Taft, J.
An important point made is upon the overruling the motion to strike but the cross-petition of the defendants. It turns upon the application of section 17 of the assignment act as amended in 1868, S. & S. 397, which provides, “ That all transfers made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors shall be declared void at the suit of any creditor,” and that after such transfer shall have been declared to'have been made'with such intent, the'probate court shall, appoint an assignee, who shall proceed to administer the property for the benefit of the creditors, requiring a publication*" of a four’weeks’ notice of the pendency of the suit, and allowing to the' creditors fifteen day3 after the expiration of the notice for filing their answers, in order to entitle themselves to a pro rata distribution, to the exclusion of those creditors who do not present their claims by answer within the fifteen days after the expiration of the notice. The cross-petition is founded on this act. By the' replevin suit the plaintiff'in replevin, we think, acquired the property and possession of the goods so far as the parties to [295]*295the suit were concerned, and he gave his replevin bond, with sureties, to take the place of the property itself. If he should fail to sustain his right to the property, he would be responsible to the attaching creditors for the amount of their debts, and to the debtor or original owner of the property for the balance after paying the attaching creditors, unless he had acquired against the original owner a title to such balance by a valid sale.
But if there had been mortgagees of the property subsequent to the attaching creditors, but prior in right to the plaintiff, by his action of replevin he would have been bound to pay over the surplus to them, to the extent of their-mortgages, if they asserted their claim by cross-petition. Armstrong v. McAlpin, 18 Ohio St. 184, and Morgan v. Spangler, recently decided by-the Supreme Court, and to be reported in 20 Ohio St. Now the cross-petition, in the present case, goes upon the theory that the transfer of January 11, 1867, was such that it inured, under the statute, to the benefit of all equally who should come in by suit and' claim it, and that the creditors’ right related to the date of the fraudulent transfer, and that this right of the creditors was, therefore, prior to and better than that of the plaintiff' by his replevin. By filing the cross-petition the defendants waived the preference sought by their attachments in favor of the creditors who should come in under their cross-petition and claim the benefit of the statute, and as plaintiffs in the cross-petition they were left with no other benefit from the transfer to Dougherty than that of a pro rata distribution with the other creditors who' should come in. They were, however, enabled to bring forward by their cross-petition other claims of their own not included in the attachment. The jury have found that the transfer to the plaintiff in replevin was made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, and so falls within section 17 of the assignment law to which we have referred. We think that by our statute the bond takes- the place of the property so far as the original owner and the parties to the replevin suit are [296]*296concerned. The undertaking is to be in double the value of the property taken, and “to the effect that the plaintiff shall duly prosecute the action and pay all costs and damages which may be awarded against him.? In Jennings v. Johnson, 17 Ohio, 155, it. was held “that the replevin bond took the place of the property to the extent of the interest-of the defendant in replevin.” The interest of the defend-, ants in replevin in the present case, would, in the first instance, be the amount of the attachments.
But in Conrad v. Pancost, 11 Ohio St. 685, it was held that section 17 of the act of April 6, 1859, 1 S. & C. 713, in. relation to assignments by insolvent debtors,.in no respect qualified section 191 of the Code, but operated merely upon, the title of the propérty already so assigned or conveyed affixing to it the same title under the circumstances as if expressed in a written assignment by the debtors,” and it was competent for the court to direct execution of the trust. The right of creditors depended upon, the transfer made by the debtor, and took effect from the execution of the transfer, though the proceedings to enforce their right were commenced long afterward.
Section 17, under which the case of Conrad v. Pancost was decided, provided that “all transfers made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, shall inure to the equal benefit of all creditors,” “and the probate judge, after such transfer shall have been declared by a court of competent jurisdiction to have been made with the intent aforesaid, at the application of any creditor, shall appoint an assignee” to administer the trust.
If that act had remained in force, the ease of Conrad v. Pancost, 11 Ohio St. 686, would be an authority to hold the property upon the finding of this jury to inure to the benefit of all the creditors equally, and upon the declaration of that fact by a competent court, the probate court would have proceeded to administer the trust.
This section 17, as- amended by the act of 1863, provided that all such transfers shall be declared void at the [297]*297suit of any creditor, and the probate judge, after the said intent has been found by a competent court, shall proceed to appoint an assignee to administer the fund for the benefit of the creditors as in other cases of assignments to trustees, provided four weeks’ notice shall be published by the plaintiff of the pendency of the action, and that all.creditors who shall come in by answer with their claims, within fifteen days after the expiration of the publication, shall be entitled to have distribution to the exclusion of all who do not so come in, and those who do not so come in may have equal distribution of what remains after paying in full those who have come in in time.
Ve think the amended section gives to the fraudulent, transfer the effect of an assignment for the benefit of the creditors as effectually as it did before the amendment, and the proceedings under it relate to the time when it was, made.
It is claimed that this last act is different from the former,, in that it makes void such transfer only at the suit of a creditor; and that here is not a suit of any creditor to make it void.
~We regard the filing of a cross-petition by a creditor setting up his claim aud asking that the transfer be declared void, as the commencement of a suit within the meaning of the statute. The defendants have, however, failed to comply with the requirement that four weeks’ notice shall be published, in order that creditors might come in with their claims by answer. Nevertheless, we think that the notice may yet be published, and after the four weeks shall have elapsed and fifteen days more, the distribution may be made among the creditors who shall have come in, as the statute requires. But the cross-petition was not liable to be stricken out, and the trial having established the right of property, and the amount of the damages, has given the court a basis on which to proceed in the administration of this fund. As no creditor has applied to the probate court for the appointment of an assignee, this court may, under [298]*298the authority of Conrad
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Taft, J.
An important point made is upon the overruling the motion to strike but the cross-petition of the defendants. It turns upon the application of section 17 of the assignment act as amended in 1868, S. & S. 397, which provides, “ That all transfers made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors shall be declared void at the suit of any creditor,” and that after such transfer shall have been declared to'have been made'with such intent, the'probate court shall, appoint an assignee, who shall proceed to administer the property for the benefit of the creditors, requiring a publication*" of a four’weeks’ notice of the pendency of the suit, and allowing to the' creditors fifteen day3 after the expiration of the notice for filing their answers, in order to entitle themselves to a pro rata distribution, to the exclusion of those creditors who do not present their claims by answer within the fifteen days after the expiration of the notice. The cross-petition is founded on this act. By the' replevin suit the plaintiff'in replevin, we think, acquired the property and possession of the goods so far as the parties to [295]*295the suit were concerned, and he gave his replevin bond, with sureties, to take the place of the property itself. If he should fail to sustain his right to the property, he would be responsible to the attaching creditors for the amount of their debts, and to the debtor or original owner of the property for the balance after paying the attaching creditors, unless he had acquired against the original owner a title to such balance by a valid sale.
But if there had been mortgagees of the property subsequent to the attaching creditors, but prior in right to the plaintiff, by his action of replevin he would have been bound to pay over the surplus to them, to the extent of their-mortgages, if they asserted their claim by cross-petition. Armstrong v. McAlpin, 18 Ohio St. 184, and Morgan v. Spangler, recently decided by-the Supreme Court, and to be reported in 20 Ohio St. Now the cross-petition, in the present case, goes upon the theory that the transfer of January 11, 1867, was such that it inured, under the statute, to the benefit of all equally who should come in by suit and' claim it, and that the creditors’ right related to the date of the fraudulent transfer, and that this right of the creditors was, therefore, prior to and better than that of the plaintiff' by his replevin. By filing the cross-petition the defendants waived the preference sought by their attachments in favor of the creditors who should come in under their cross-petition and claim the benefit of the statute, and as plaintiffs in the cross-petition they were left with no other benefit from the transfer to Dougherty than that of a pro rata distribution with the other creditors who' should come in. They were, however, enabled to bring forward by their cross-petition other claims of their own not included in the attachment. The jury have found that the transfer to the plaintiff in replevin was made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, and so falls within section 17 of the assignment law to which we have referred. We think that by our statute the bond takes- the place of the property so far as the original owner and the parties to the replevin suit are [296]*296concerned. The undertaking is to be in double the value of the property taken, and “to the effect that the plaintiff shall duly prosecute the action and pay all costs and damages which may be awarded against him.? In Jennings v. Johnson, 17 Ohio, 155, it. was held “that the replevin bond took the place of the property to the extent of the interest-of the defendant in replevin.” The interest of the defend-, ants in replevin in the present case, would, in the first instance, be the amount of the attachments.
But in Conrad v. Pancost, 11 Ohio St. 685, it was held that section 17 of the act of April 6, 1859, 1 S. & C. 713, in. relation to assignments by insolvent debtors,.in no respect qualified section 191 of the Code, but operated merely upon, the title of the propérty already so assigned or conveyed affixing to it the same title under the circumstances as if expressed in a written assignment by the debtors,” and it was competent for the court to direct execution of the trust. The right of creditors depended upon, the transfer made by the debtor, and took effect from the execution of the transfer, though the proceedings to enforce their right were commenced long afterward.
Section 17, under which the case of Conrad v. Pancost was decided, provided that “all transfers made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, shall inure to the equal benefit of all creditors,” “and the probate judge, after such transfer shall have been declared by a court of competent jurisdiction to have been made with the intent aforesaid, at the application of any creditor, shall appoint an assignee” to administer the trust.
If that act had remained in force, the ease of Conrad v. Pancost, 11 Ohio St. 686, would be an authority to hold the property upon the finding of this jury to inure to the benefit of all the creditors equally, and upon the declaration of that fact by a competent court, the probate court would have proceeded to administer the trust.
This section 17, as- amended by the act of 1863, provided that all such transfers shall be declared void at the [297]*297suit of any creditor, and the probate judge, after the said intent has been found by a competent court, shall proceed to appoint an assignee to administer the fund for the benefit of the creditors as in other cases of assignments to trustees, provided four weeks’ notice shall be published by the plaintiff of the pendency of the action, and that all.creditors who shall come in by answer with their claims, within fifteen days after the expiration of the publication, shall be entitled to have distribution to the exclusion of all who do not so come in, and those who do not so come in may have equal distribution of what remains after paying in full those who have come in in time.
Ve think the amended section gives to the fraudulent, transfer the effect of an assignment for the benefit of the creditors as effectually as it did before the amendment, and the proceedings under it relate to the time when it was, made.
It is claimed that this last act is different from the former,, in that it makes void such transfer only at the suit of a creditor; and that here is not a suit of any creditor to make it void.
~We regard the filing of a cross-petition by a creditor setting up his claim aud asking that the transfer be declared void, as the commencement of a suit within the meaning of the statute. The defendants have, however, failed to comply with the requirement that four weeks’ notice shall be published, in order that creditors might come in with their claims by answer. Nevertheless, we think that the notice may yet be published, and after the four weeks shall have elapsed and fifteen days more, the distribution may be made among the creditors who shall have come in, as the statute requires. But the cross-petition was not liable to be stricken out, and the trial having established the right of property, and the amount of the damages, has given the court a basis on which to proceed in the administration of this fund. As no creditor has applied to the probate court for the appointment of an assignee, this court may, under [298]*298the authority of Conrad v. Pancost, proceed to administer the fund. As to the manner of administering the fund, or the steps to be taken, it is not necessary that we should be more specific. It is enough that we now declare that the cross-petition was properly filed, and that the motion to. strike it out was properly overruled.
■ We come, then, to the errors assigned at the trial.
1 It is claimed that the court should have instructed the jury that they could not find for the defendants unless the evidence satisfied them beyond a reasonable doubt that the transfer was made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, because it would be finding the plaintiff guilty of a crime. We think it would have been erroneous to give the charge asked, because we do not think that the hindering, or delaying, or defrauding of creditors, which would be sufficient to justify a court in declaring a transfer void under section 17, would necessarily amount to the “cheating and defrauding,” or to “the fraudulent transfer to defeat his creditors,” which constitutes the misdemeanor finder section 12 of the act for the punishment of certain offenses therein named, passed March 8, 1831. It is impossible for us to decide that the one is the same, with the other, and a verdict in this case would not be evidence that the offense defined in said section 12 had been committed. We think the ruling of the court was right.'
Objection is urged that the appraisement made for the purpose of the replevin bond, was ruled out when offered by the plaintiff. There was other and better evidence, and while we might not have been willing to reverse the judgment, if the evidence had been received, we do not think the plaintiff' was prejudiced by its exclusion.
An objection is also urged against the verdict, because the court permitted the amount of the insurance procured and kept on the stock by the plaintiff', to be given in evidence. This seems to have been an act on the part of the plaintiff in the nature of an admission, and, as such, it appears to us to have been competent.
[299]*299It is also claimed that parol evidence was permitted to prove the amount of the insurance, when the policy was the best evidence. But the policy was in the hands of the plaintiff', and notice was given him to produce it, which he did not do. Plaintiff’s counsel complain that the policy was in Louisville, and the notice was too short for the plaintiff to get it before the testimony was allowed to be given. But the testimony related merely to the amount insured, and the policy was in the hands of the plaintiff, and it does not appear that the testimony was not correct, which could have been made to appear on motion for a new trial, if such had been the case, by the production of the policies. It is quite clear to us that the plaintiff' has not been prejudiced by this testimony being admitted instead of the policy. Besides, we regard the notice under the circumstances as sufficient to warrant the admission of secondary evidence.
As to conversations preceding the issuing of the policy, they were competent, not to prove a contract of insurance,' but to prove admissions of the plaintiff as to the value of the property. And the same principle applies to declarations made by the Gibsons in presence of the plaintiff', and not denied.
As to the judgment on the verdict, however, we think it should be modified so as to make it accord with the views we have expressed, in order that it may be administered under section 17 of the assignment act, as amended in 1863. ■