delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thе issue in this interpleader proceedings is whether an assignment which Jesse W. Shipley made of a remainder *630 ■interest on March 31, 1939, to his daughters, Eulalia D. Shiplеy Sauble and Beatrice Shipley Myers, is void as against the Westminster Savings Bank, his creditor.
On April 1, 1939, the bank sold Shipley’s mortgaged real estate under foreclosure, and in July recovered a deficiency judgment against him for the sum of $1,976.92. In January, 1943, after the life tenant’s death, the bank attached the remainder-mаn’s share of $2,331.30 in the hands of Ivan L. Hoff, executor. Upon receiving notice of the assignment, which had never been recorded, the executor рetitioned the court to decide whether the remainder belonged to the assignees or to the bank. The chancellor upheld the assignment’ and decreed that the assignees were entitled to the fund. The bank is appealing from that decree.
It has been an ancient policy of thе common law to protect the. rights of creditors against all dispositions of property which result in fraud. In 1570 the Parliament enacted the Statute of 13 Elizabeth ch. 5, which declared void any conveyance made with intent “to delay, hinder or defraud creditors,” but provided that the act did not extend to any estate or interest conveyed “upon good consideration and
bona fide”
to any person without notice of the fraud. 1
Alexander’s British Statutes,
Coe’s Edition, 499-545. The object of the statute was to aid in the suppression of fraud by protecting creditors from any conveyances by debtors to relatives or friends under the pretext of discharging a moral obligation. This statute is declaratory of the common law and is construed liberally by the courts, both at law and in equity. It has been uniformly held in England and the United States that a vоluntary conveyance made by an insolvent to his child is void as against creditors existing at the time of the conveyance.
Lord Townshend v. Windham,
2 Ves. 1;
Reade v. Livingston,
3 Johns Ch., N. Y., 481,
The law is now firmly established that no man, upon the pretеxt of liberality, can give away property which in equity and good conscience ought to be used to pay his debts. It is a settled principle that a voluntary conveyance is
prima facie
in fraud of existing creditors of the grantor without regard to his actual intention. The primary purpose or motive with which a vоluntary transfer of property is made by a party indebted at the time is immaterial.
Goodman v. Wineland,
In the case before us it is conceded that the assignor was in “dire financial circumstances” when he made the assignment and he made oath that the consideration was love and affection and the purpose that the daughters would keep their parents and take care of them during their declining years. In
Wilmer v. Placide,
It is unquestioned that an assignment madе by a remainderman of his remainder interest for valuable consideration is valid as against an attachment subsequently issued on a judgment against the assignоr laid in the hand of the executor as garnishee.
Hohman v. Orem,
It has been generally accepted that when a conveyance is made in consideration of future support of the grantor, and the parties act in good faith, and support is actually furnished, the conveyance is valid as against creditors to the extent of the value of support already furnished.
Merithew v. Ellis,
Finding the assignment constructively fraudulеnt, we must reverse the chancellor’s decree awarding the assign- or’s remainder estate to appellees, and remand the case fоr the passage of a decree declaring the assignment void as against appellant.
Decree reversed, and case remanded for the the passage of a decree in accordance with this opinion, the costs to be paid out of the fund deposited with the clerk.
