before it could avail him, is a question it is unnecessary to decide; for the view we have taken above is conclusive of the case in this court.

Let the judgment be affirmed.

GERALD AND WIFE vs. MCKENZIE ET AL.

[BILL IN EQUITY, FILED BY HUSBAND AND WIFE, TO PROTECT THE WIFE'S SEPARATE ESTATE, SECURED BY MARRIAGE SETTLEMENT, FROM SALE UNDER EXECUTION AT LAW.]

1. Husband, as trustee, may interpose a claim at law.—If no trustee is provided for in the marriage settlement, the legal title to the separate estate of the wife is necessarily vested in the husband, if he reduces the property into possession; and having the legal right, he may interpose a claim at law, when her property is levied on, and try the right of property.

2. But wife cannot compel him to interpose, and may therefore come into equity.-But, although the husband, in such case, may assert his legal title at law, yet the wife cannot compel him to do so, and for this reason she may at once apply to a court of equity for the protection of her rights.

3. Provisions of Code (§ 2131) apply only to separate estates created by law.-Section 2131 of the Code, which authorizes the wife to sue alone when the suit relates to her separate estate, applies only to separate estates created by statute, and not to those which were created by the act of the parties before the existence of the statute.

4. Bill filed by husband and wife held her bill alone.-When a bill, which is filed in the name of husband and wife, concerns only the separate estate of the wife, seeks only to establish and protect her rights and interests, and asks no relief for or against her husband, it will be regarded as the bill of the wife alone, and the husband will be considered only her trustee or next friend.

APPEAL from the Chancery Court of Montgomery.
Heard before the Hon. WADE KEYES.

THIS bill was filed by the appellants, (Pearly S. Gerald, and Camilla, his wife,) to protect certain slaves, in which Mrs. Gerald claimed a separate estate, from sale under execution

Gerald and Wife v. McKenzie et al.

at law, at the suit of John McKenzie against Justus Wyman. It alleged, in substance, that the complainants, in 1837, prior to their marriage, entered into a marriage contract, by whose terms all the property of the said Camilla was settled to her sole and separate use, free from the control and dominion of her husband, but no trustee was provided for, nor has any been since appointed; that, in 1852, Mrs. Gerald, through her husband, purchased the negroes now in controversy from said Justus Wyman, in satisfaction of a judgment which she had previously recovered against him and others; that said negroes were allowed to remain in the possession of said Wyman under a contract of hiring, and, while in his possession under said contract, were levied on as his property under execution in favor of said McKenzie; that said McKenzie indemnified the sheriff to make said levy, and is urging him to sell; and that said Wyman is the only witness by whom said contracts of sale and hiring can be proved.

The chancellor dismissed the bill for want of equity, and his decree is now assigned for error.

N. HARRIS, and ELMORE & YANCEY, for appellants:

1. The allegations of the bill as to the sale of the slaves under execution, their probable loss, and the threatened multiplicity of suits against different purchasers, are sufficient to give the court jurisdiction.-Calhoun v. King, 5 Ala. 525; Walker v. Miller, 11 ib. 1067; Lewis v. Hudson, 6 ib. 465; 2 Story's Equity, § 845.

2. The fact that Mrs. Gerald had no trustee appointed to hold the property, gave the court jurisdiction. When a separate estate is secured to the wife under a marriage settlement, and no trustee is appointed by the deed, the husband is only regarded as her trustee in equity: he has no right to sue for the property in a court of law.-2 Story's Equity, § 1380; Harkins v. Coulter, 2 Port. 465; Fellows, Wadsworth & Co. v. Tann, 9 Ala. 1003. The bill prays for general and "appropriate relief"; under which prayer, and the facts stated in the bill, it would be the duty of the court to appoint a trustee," who shall become a depositary of the legal estate." Fellows, Wadsworth & Co. v. Tann, supra.

3. The fact that Wyman was the only witness to the con

Gerald and Wife v. McKenzie et al.

tract of hiring, gave the court jurisdiction.-Jordan v. Loftin, 13 Ala. 548. Wyman was a competent witness in equity, although declared incompetent by the Code on the trial of the right of property at law.-Code, §§ 2289, 2291, 2921; Kirksey v. Dubose, 19 Ala. 50, and cases there cited, as to the construction of the old statute.

WM. В. Moss, contra:

1. There is no equity in the bill. The title set up to the slaves levied on, is purely a legal title, and might be asserted at law, either by the interposition of a claim under the statute, or in trover, detinue, or case. No circumstances are shown, which could prevent a court of law from giving adequate compensation in damages.-Code, §§ 602, 2587, 2588; Bissell & Carville v. Lindsay, 9 Ala. 162; Marriott & Hardesty v. Givens, 8 ib. 694. Whether the legal title is in Mrs. Gerald, or in her husband, makes no difference. If it is in him as trustee, he has all the above-mentioned or other adequate remedies at law, and there is no allegation that he refuses to sue, or to put in a claim.-9 Ala. 162; ib. 364. If it is in the wife, (and it must be in one or the other of them,) she has the same remedies in her own name, it being her separate property she could seek redress at law, or put in a claim under the statute.-Code, §§ 602, 2131.

2. That the slaves are hired out for the year, and therefore complainant could not sustain a claim under the statute, if it be a true proposition, would only be ground for a bill quia timet, which this is not: it is a bill to investigate the right of property, and prays a perpetual injunction.--Nance v. Cox, 16 Ala. 126. But the proposition itself is denied. If the interest of the bailee was subject to execution, as in case of a mortgagor before the law-day, there might be ground to resort to equity to preserve the security; but the interest of the defendant in execution in the property is specially exempted from levy by the Code (§ 2455.) The right of possession is not in issue, but the right of property.-Code, § 2588.

3. A right to the statutory remedy, unless section 602 of the Code be held merely declaratory, excludes the right to resort to equity. It is not merely declaratory of the common law, for the reason, that the language forbids such a construc

Gerald and Wife v. McKenzie et al.

tion. The common-law rule had its fixed and certain verbiage and terms-viz., "a plain and adequate remedy at law." Before the adoption of the Code, cumulative statutory remedies were held not to take away equity jurisdiction, because the rule was always construed with reference to the distinctive features of the systems in England, from which we get both our common-law and equity jurisprudence. But the legislature has adopted new terms and a new verbiage: instead of the language of the old rule, we now have "a plain and adequate remedy provided in the other judicial tribunals." This, therefore, must have been intended to adapt the chancery jurisdiction to our own system provided by the Code; which conclusion is strengthened by the fact, that the spirit of our whole recent legislation has been, not to enlarge, but to limit the jurisdiction of equity, by providing against the necessity of frequent resort to it. By showing, then, that complainant had "a plain and adequate remedy provided in the other judicial tribunals," she has no right to come into equity.

4. That the defendant in execution is the only witness by whom the retention of possession can be explained, furnishes no ground for equity jurisdiction. No discovery is sought from the execution creditor; Wyman is merely a witness; and the complainants resort to equity, to evade the statute which, from a wise public policy, has made him incompetent. Story's Equity, $§ 1489, 1499. They could, however, have had the benefit of his testimony, in trover, detinue, or case.

GOLDTHWAITE, J.-As there was no trustee provided by the marriage settlement, the legal title necessarily vested in the husband by the marriage, if he reduced the property into possession, for the reason, that the separate estate created in the wife by the settlement is the creature of equity alone, and the possession could not in a court of law be referred to it, and must therefore be considered as attaching to the husband in that character. We concede that, having the legal right, he might have maintained an action at law for any direct or consequential injury done to the property, and, also, that he might interpose a claim and try the right under sections 2587, 2588, 2589, &c., of the Code.

We agree, also, that the mere fact that a trust has been

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