This was a claim case, on the trial of which the jury, under the charge of the court, found the property levied on not subject. The plaintiff in fi. fa. made a motion for a new trial, on two grounds — first, because the court erred in refusing to allow the witness, N. L. Redd, to answer the question “ whether the articles named in the account were bought for the use of the plantation of Henrietta E. Redd, in Chattahoochee county; ” second, because the court erred in charging the 'jury “ that if they believed all the testimony introduced in the case, they could not find the property subject to the execution.” The motion for a new trial was overruled, and the plaintiff excepted.
It appears from the evidence in the record, that the plaintiff’s fi. fa. issued on a judgment obtained in May, 1875, against Albert G. Redd and Henrietta E. Redd, which was levied on ten acres of land about one mile north of Columbus, including the improvements thereon, known as the residence of A. G. Redd, and in his possession — levied on as the property of Henrietta E. Redd. The property was claimed by A. G. Redd, as trustee for his wife, the said Henrietta E., under a trust deed executed in pursuance of a decree of the superior court of Muscogee county, by the said A. G. Redd, on the 6th day of November, 1865, by
1. There was no error in refusing to allow the question- to
2. There was no error in the charge of the court in view of the evidence contained in the record. The trust created by the deed for the benefit of Mrs. Redd .and her family was an executory trust, and therefore the property in dispute was not subject to levy and sale at law, as was held by this court in Jennings, trustee, vs. Coleman & Newsome, decided during the present term.
• 3. The plaintiff, however, insists that, inasmuch as he has filed an equitable plea under the statute, that he is entitled to have the same relief in the common law court as he could obtain in a court of equity. If the plaintiff had alleged in his equitable plea, and proved at the trial, that the rents and profits of the trust property in controversy, were of greater value than what would be a reasonable support for Mrs. Redd and' her family, according to their station and condition in life in the community in which they live, the surplus anight, and probably would, be decreed by a court of equity to be applied to the payment of her separate indebtedness ; but nothing of that sort was alleged in the plaintiff’s equitable plea, nor proved at the trial. Therefore thea’e was no era’or in oveaTuling the plaintiff’s anotion for a new trial.
Let the judgment of the court below be affirmed.