delivered the opinion of the Court.
The substance of the charge, appears to have been, that if Caller’s just debts exceeded a fair valuation of his property, and the gift was to the prejudice of his creditors, it was absolutely void. L'hese were circumstances to be left to the jury, and if connected with others sufficiently strong, they might infer that the gift was originally intended as a fraud upon creditors, and therefore void. But unconnected with other circumstances of fraud on the part of Caller, the mere fact that his debts exceeded the value of his property, and that the gift 'was to the prejudice of his creditors, were not of themselves sufficient to authorize the court or jury to infer that the gift was fraudulent and void. But the charge seems to have proceeded on the supposition that it vvas not necessary to establish fraud in the donor in order to avoid the gift, and 'that if it was even made bona jicle and with no intention