Tompkins, Judge,
delivered the opinion of the court.
Crow & Tevis commenced their action in the circuit court against Ruby, and had judgment by -default. A writ of attachment which was issued with the summons, was served on M. Miller Maughas, and two interroga-lories, filed by the plaintiff, were answered on oath by Maughas,the garnishee; and the issues made on them were found for the said Maughas, on which the court gave judgment for Maughas, the garnishee aforesaid. To reverse that judgment, Crow & Tevis prosecute their writ of error. On the trial of the cause, Maughas, the garnishee, admitted that he had under his control, charge and custody, of the goods and effects transferred to him by the said Samuel C. Ruby, at the commencement of this suit, and at the time he was summoned as garnishee aforesaid, in ti'ust for the creditors of the said Ruby, certain goods and chattels, evidences of debt and effects of said Ruby, to a large amount. Maughas, the garnishee, offered in evidence a deed made by Ruby to him for the purpose of conveying the above mentioned property, to which the plaintiff objected. The court overruled the objection, and the deed was read m evidence. It was also in evidence that, on the day before the execution of this deed by Ruby to Maughas, he made another deed to Charles Drury, for certain properly, worth perhaps five or six hundred dollars. There was no evidence of any money paid by Drury. The consideration expressed in the deed was one hundred and forty-five dollars; and it was also in evidence that Ruby owed Drury that sum of money. Some few weeks after the execution of this deed to Drury. Ruby removed the property sold, as aforesaid, to Drury, with the assent, as is supposed, of Drury. On this evidence, the plaintiff prayed the court to instruct the jury:
1. If they believed the deed of assignment to Maughas was made for the purpose of defrauding and hindering the creditors of the said Ruby in the collection of their just, debts, they must find for the plaintiffs.
2. If they believed from the evidence that, upon the eve of making said assignment, ihe said Ruby fraudulently sold or transferred other property for the purpose of taking it back to his own use, and of keeping it from his creditors, and at the same time intended to make the said assignment, that is evidence from which they may infer the intention of the said Ruby in making said assignment.
A deed of assignment by a debtor to a trustee for the creditors, órTcer" tain terms ed in the deed, /a°fe vest illegal title to the ty assigned in the purposes tioned in such deed. Though farties^when sented’to, before nean operate to tion or auach-U" ment, it must be established in Ions n'amld m (he deed are creditors to the amounts assume .
3. If the jury believed that Ruby, in making this assignment, professed in said assignment to have assigned all his property for the benefit oí his creditors, and did not, but reserved some for his own use, more than the law exempts from execution, that it is a fraud upon his creditors, and renders null and void his assignment.
4. That the jury are the judges whether there is fraud or not in Ruby’s assignment, and whether he intended practising a fraud upon his creditors in making said assignment.
5. That if the jury believe there is fraud in- Ruby’s assignment, they must find for the plaintiffs against the garnishee.
The circuit court gave the first and fourth instiuctions and refused to give the others. The defendant then moved the court to instruct the jury: 1. That the deed ofi assignment offered in evidence, is prima facie sufficient to vest the legal title of the property in the defendant for the purpose therein mentioned. Six other instructions were asked by the defendant, which amount to nothing more than the first, that is, the same matter expressed in other phrases.
The only P°fot arising on these instructions is, what ought to be the effect of the deed of assignment to Maughas ? The circuit court instructed the jury, on mot'on °f the plaintiffs, that if they believed the deed Maughas was made for the purpose of fraudulently hindering the creditors of Ruby Iron# collecting their íust debts, that they must find for the plaintiffs. That also, on the motion of the plaintiffs, instructed the jury that they were the judges whether or not there fraut^ *n the transaction. It is rather to be regretted that any occasion should arise to make it necessary for the plaintiffs to ask this last instruction, a mere waste thne; the counsel for the defendant could not have thought otherwise. The first instruction was very correctly given; and the plaintiffs’ counsel cannot be censure<í for asking the second and third instructions after the circuit court had peimitted the deed of assignment to be given in evidence to the jury, without any proof of tlie justice of the demand set up by Ruby against himself in that deed. T he second and third instructions amount to little more than this: that if the jury believe that Ruby, about the time he made this deed to Maughas, was acting dishonestly by conveying to Drury more property than was necessary to satisfy Drury’s demand, against him, in order that he might get it back after [487]*487paying Drury’s demand; that this is evidence from which they might infer that the deed to Maughas was also fraudulent, and consequently void; It is very true that a jury will more readily find a verdict against a man whom they believe to be dishonest, than against one of whom they entertain a better opinion; and thé circumstance that so large an amount of property was apparently sold to Drury for so small a sum of money, was well calculated to create in the mind of an inquisitive man a suspicion that the deed to Maughas was founded in fraud. But had Maughas proved to the jury that these preferred creditors, for whom he was made trustee, were in good faith creditors to the several amounts stated, then there is no reason why any impropriety in the transaction with Drury should affect the deed made by Ruby to him. The fifth instruction was well enough refused; for, as it seems to me, it had been much better expressed in the first; and counsel ought not to harrass courts with a repetition of the same thing.' The time of the courts belongs to the public, and the parties who needlessly occupy that time, injure thereby other suitors. In giving the defendant’s first instruction, the circuit, court, it seems to me, committed manifest error. A deed always imports evidence of a consideration^ between the parties thereto, as between Ruby the maker, and Maughas the grantee; there is no doubt that it imports a consideration. But Crow & Tevis are no parties to this deed; they are creditors of Ruby, and the very fact that Ruby attempts to convey away his property to a trustee for the benefit of absent creditors, is calculated to awaken a suspicion that he thereby proposes to himself some undue advantage. It has often been declared by this court, that any debtor has the right to pay what creditor he pleases first, whether it be with money or pioperty. The only restriction imposed on this right of the debtor, is that imposed by the law made for the relief of insolvent debtors. The man who wishes to have the benefit of that act, must comply with its provisions. The mode of proceeding, as well against debtors suspected of fraud, as against creditors subject to such suspicion, is pointed out in that act. There is no question here arising under that act.
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Tompkins, Judge,
delivered the opinion of the court.
Crow & Tevis commenced their action in the circuit court against Ruby, and had judgment by -default. A writ of attachment which was issued with the summons, was served on M. Miller Maughas, and two interroga-lories, filed by the plaintiff, were answered on oath by Maughas,the garnishee; and the issues made on them were found for the said Maughas, on which the court gave judgment for Maughas, the garnishee aforesaid. To reverse that judgment, Crow & Tevis prosecute their writ of error. On the trial of the cause, Maughas, the garnishee, admitted that he had under his control, charge and custody, of the goods and effects transferred to him by the said Samuel C. Ruby, at the commencement of this suit, and at the time he was summoned as garnishee aforesaid, in ti'ust for the creditors of the said Ruby, certain goods and chattels, evidences of debt and effects of said Ruby, to a large amount. Maughas, the garnishee, offered in evidence a deed made by Ruby to him for the purpose of conveying the above mentioned property, to which the plaintiff objected. The court overruled the objection, and the deed was read m evidence. It was also in evidence that, on the day before the execution of this deed by Ruby to Maughas, he made another deed to Charles Drury, for certain properly, worth perhaps five or six hundred dollars. There was no evidence of any money paid by Drury. The consideration expressed in the deed was one hundred and forty-five dollars; and it was also in evidence that Ruby owed Drury that sum of money. Some few weeks after the execution of this deed to Drury. Ruby removed the property sold, as aforesaid, to Drury, with the assent, as is supposed, of Drury. On this evidence, the plaintiff prayed the court to instruct the jury:
1. If they believed the deed of assignment to Maughas was made for the purpose of defrauding and hindering the creditors of the said Ruby in the collection of their just, debts, they must find for the plaintiffs.
2. If they believed from the evidence that, upon the eve of making said assignment, ihe said Ruby fraudulently sold or transferred other property for the purpose of taking it back to his own use, and of keeping it from his creditors, and at the same time intended to make the said assignment, that is evidence from which they may infer the intention of the said Ruby in making said assignment.
A deed of assignment by a debtor to a trustee for the creditors, órTcer" tain terms ed in the deed, /a°fe vest illegal title to the ty assigned in the purposes tioned in such deed. Though farties^when sented’to, before nean operate to tion or auach-U" ment, it must be established in Ions n'amld m (he deed are creditors to the amounts assume .
3. If the jury believed that Ruby, in making this assignment, professed in said assignment to have assigned all his property for the benefit oí his creditors, and did not, but reserved some for his own use, more than the law exempts from execution, that it is a fraud upon his creditors, and renders null and void his assignment.
4. That the jury are the judges whether there is fraud or not in Ruby’s assignment, and whether he intended practising a fraud upon his creditors in making said assignment.
5. That if the jury believe there is fraud in- Ruby’s assignment, they must find for the plaintiffs against the garnishee.
The circuit court gave the first and fourth instiuctions and refused to give the others. The defendant then moved the court to instruct the jury: 1. That the deed ofi assignment offered in evidence, is prima facie sufficient to vest the legal title of the property in the defendant for the purpose therein mentioned. Six other instructions were asked by the defendant, which amount to nothing more than the first, that is, the same matter expressed in other phrases.
The only P°fot arising on these instructions is, what ought to be the effect of the deed of assignment to Maughas ? The circuit court instructed the jury, on mot'on °f the plaintiffs, that if they believed the deed Maughas was made for the purpose of fraudulently hindering the creditors of Ruby Iron# collecting their íust debts, that they must find for the plaintiffs. That also, on the motion of the plaintiffs, instructed the jury that they were the judges whether or not there fraut^ *n the transaction. It is rather to be regretted that any occasion should arise to make it necessary for the plaintiffs to ask this last instruction, a mere waste thne; the counsel for the defendant could not have thought otherwise. The first instruction was very correctly given; and the plaintiffs’ counsel cannot be censure<í for asking the second and third instructions after the circuit court had peimitted the deed of assignment to be given in evidence to the jury, without any proof of tlie justice of the demand set up by Ruby against himself in that deed. T he second and third instructions amount to little more than this: that if the jury believe that Ruby, about the time he made this deed to Maughas, was acting dishonestly by conveying to Drury more property than was necessary to satisfy Drury’s demand, against him, in order that he might get it back after [487]*487paying Drury’s demand; that this is evidence from which they might infer that the deed to Maughas was also fraudulent, and consequently void; It is very true that a jury will more readily find a verdict against a man whom they believe to be dishonest, than against one of whom they entertain a better opinion; and thé circumstance that so large an amount of property was apparently sold to Drury for so small a sum of money, was well calculated to create in the mind of an inquisitive man a suspicion that the deed to Maughas was founded in fraud. But had Maughas proved to the jury that these preferred creditors, for whom he was made trustee, were in good faith creditors to the several amounts stated, then there is no reason why any impropriety in the transaction with Drury should affect the deed made by Ruby to him. The fifth instruction was well enough refused; for, as it seems to me, it had been much better expressed in the first; and counsel ought not to harrass courts with a repetition of the same thing.' The time of the courts belongs to the public, and the parties who needlessly occupy that time, injure thereby other suitors. In giving the defendant’s first instruction, the circuit, court, it seems to me, committed manifest error. A deed always imports evidence of a consideration^ between the parties thereto, as between Ruby the maker, and Maughas the grantee; there is no doubt that it imports a consideration. But Crow & Tevis are no parties to this deed; they are creditors of Ruby, and the very fact that Ruby attempts to convey away his property to a trustee for the benefit of absent creditors, is calculated to awaken a suspicion that he thereby proposes to himself some undue advantage. It has often been declared by this court, that any debtor has the right to pay what creditor he pleases first, whether it be with money or pioperty. The only restriction imposed on this right of the debtor, is that imposed by the law made for the relief of insolvent debtors. The man who wishes to have the benefit of that act, must comply with its provisions. The mode of proceeding, as well against debtors suspected of fraud, as against creditors subject to such suspicion, is pointed out in that act. There is no question here arising under that act. The defendant in this action, (Ruby,) seeking to withdraw his property from the action of the ordinary process of the law, conveys it to Maughas to satisfy demands which, for anything known to Crow & Tevis, may be fictitious. Had Ruby, before this attachment was issued, sold and delivered to each [488]*488creditor a reasonable amount of his property to satisfy his demand, there might have been some reason in requiring Crow & Tevis to prove fraud against such creditor. The love of property will induce the honest owner to hold it in his own right as long as he can. But here is no delivery to the creditor, and no pretence of sale; but property transferred to an agent not of the creditor, for none are proved to exist, but of Ruby himself. If it were established by proof that those persons named in the deed were creditors to the amount assumed, their assent to the act of Ruby might be perhaps implied, and Crow & Tevis be driven into a court of equity to compelí Maughas to proceed to execute his duty in a reasonable time, in spite of any restrictions imposed by Ruby in his deed. But to give to Ruby the power to name creditors and debts in any place, and to any amount he pleases, and then to require the creditors to prove the falsehood of his statements in his deed, in order to enable the plaintiifs, Crow & Tevis, to reach the property in the hands of Maughas, would be to allow him virtually to withdraw his property from the action of the writ of execution, and of legal process in general. The ingenuity of debtors would soon find credi tors Tor themselves in all quarters of the world, and those of their neighborhood would do well, in most cases, to abandon their claims rather than to encounter the expense of disproving the demands of the alleged creditors.
A deed conveying “one bundle ■buncUerof°foe bill?, two bundles of notes, two bundles of accounts, ceipts,” is void -or uncortointy.
At the June term of this court, held at St. Eouis this year, for the third judicial district, a case of attachment was before the court. The names of the parties are not recollected; but Mr. Darby, ns garnishee, answering interrogatories, stated that he believed the debts, to be secured by the deed of assignment, were in good faith due, and the parties took issue on the law arising on the facts admitted to be true on each side. It was not m that case contended that the deed of assignment imported any evidence that the debts, by it secured to be paid, were real subsisting debts. By that deed, Ruby conveys to Maughas “one bundle of orders, one bundle of fee bills, Dvo bundles of notes, two bundles of accounts, one of receipts.” So far as it regards these articles, the deed is, in my opinion, void for want of certainty in the descrip-t¡on 0f ar(jc]es purported to be conveyed.
I he circuit court then, m my opinion, committed error in instructing the jury, on motion of the defendant or garnishee in this case, that the deed of assignment offered m evidence, is prima facie sufficient to vest the [489]*489legal title of the property in the defendant (garnishee) ~r the pur;~oses therein mentioned; and its judgment ought~ in my opinion, to be be reversed for that reason, and the other members of this court concurring, it is reversed.