To the equity of the complainant’s bill the maintenance of the following consecutive propositions is necessary: 1. That the complainant had, after her marriage, a separate estate in the two thousand dollars delivered to her husband. 2. That her husband was, as to this fund, a trustee for her. 3. That the trust was carried into, and fastened upon the goods levied on. 4. That that trust may be forced upon the conscience of. the plaintiffs in attachment, who caused the goods to be sold, or upon the money arising from the sale.
Waiving the consideration of the other propositions, the third is, in our opinion, untenable; consequently, the equity of the bill fails. A trustee, who holds money for another, and who invests that money in any specific property, into which it may be traced, will be held a trus*166tee of the property for the cestui que 'trust. — Bridges & Co, v. Phillips, 26 Ala. 136; Love v. Graham, 26 Ala. 187. But, if the trust fund is mingled with the funds of the trustee, and not capable of being distinguished, the trust cannot be visited upon the property, but remains a mere moneyed liability. — Stewart & Irvine v. Pry, 3 Ala. 673; Maury v. Mason, 8 Porter, 211; 2 Story’s Equity, §§ 1268-59. In Trecothick v. Austin, 4 Mason, 11, Judge Story uses the following language: “If the testator has money or other property in his hands, belonging to others, which is in trust, or otherwise; and it has no ear-marks, and is not distinguishable from the mass of his own property, — the party must come in as a general creditor.” This language is approved in Maury v. Mason, supra. In Stewart & Irvine v. Fry, supra, we find the same principle thus stated: “Independent of the rule peculiarly applicable to mortgages, these profits, so far as received by the intestate, and carried into his general .funds, cannot be reached by the mortgagees as a trust. In such a case, the trust fund is not capable of distinction, and it remains only as a general debt. This is the universal rule, both with regard to bankruptcies and intestacies.”
The complainant says in her bill, that the two thousand dollars belonging to her were put in with a capital of her husband, and carried into a boot and shoo store; and that the husband carried on his business, on the commingled money of himself and wife, from their marriage in 1849, to the levy of the attachment in 1855. Now the complainant’s money, it seems, was indiscriminately mixed with her husband’s in trade, and thus commingled with the proceeds of his skill and industry applied to the business, for about six years. It would be most unreasonable, to suppose that a fund, without ear-marks for its identification, could thus be commingled, and subjected to all the changes and vicissitudes of a mercantile business, for so long a time; and yet be identified, and traced into the particular goods levied on. TJpon the principles of law above laid down, we conclude, that the complainant cannot visit the trust, if it exists, upon the goods levied on; *167and that sbe lias, therefore, no interest whatever in the money arising from the sale.
It is certainly true, that if a trustee carries the trust funds into trade, and makes profits, he is chargeable with those profits; but there is no principle which will enable á cestui que trust to take the goods of a mercantile concern, because the trustee, some years before, had appropriated the trust funds to its benefit, and commingled them with his own in the business.
"Wo do not pass upon the other arguments against the equity of the bill which are found in the brief of the ap-pellee’s counsel, because the position which we have taken seems fatal to the only ground upon which it is attempted to maintain the equity of the bill.
The decree of the chancellor is affirmed.