This action was brought to set aside a deed to certain real estate, situate in Bates county, executed by J. A. Holderman and wife to Jane Holderman, one of the defendants, dated the eighth day of March, 1882, on the ground that said deed was executed without consideration, and with the intent, on the part of the said J. A. Holderman, to hinder, delay, and defraud plaintiffs and other creditors of the said J. A. Holder-man, of the collection of their just debts, in which intent the said Jane participated. The evidence in the case, .as preserved in the bill of exceptions, tends to prove the following state of facts:
The defendants, Barton and Jane Holderman, are husband and wife. Barton Holderman bought the tract •of land in question, containing about four hundred acres, in 1853, and has lived upon it ever since, except during -the war. Prior to the thirteenth of July, 1881, the said
In pursuance of this arrangement, the said Barton and his wife, by their deed, dated the thirteenth day of July, 1881, conveyed the four hundred-acre tract to the said J. A. Holderman, with the understanding that when the liens should be released from the land, and Everingham should release his, J. A.’s, land, from the security for the loan, he would reconvey said land to his mother, the said defendant, Jane Holderman, wife of the said Barton. This deed was acknowledged and recorded on the fourteenth day of July, 1881, and, on the same day,, the said J. A. and his wife executed a deed of trust on his father’s four hundred-acre tract, thus conveyed to him, and his own one hundred and sixty-acre tract, to the said Everingham, to secure the loan of $2,750, which they thereupon received from him. A settlement was effected with the creditors of Barton Holderman, with the money thus obtained, his land released from the liens upon it; and, thereupon, the said Everingham released J. A.’s land from the deed of trust, and he after-wards sold it. He neglected, however, to reconvey said four hundred-acre tract to the said Jane, until the eighth day of March, 1882, and, in the meantime, and before-
On the trial, the court, after hearing the evidence in the cause, dismissed the bill, and we do not see how it could have done otherwise, in the light of the foregoing facts. The deed made by Barton Holderman and his wife to J. A. Holderman, and the deed of trust executed by J. A. Holderman and his wife to Hartwell, trustee, to secure the payment of the note given to Everingham for the $2,750, borrowed from him to pay off Barton Holderman’s debts, were each but parts of one transaction, having for its sole object to secure the loan from Everingham. In order to accomplish this purpose, it became necessary that J. A. Holderman’s land should be put into the trust deed, and this was the reason the transaction assumed the form it did. On the face of the papers executed, the equity of redemption in the land of his father, as well as in his own land, was in J. A. Holderman, but the deed of the father to his son, although absolute on its face, was, in fact, from the very nature of the transaction, a mortgage of indemnity, only, to J. A. Holderman. He could redeem his own land from the deed of trust, for the benefit of himself and his creditors ; but he could not so redeem his father’s land. The only benefit he could derive by redeeming the legal title
On the other hand, the payment of the debt secured by the deed of trust would discharge, alike, the lien upon the land of Barton and ,T. A., and the note given by J. A. for the money borrowed, and leave the naked legal title of Barton’s land in J. A., discharged of every claim he had upon it, and such title would remain in him, for the sole purpose of being reconveyed to his father, and, until such reconveyance was made, would be held by him, by implication of law, in trust for his father — a trust not within the statute of frauds, and enforceable in a court of equity — so that the said J. A. never had a beneficial or disposable interest in said real estate, or any interest therein, subject to the claims of his creditors. The deed made by him, in execution oí the trust, to his mother, prior to the levy of the attachment, in pursuance of the original agreement with his father, was made for a valuable consideration, and could not have been to defraud, hinder, or delay plaintiffs, or any other creditors of the said J. A. Holderman of the collection of their debts.
The judgment of the circuit court is, therefore affirmed.
