This is a bill in equity, the prayer of which is that the defendant may be compelled to convey to the plaintiff certain real estate.
The real estate in question was formerly owned by Rufus Porter. In 1848, he conveyed it to his brother Seward W. Porter, to secure him against liabilities incurred as an indorser for Rufus, who was then engaged in building the Buckfield Branch Railroad. The conveyance was in form absolute, but the evidence satisfies us that it was intended as security only. In 1855, Seward, being in failing circumstances, conveyed this real estate to his brother Stephen *342Porter, the defendant. The plaintiff claims that this conveyance was fraudulent, being made to hinder and delay creditors. Whether this was so or not, we will not now stop to discuss. But we will here remark that the evidence satisfies us that the liabilities, to secure which the land was conveyed to Seward, were all discharged by Rufus, and that the land was then held by Seward in trust for him, and that he was entitled to a reconveyance of it whenever he demanded it. The conveyance to Stephen was therefore very clearly a fraud upon Rufus, if it was thereby intended to keep it from him. And, as soon as Rufus learned of the conveyance, he complained of his brother and denied his right to make it. The result was that the notes which Stephen had given for it, (amounting to $10,000,) were given up by Seward to Rufus, and by him to Stephen, and Stephen conveyed the land to Rufus. Rufus thus got his land back again, except that he was compelled to convey a thousand dollars worth of it to Seward’s wife, and secure Stephen by a mortgage of it, for a thousand dollars more. Rufus neglected to put his deed from Stephen on record, and, seven years afterwards, and ten years after the alleged fraudulent conveyance to Stephen, the plaintiff levied an execution upon it as the property of Seward, and now asks the Court to confirm his title. It should be stated that, two years nearly before this levy was made, the premises had been mortgaged to James O’Donnell, to secure between four and five hundred dollars, and to Stephen Porter, to secure about one thousand dollars, and then conveyed to Nehemiah Porter, and that these conveyances were all on record; and that neither Rufus, Nehemiah, or Mr. O’Donnell are made parties to the bill. Under these circumstances can the bill be maintained? We are clearly of opinion it cannot.
To say nothing of the want of parties, and nothing of the validity of the plaintiff’s judgment, we think the plaintiff’s case is fatally defective for want of equity.
It is by no .means clear that a creditor can in any case levy his execution upon real estate held by the debtor in trust. *343If he has notice of the trust, unqestionably he cannot. But suppose he has no notice of the trust, will the law allow him to take the property of one man to pay another’s debt ? This question was very ably discussed by Chief Justice Shepley, in delivering the opinion of the Court in Warren v. Ireland, 29 Maine, 62, and the conclusion reached, that a trust estate could not be levied upon. — "The rule is well established,” said he, "that the judgment creditors of a trustee are not allowed to hold a trust estate against the cestui que trust.” After quoting the words of the statute, that the creditor may "levy his execution upon the debtor’s real estate,” he continues : — "If the words ' debtor’s real estate,’ are to receive such a construction as to include an estate in which he had no beneficial interest, and the title to which he held in trust for another, the effect may be to enable a creditor to obtain payment, not from the estate of his debtor, but from the property of another person. It might compel the debt- or, against his will, to violate a most sacred trust, for the purpose of paying his own debt out of another’s property. Could it have been the intention of the Legislature, by the use of such language, to authorize the property of one person to be taken to pay a debt due from another, and to compel him to violate a trust, to accomplish such a purpose? The statute also provides, that the levy ' shall make as good a title’ to the creditor ' as the debtor had therein.’ If the debtor’s title was subject to the beneficial interest of another person in the estate, will any more perfect title be conveyed by the levy and statute provisions to the creditor? If so, the rights of the cestui que trust may be destroyed without any act of his own or of his trustee. To determine that they can be, is to decide that the Legislature, without a violation of the fundamental law, may appropriate the equitable property and rights of one person tp pay the debts of another. And, if the rights of the beneficiary are not destroyed, but still adhere to and follow the title, so that they can be enforced against the statute purchaser, the effect will be, that he will be made by the satisfaction of his judg*344ment to pay for the estate without obtaining any value, for he will become the holder of a title from which he can derive no benefit. The language of the statute may have its full effect and these mischiefs be avoided, if it be construed to include those estates only in which the legal and beneficial interests are united in the debtor. It may be, if such be the construction of the statute, that a creditor may have no means of information, whether an estate, apparently owned by his debtor, be a trust estate; and he may fail to obtain any value by a levy, when he has been vigilant to obtain his rights. This may also happen in other cases, when his debtor has a title to an estate apparently good, which proves to be wholly defective. In such cases, the debt remaining unpaid, he may by a proper course have his judgment revived.”
And Judge Story, in his work on Equity, (2 Story’s Eq. Jur., § 977,) denies that a trust estate can be bound by any judgments, or other claims of creditors against the trustee. And in a note to this section Judge Reheteld says, that it has been recently decided in Vermont, after a very full examination of the authorities, that creditors levying upon lands held by the debtor in trust, although they have no notice of the trust, acquire no title against the cestui que trust.
If this view of the law be correct, it is difficult to perceive how an alienation by the trustee of a trust estate, can be a fraud upon his creditors, since, if the title had remained in him, the property could not be appropriated to pay their debts.
But, whether this view of the law be correct or not, we cannot doubt that when, as in this case, the legal title has passed out of the trustee, and is actually restored to the cestui que trust, it is too late for a creditor to attempt to follow it upon the ground that, when the trustee conveyed, he intended a fraud upon his creditors as well as upon his cestui que trust. The fraudulent intentions of the trustee cannot and ought not to work a forfeiture of the rights of the cestui *345que trust. His claims are as strong as those of a creditor,■ and as much under the protection of the law.
But it is contended that, inasmuch as the deed from Stephen to Rufus, although executed many years before, was not recorded till after the plaintiff’s levy, it cannot affect his rights acquired under the levy. Suppose this be so ; suppose,’for the. purposes of this investigation, the title is to be regarded as still in Stephen ; what is the result ?
Stephen discloses that, after the conveyance to him, he was informed and believed that in equity the estate belonged to Rufus; that he was willing to éxecute the trust which Seward by conveying to him had violated, and restore the estate to Rufus, if he could be indemnified for. what he had paid out, and for his time and trouble. The evidence shows that he has been fully indemnified, and if it were true that he now held the legal title, he would hold it without consideration and in trust for Rufus. Would this Court compel him to violate his trust and convey to the plaintiff? Upon what principle could such a decree be claimed? Are not the claims of the cestui que trust equal at least to those of a creditor of his former trustee ? It may be true that, because there was no record evidence of the trust, a creditor might have seized and appropriated this property to the payment of his debt while the legal title .was in the debtor; but we know of no rule of law that will allow him to follow it into the hands of one not his debtor. If it had been the property of the debtor in fact, as well as in appearance, undoubtedly he could. But being the property of the debtor in appearance only, and not in fact, he cannot. If a debtor fraudulently conveys his property, the creditor may follow it. If he fraudulently conveys the property of another,— property which he holds in trust merely, — the creditor cannot follow it. In such case, the fraudulent purpose of the debtor is of no importance. It cannot make that his which in equity belongs to another.
Treating, therefore, the unrecorded deed as if it had never been executed, and assuming, for the purposes of this *346investigation, that the title at the time of the levy was still held by the defendant, it appearing to our satisfaction that the property never in fact belonged to the debtor, aud that the defendant held it in trust for another, it is still the judgment of the Court that it could not legally be levied upon as the property of Seward W. Porter. It was never equitably his ; it had ceased to be colorably his. Being in the hands of one willing to execute his trust, willing to hold it for the benefit of the equitable owner, tfie Court would not compel him to violate his trust and convey it to another.
Bill dismissed, with costs for the defendant.
Appleton, C. J., Barrows, Danporth and Tapley, JJ., concurred.