The action of the chancellor in overruling the plea in abatement can be sustained upon the ground, irrespective of all others, that by demurring to the bill the plea was waived. — Town of New Decatur v. Scharfenberg, 147 Ala. 367, 41 South. 1025; Grant v. Phoenix Ins. Co., 121 U. S. 105, 7 Sup. Ct. 841, 30 L. Ed. 905; 1 Ency. Pl & Pr. 36; 1 Cyc. 131. But, aside from this, the only insistence laid in argument in support of its sufficiency is predicted upon the averment “that the complaint had never been given authority by the United States court to bring the suit.” No case has been cited holding that it is incumbent upon, a trustee in bankruptcy to first obtain leave of the court appointing him before instituting suits of this character, and therefore the averment of “leave of court obtained” to be necessary. To the contrary, the point has been expressly decided otherwise (and we think correctly) by the Supreme Court of Mississippi in the case of Chism, Trustee, v. Citizens’ Bank, 77 Miss. 599, 27 South. 637. See, also, 22 Cyc. p. 1307. This also disposes of the second, eigth, and ninth assignments of the demurrer to the bill adversely to the appellants.
By the bill the trustee in bankruptcy seeks to have declared void and annulled certain alleged gifts, made by the bankrupt, of real and personal property to these appellants, and to subject that property to the payment of the debts of certain named simple contract creditors. According to the averments of the bill, these several gifts were made, respectively, January 3, 1903, March 26, 1903, March 31, 1905, and the remaining one between the dates, of the bankrupt’s marriage, in January, 1903, and of the filing of the petition for the adjudication as a bankrupt, in April, 1906. It is nowhere averred that these gifts were made with a covinous intent; and as to existing creditors of the bankrupt at *623tbe time tbe gifts were made no sncb averment is necessary to subject tbe property to tbe satisfaction of tbeir debts, but as to subsequent creditors tbe allegation of a fraudulent intent is necessary. — McGhee v. I. & T. Nat. Bank, 93 Ala. 192, 9 South. 734; Allen v. Galdwell, Ward & Co. 149 Ala. 293, 42 South. 858, and cases there cited. And tbe fact that tbe bill is exhibited by a trustee in bankruptcy does not relieve him of making tbe necessary averments that obtain with respect to such a bill if exhibited by tbe creditors themselves. He is simply tbe representative of tbe creditors severally, and is attempting to enforce tbeir rights severally, and not bis own. They are tbe beneficiaries of tbe results obtained by him in tbe proceedings; and tbe alleged fraudulent grantees have the same right to be apprised of tbe facts upon which be relies for a recovery as they would have bad, bad the bill been filed by tbe creditors. In short, tbe trustee cannot be permitted to recover for the benefit of tbe creditors upon allegations short of those necessary and requisite in a bill exhibited by tbe creditors themselves. It is true that tbe adjudication of bankruptcy is in tbe nature of a decree in rem, and is conclusive, if rendered by a court having jurisdiction, of the fact of tbe bankrupt’s insolvency, and therefore of existing creditors at tbe date of its rendition; but tbe probative force of that adjudication cannot be extended, so as to make it proof of tbe fact that such creditors existed a year or more prior to the date of its rendition. And in order to avoid tbe necessity of alleging and proving a fraudulent intent it would be necessary to aver that the respective debts of tbe several creditors arose or accrued prior to tbe making of tbe severafl conveyances '¿attacked. .Indeed, (without such averment in tbe bill under consideration, it would be wholly without equity.
*624Furthermore, the decree adjudging the debtor a bankrupt cannot be extended beyond the precise point adjudged, viz., that he was insolvent, which, of course, necessarily involves the determination that there were existing creditors and the like, but not the precise amount which he owed to any one creditor, or, really, that he was indebted to any particular creditor in any sum. The adjudication of bankruptcy not being conclusive as to this, the appellants are not cut off thereby from contesting with the trustee the correctness and validity of the claim of every creditor asserted by him and for whose benefit this suit is prosecuted. To "this end they have the right, therefore, to know when the indebtedness accrued and by what it is evidenced.— Gibson v. Trowbridge Furniture Co., 93 Ala. 579, 9 South. 370. To hold otherwise would deprive appellants of the opportunity of litigating with the complainant a necessary averment in his bill, and a fact which must be ascertained by the decree in the event he should succeed, and impair and perhaps destroy their right to pay the amount found to be due the creditors and thus save the property from sale.
Those grounds of demurrer raising these questions should have been sustained. We entertain the opinion that the remaining grounds of the demurrer are not well taken.
The decree is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Dowdell, Anderson, and McClellan, JJ., concur.