delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
Tbe plaintiff in error, on tbe 28th of February, 1860, filed a bill in tbe Obancery Coin’t of Monroe county against George W. Henderson and others, alleging that on the 28th of May, 1858, be bad recovered a judgment against tbe defendant in error, Henderson, and E. M. Rogers, and R. H. Dalton, for $J65.25, which remained wholly unpaid.
The defendant demurred to the bill for several causes, all amounting in effect to this, to wit: that as .complainant did not allege the insolvency of F. M. Rogers and R. IT. Dalton, two of the defendants to the original judgment at law, there was an adequate remedy at law, and no necessity to resort- to equity for relief.
The court sustained the demurrer, and dismissed the bill, from which decree the complainant brought this writ of error.
It is universally agreed that a creditor cannot go into a court of equity, to subject equitable assets, or dioses in action, not subject to be taken upon execution to the payment of his debt, until he has first obtained judgment at law upon his debt, and issued execution, and had a return of nulla bona. Farned v. Harris et al. 11 S. & M. 366; Brown v. The Bank of Mississippi, 31 Miss. 458.
And where property legally liable to execution has been fraudulently conveyed or incumbered, the application to chancery is to remove an obstruction which prevents a legal lien from operating upon the property, and in such case the
Conveyances of property made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, are declared by the statute of frauds to be “ clearly and utterly void,” as against the creditors affected by them. The right of the judgment creditor to levy his execution upon property so conveyed, and to proceed at law to subject it to sale for the satisfaction of his debt, cannot be denied, without any reference to the question whether the debtor possesses other property, or whether there are other defendants having property liable to the same judgment. In other words, it is not necessary, in order to justify the levy of an execution upon property fraudulently conveyed, that the plaintiff should show, or that the fact should exist, that neither the party who has made such conveyance, nor his codefendants in the judgment, have other property upon which a levy can be made, We do not mean to say that every voluntary conveyance is a fraudulent one within the meaning of the statute. The plaintiff making a levy on the property undertakes the responsibility of showing that, upon the circumstances of the particular case, the transaction is one which the law will not sanction.
In the present case, the levy has been made on the property alleged to have been fraudulently transferred, and the plaintiff comes into a court of equity to have the conveyance set aside as a cloud or incumbrance upon the title, preventing a sale of it for its value. The right to do so seems to be clear; for although the property might be sold in its present situation on the execution at law, yet equity will not require the creditor to sell a doubtful or obstructed title at law, but will set aside the conveyance, and remove the obstructions to a fair sale. Fowler v. McCartney, 27 Miss. 516; 1 Am. Lead. Cases, 84.