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Statement of the case.

Chancellor, upon a motion supported by these affidavits, made an order for the sale of the real estate of the defendant by the sheriff. The sale was made, and the same being returned and confirmed, the proceeds were brought into Court and applied, under the order of the Chancellor, to the liens, according to their priority.

GEORGE K. HALL,

vs.

DAVID GREENLY, ELISHA E. GREENLY, JOHN P. GREENLY, and ELISHA EVANS.

Sussex, July T. 1824.

A voluntary deed was made by a father conveying to his two sons, who were minors, certain land, which was afterwards sold by the sheriff in execution of judgments against the father, recovered subsequently to the deed but for debts contracted prior to it. Under the special circumstances of the case, the Court refused to set aside the deed for the relief of a purchaser of the land deriving title under the sheriff's sale. In cases of this nature the Court, in granting relief, will only set aside the deed impeached. It will not decree a delivery of possession to the purchaser, nor an account of the rents and profits.

BILL TO SET ASIDE A CONVEYANCE FOR FRAUD ON CREDITORS.-This bill was filed under the following circumstances. David Greenly, by deed dated the 19th of January, 1819, conveyed certain real estate, of which he was seized, to his two sons, Elisha E. Greenly and John P. Greenly, their heirs and assigns, for the consideration, as expressed in the deed," of the sum of $1000.00, good and "lawful money of the State of Delaware, to him in hand

Statement of the case.

"paid by Elisha Evans for the said Elisha E. Greenly and "John P. Greenly, and the regard he had for them, and "many other good reasons known only to himself," the said David Greenly. By the terms of the deed there was reserved to the said David Greenly the use of the land conveyed, as long as he should occupy it himself; with this proviso, that he should raise and school his children without any charge or expense to them. The grantees in the deed were, at the date of it, infants under the age of twenty-one years. The grantor, David Greenly, continued after the conveyance to reside on the land as before, with his family, of whom the grantees, his sons, formed a part.

At the time of making the conveyance before mentioned, David Greenly was indebted to sundry persons. Among others, he was indebted to John Houston in nine single bills, dated the 15th of August, 1817, amounting in the whole to about $267. Judgments were recovered by Houston on these single bills before a Justice of the Peace, after which he assigned four of the judgments to James Huffington; and for the others Greenly gave to Houston a single bill, dated the 17th of October, 1820, for the sum of $174.90, with a warrant of attorney for the confession of judgment thereto annexed. A judgment on this single bill to John Houston was entered in the Court of Common Pleas. At the same time James Huffington took from Greenly, for the four judgments before the Justice which Houston had assigned to him, a single bill for the sum of $133.16, with a warrant of attorney for the confession of judgment; and a judgment on this single bill to James Huffington was also entered in the Court of Common Pleas. At the time of making the before mentioned conveyance, David Greenly was also indebted to Edward Huffington and William Huffington, in a promissory note for $200.00, dated the 23rd of December, 1818, on which note a judgment was recovered against David Greenly in the Court of Common Pleas, at the October

Statement of the case.

Term, 1820, for $234.00. The latter judgment was for the use of Daniel Cannon. Writs of fieri facias were issued upon the judgment of James Huffington against Greenly, and upon the judgment of Edward and William Huffington for the use of Cannon. The land conveyed by the before mentioned deed was levied upon, and afterwards on the 4th of March, 1823, under further process of execution, was sold by the sheriff at public sale, and purchased by David Robinson for the sum of $510.00 The sale, being returned to the Court, at the April Term, 1823, was confirmed, and a deed was executed by the sheriff conveying to Robinson the interest of Greenly in the land. Afterwards David Robinson, by deed dated the 6th of June, 1823, conveyed the premises to the complainant.

The bill set forth the facts above stated and alleged that the deed from Greenly to his two sons, who were minors, was a voluntary conveyance, without any valuable consideration, and was fraudulent and void as against the creditors of Greenly, and as against David Robinson and the complainant, who were bona fide purchasers of the premises, under David Greenly, for a valuable consideration. The bill further alleged that the execution and existence. of the deed were concealed from the creditors for the purpose of defrauding them; that the said John Houston and James Huffington had released the judgments recovered before the Justice of the Peace for the express purpose of obtaining such judgments as would be a lien upon the land of David Greenly; and that the said Greenly had continued to hold the land, after the conveyance of the same to his two sons, for his own use and benefit. The bill charged the defendant, Elisha Evans, who was Greenly's father-in-law and by whom the deed was drawn, to be a confederate in the fraud. The prayer of the bill was that the deed should be declared void and be decreed to be delivered up to the complainant to be cancelled; that the grantees therein, Elisha E. Greenly and John P.

Statement of the case.

Greenly, might be compelled to execute and deliver to the complainant a conveyance of the land in controversy, and that possession thereof might be delivered to the complainant; that until such delivery should be made a receiver of the rents and profits might be appointed by the Court; that the defendant Greenly might be restrained from assigning a lease he had made of part of the premises to one James Walker; and that the defendants might be decreed to come to an account with the complainant for the rents and profits of said land and premises; and for further relief.

The answer of the defendants admitted the conveyance by David Greenly to his two minor sons, Elisha P. Greenly and John P. Greenly, of the lands and premises in controversy, at the time and in the manner alleged in the bill. It also admitted the recovery of the several judgments against David Greenly, (as set forth in the bill,) by John Houston, by James Huffington, and by Edward and William Huffington, for the use of Daniel Cannon; and that writs of fieri facias were issued upon the judgments of James Huffington and of Edward and William Huffington for the use of Daniel Cannon,-in execution of which writs the lands and premises conveyed by David Greenly to his two sons had been levied upon and sold, and afterwards conveyed by the sheriff to David Robinson; also, that the same lands and premises were sold and conveyed by Robinson to the complainant. The answer alleged, by way of defence, that David Greenly had been a weakminded and illiterate man, addicted to habits of intemperance, easy to be imposed upon, and every way unfit for business; that he had contracted sundry debts, without any adequate compensation, to persons who had taken advantage of his weakness; that his affairs having become much involved, and he being unfit to manage them, the defendant, Elisha Evans, who was Greenly's father-in-law, had been obliged to devote much time and labor, and to

Statement of the case.

expend considerable sums of money, ou Greenly's account; that he had determined to make this a ground for requiring, on the part of Greenly, a fair provision for his children, so that they might not be reduced by his incompetence to beggary; that, in satisfaction of the said claim of Elisha Evans, the defendant Greenly, together with his wife, by a deed dated the 10th of November, 1817, conveyed to Elisha Evans and his wife, the lands and premises in controversy, to hold the same for their joint lives and the life of the survivor; that immediately after such conveyance Elisha Evans went into and continued in possession of the premises, lived upon them, and was assessed and paid the taxes for them: that the same were known and considered in the neighborhood as having been purchased by Evans; that some time after this, about the month of January, 1819, Evans, at the instance of Greenly's wife, who was then sick, proposed to Greenly that he, Evans, together with his wife, would release the interest which had previously been conveyed to them in the lands in controversy, provided, that he, Greenly, would thereupon settle the said land upon his children; that this proposition was assented to by Greenly, and as the deed previously made to Evans had not been recorded, it was determined to carry the arrangement into effect by a deed directly from Greenly to the children,-in pursuance of which agreement the deed from Greenly to his children, referred to in the bill, was executed. The answer further alleged, that although the deeds before mentioned were not recorded, their existence and objects were, immediately after their execution, known to the persons interested in the notes, bills, judgments and executions, the sale by the sheriff and the deed from him, mentioned and set forth in the bill; that the lands were sold by the sheriff at a very great sacrifice; that Robinson, the purchaser, expressed his willingness at the time of the purchase to hold them for the payment of his debt out of the rents and profits and afterwards to re-convey them to

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