The carefully-guarded allegations of the bill, touching the -defendant's pretended cause of action against the complainant Plerbert, make it apparent that the pleader purposely conceals the true status of the claim upon which the attachment was issued. It was within his power, by inspection of the records •or by inquiry of the auditor in attachment, to have been so well informed that he could fully and fairly have stated and impeached it, but instead of so doiug, without definitely alleging what the claim was or how it is impeachable, he contents himself with the general allegation that it was not legal or valid. Such indefiniteness and uncertainty, without excuse, is not good pleading. Moore v. Gamble, 1 Stock. 246, 250 ; Story Eq. Pl. §§ 242, 251.
But the bill is not objected to upon this ground. The objection is, that the bill fails to allege that the claim was not just. The bill alleges that it was not “legal” and not “valid.” The word “valid,” addressed to a court:of equity, in the connection in which it is used in the bill, includes, I think, the charge that the claim is not of such a character that it can be supported or defended either at law or in equity. Reading between the lines ■of the bill, it becomes quite plain that the claim, in fact, is founded upon notes more than twenty years old, recovery upon which is barred at law by the statute of limitations. It is insisted that defence under that statute is unconscionable. Acting in analogy to the rules of law, equity will so far regard the •statute as not to suffer the recovery of a claim which would be barred by it at law, unless intervening circumstances, of special -character, should otherwise demand; ■ and such circumstances do •not appear by the bill before me.
*15The bill invokes the assistance of this court against a sale mnder a judgment at law. In such a case, upon an application, free from laches and intervening equities, relief will be granted •where it appears that the complainant, pending the suit at law, •was ignorant of the facts upon which he relied for relief, or where, being a matter of equitable cognizance, the defence would not be received in the suit at law, or where the complainant was prevented from availing himself of the defence by fraud or .accident or by the act of the opposite parties unmixed with negligence or fraud on his part. Glover v. Hedges, Sax. 113; Quackenbush v. Van Riper, Sax. 476, 483; Kinney v. Ogden’s Admr., 2 Gr. Ch. 168; Powers v. Butler, 3 Gr. Ch. 465; Reeves v. Cooper, 1 Beas. 223; Davis v. Headley, 7 C. E. Gr. 115; Cairo and Fulton R. R. Co. v. Titus, 12 C. E. Gr. 102; Doughty v. Doughty, 12 C. E. Gr. 315; Holmes v. Steele, 1 Stew. Eq. 173; Dringer v. Receiver of Erie R. R. Co., 15 Stew. Eq. 573; Mechanics National Bank v. Burnett Mfg. Co., 6 Stew. Eq. 486; Brick v. Burr, post 189.
Equity will relieve where, in ex parte proceedings in foreign ¡attachment, advantage has deliberately been taken of a complainant’s absence to obtain, ex parte, a judgment upon a claim against which he has a sufficient defence either at law or in equity. In ¡the case of Moore v. Gamble, 1 Stock. 246, it was alleged by the complainant that, shortly after he married, he went to New •Orleans, leaving his wife at the residence of her mother and stepfather, and while he was away his wife died; that, by the will of his wife’s father, her mother, as executrix thereof, was required to support the daughter during her minority, and in consideration of that duty, she and her husband agreed not to charge the complainant for his wife’s board while he was away. After the wife’s death, - in violation of their agreement, they ¡attached the complainant’s land for his wife’s board, and, without notice to him, entered judgment against him, although, at the ¡time of the attachment, they not only had no cause of action, because of their agreement, but they had property belonging to him in their possession more than sufficient to pay the sum they ■claimed.
*16Upon this state of facts, Chancellor Williamson remarked
“ Such a case,would entitle the complainant to be relieved against the judgment. For the defendants, under the circumstances, to-have taken the advantage of the complainant’s absence, when he-had no opportunity of being heard, or setting up the legal or equitable defence he had against defendants’ demands, would have been a gross wrong and fraud. In a case so gross this ■ court would not stop to inquire whether or not the injured party might possibly get relief upon an application to open the judgment. The propriety of affording relief in such a case would be so manifest, and could be afforded with so much facility by ■ this court, that there could be no hesitation in granting it.”
In the case of Tomkins v. Tomkins, 3 Stock. 512, in which-relief was sought from a judgment in foreign attachment, the • same chancellor said: “In a case like the present, of foreign attachment, where the proceeding is in rem and the judgment is - obtained without the knowledge of the defendant, and the proceedings are all necessarily ex parte, it would be hard indeed if this court -would not interfere to protect a party against the fraud i of the plaintiff. The propriety of this court’s interfering in such -. cases is too obvious to require its being vindicated.”
The case presented in the bill now considered shows, not only that an advantage was taken of the defendant’s absence to obtain - a judgment in attachment upon a stale and invalid claim, but that such absence was deliberately waited for, and the proceedings in attachment so timed and secretly conducted that not only the judgment was had without opportunity for defence, but it was so • executed that the defendant became the owner of a valuable-property for an inadequate price, if it be assumed that the claim upon which his judgment is founded can be supported, or for-nothing, if that claim is wholly invalid, as the complainants in- ■ sist. It would be monstrous if equity could not give relief in - such a case.
This is not like the case of Eberhart v. Gilchrist, 3 Stock. 167, where there was no allegation that the ex parte judgment in. attachment was the product of a fraudulent contrivance.
*17The terms upon which relief will be afforded must bo equitable. If, under circumstances hereafter developed, it shall be made to appear that the complainants’ defence to the claim upon which judgment is founded is unconscionable, though ample under the strict rules of law, the defendant’s legal advantage with respect to it will not be disturbed.
It is, however, ordinarily, not unconscionable to ask the benefit of the statute of limitations from a court of equity, and it would hardly be deemed unconscionable or unjust to ask it when it might have been had at law but for the artifice of the defendant. The force of the allegation, that the claim of the defendant was not legal or valid, is not, then, weakened by its appearing that the defence to it wás the statute of limitations.
This court cannot set aside the judgment of the common law -courts and give leave to plead in the suit in which it was recovered. Its decree will operate upon the defendant and the land, and not upon the court. Barnsley v. Powell, 1 Ves. 285; 3 Pom. Eq. Jut. § 1360; 2 Story Eq. Jur. 873.
In such a case as this, where the judgment at law has been properly executed and property sold to the defendant, the relief granted will be to compel a reconveyance upon the complainant doing that which in good conscience he should do.
The attainable object of this suit appears, then, to' be a reconveyance of the land which the defendant holds. The attitude of the bill is, that nothing is to be rendered for this reconveyance.
In this light the question as to the misjoinder of the comjfiainants may be considered.
Both the complainants have a common interest in the attainable object of the suit. Though their interests are not co-extensive, they are not inconsistent and conflicting. They are both supported by the same equity against the defendant, and his defence against a suit by one is his defence against a suit by the other. In this situation the complainants are not misjoined. Story Eq. Pl. §§ 279, 285; Young v. Young, 18 Stew. Eq. 27, 36.
The motion to dismiss must be denied, with costs.