Appellee's bill sought to enforce a vendor's lien on a half interest in a considerable body of land which she had sold and conveyed to the owner of the other half interest, appellant. Demurrer to the bill was overruled. We think we need only notice the grounds of demurrer urged for review in appellant's brief.
After describing a large tract of land which complainant's deceased husband, J. H. Hicks, owned in common with defendant, the bill avers that deceased "left a last will and testament, which was duly probated, devising all of said property, other than that which was specially willed and bequeathed to others, to" complainant; that complainant, W. L. Dumas, and W. C. Hicks were named and qualified as executors; that the estate of deceased had been fully settled and the executors discharged; that notes for the purchase money, copies of which are exhibited with the bill, had been made by defendant payable to "the estate of J. H. Hicks"; that said notes were regularly transferred to complainant "by said executors"; and that they were due and unpaid. No copy of the will was attached to the bill, nor were its contents averred except as stated above. Copies of the notes exhibited in the bill showed an indorsement to complainant by "W. L. Dumas, executor."
The brief charges that the legal title to the notes is not in complainant. On the averments of the bill, complainant is clothed with a perfect equity, and if, as the brief suggests, this leaves complainant without the legal title, the answer is that —
"As a general rule one of two or more executors possesses the power of selling and disposing of the personal assets of the estate as fully as if all join in the act of transfer." 24 C. J. 1186, where the authorities are cited.
In the next place, it is said that one effect of that part of the will quoted above is to leave in complainant nothing to convey as a consideration for the notes in question. The method of averment adopted can hardly be approved as a clear statement of the facts intended; still it cannot be said that the bill, though construed most strongly against the pleader, leaves nothing in the complainant. So construed, the averment leaves the land sought to be subjected to complainant's lien without accurate description; but that is not the point taken by the demurrer.
It is further said that there is a repugnancy between the averments of the bill, quoted in the second place above, and the exhibits thereto, for that the notes exhibited do not appear to have been transferred to complainant "by the executors." A writing was not necessary to constitute a valid assignment of the debt so as to enable the assignee to maintain a bill of this character. Magruder v. Campbell, 40 Ala. 623; Wells *Page 606 v. Cody, 112 Ala. 278, 20 So. 381. But, aside from that, the assignment by W. L. Dumas was in legal effect an assignment by "the executors," as we have already noted.
The decree overruling the demurrer to the bill was, as for any objection thereby taken, correctly overruled.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.