The verdict was for the defendant, and the court granted a new trial. Shall we reverse the order for a new trial, is the general question for decision.
1. There were two demises in the declaration, one from Aiken as trustee for his wife, and the other from Mrs. Aiken herself. In whom was the legal title prior to the conveyance to Epping? We think it was .in Mrs. Aiken. In the conveyance from Rhett to her husband, a trust for her benefit was indicated by the bare fact that he was denominated in the deed her trustee. Section 2307 of the Code .declares, “No words of separate use are necessary to create a trust estate for the wife. The appointment of a trustee, or any words sufficient to create a trust, shall operate to create a separate estate.” And the preceding section, which is general as to all trust estates, declares, “No formal words are necessary to create such an estate. Whenever a manifest intention is exhibited that another person shall have the benefit of the property, the grantee shall be declared a trustee.” These provisions of the Code open *738a fresh source in our law, from which the trust stream flows in its natural channel, if it did not do so before. What is more manifest to common sense than that a husband who, in the deed by which he acquires land, describes himself as the trustee of his wife, intends to take in that character, and for her benefit, not for his own ? Moreover, in this case Mrs. Aiken was recognized as the beneficiary by Epping; for in the conveyance which he took from her and her husband, the latter was described as her trustee, and the former was expressly denominated cestui qye trust. Prior to the act of 1866, (Code, §1754,) such a trust would perhaps have been executory, and would have continued on foot so long as the coverture existed, but that act, as has been several times decided, introduced a new rule of property in respect to married women, and a corresponding enlargement of their legal capacity. With reference to her separate estate, a female, married or single, is now on full equality with a male, except in a few particulars defined by statute. Save in those particulars, when her equitable rights are commensurate with those of the male, her legal rights are also commensurate with his, and the difference of sex is utterly immaterial. Whenever the subtle action of law-chemistry, perhaps I should rather say law-magic, for it resembles magic more than natural science,.transmutes his equitable rights into legal rights, the like transmutation, the conditions being the same, .will be effected upon hers. A consequence of this exact parallelism between the sexes is, that a conveyance, made since the act of 1866, in trust for a woman, married or single, of full age and sound mind, with no remainder to protect, and nothing prescribed for the trustee to do, operates to pass the legal title immediately into the beneficiary. The trust is executed in the moment of its creation. “In an executed trust for the benefit of a person capable of taking and managing property in his own right, the legal title is merged immediately into the equitable interest, and the perfect title rests in the beneficiary accord*739ing to the terms and limitations of the trust.” Code, §2314. “ Trusts are either executed or executory. In the former, everything has been done by the trustee required to secure the property, or to render certain the interest of the beneficiaries, and all that remains for him to do is to preserve the property and execute the beneficial purposes. In ex-ecutory trusts, something remains to be done by the trustee, either to secure the property, to ascertain the objects of the trust, or to distribute according to a specified mode, or some other act to do which requires him to retain the legal title.” Ib., §2313. It may be thought that the work of ascertaining whether the legal title was in Mrs. Aiken x-ather than in her husband as her trustee, is superfluous for the purposes of the present case, and this may be true; but the question was argued at the bar, and its decision obviates certain possible difficulties in reference to a trustee who has acted with the consent of his cestui que trust, repudiating his ow7i deed, and setting up his own abuse of his trust functions. Furthermore, there being two demises in the declaration, there is a propriety in pointing out which of them, according to the evidence, envelopes the real strength of the plaintiffs case.
2. The indication in the evidence is vex-y strong that whether Epping bought the land absolutely, or whether he took title on an understanding to re-convey upon the repayment of the money which he advanced, the object of the transaction was to raise money to be applied on the debt of Aiken, the husband, and that the price of the property was, in fact, so applied by Epping hi7nself. It is, doubtless, true that Epping did not volunteer his interposition in the matter, and that he was ux’ged to it by Aiken, and not improbably by Mrs. Aiken herself. His motive may have been kindness, pure benevolence, without any view to gain; perhaps it was, and it may be ungrateful and ungracious in the Aikens to reclaim the land as against him or his gx-antee. They, however, justify themselves with the answer that he has been reimbursed in full, which he denies. There is *740conflict in the evidence of Aiken and Epping, but it seems not to go to the legal hinge of the controversy. While Epping insists that he purchased the land out and out, and paid for it, we do not understand him as denying that the inducement to the transaction was to relieve Aiken from the pressure of an execution against him, which was in the hands of the United States marshal, or that he made the payment by taking up that execution. lie seems, on the contrary, to admit it. According to his own evidence, it looks like Mrs. Aiken’s land went to raise money to pay the debt of her husband, and that Epping was not only cognizant of the purpose, but aided in carrying it out even to the extent of paying over the money to the officer in whose hands the debt was. Epping got the land, and Aiken’s creditor got the money by Epping’s co-operation — but what did Mrs. Aiken get? Nothing, except a wife’s happiness at having assisted in extricating her husband out of pressing pecuniary distress. This, no doubt, was much, but it is a kind of compensation with which the law is by no means content. A wife may assist all the world with her means, so that she avoids contracts of suretyship, except her husband. Him, whom she would most desire to help, she must leave to struggle with his creditors as best he can- — the law, dreading his influence over her, puts her under disability for her own protection. The language of section 1783 of the Code is as follows :
“The wife is a feme sole as to her separate estate, unless controlled by the settlement. Every restriction upon her power in it must be complied with; but while the wife may contract, she cannot bind her separate estate by any contract of suretyship, nor by any assumption of the debts of her husband, and any sale of her separate estate, made to a creditor of her husband in extinguishment of his debts, shall be absolutely void.”
The mere letter of this language may not include the case of a conveyance made by a wife to induce a third person to pay the debt of her husband, or to advance money with which to pay it, but such a case is clearly within its reason and spirit. If the wife can neither assume the debt *741nor pay the creditor, she cannot hire another to do so in her stead, using her property to make, or to secure, compensation. She can neither pay nor secure, nor cause to be paid or secured. The statutory condemnation of a sale made to the creditor in payment to the husband’s debt, is very strong ; it is “ absolutely void.” These terms applied by a statute to immoral transactions, such as involve manifest turpitude or corruption, generally import utter nullity, not only as between the original parties, but -as between one of these and the successors or privies of the other, whether these latter take with notice or without it, and whether they have paid a valuable consideration or not. And there are instances in which a like construction prevails where only a general policy of the law is to be subserved, apart from considerations of morality. On the other hand, there is a lax sense in which the word void is sometimes used even in statutes, as meaning only voidable. 6 Pick., 486; 13 Mass., 515. When this term or any other which has not a fixed and invariable significance is to be expounded, the nature of the case is to be regarded; and, moreover, the attention must not be confined to a single doctrine of the law, but all the doctrines that bear upon it are to be collated and, if possible, harmonized. Looking first to the nature of the case, it is evident that it is not wicked or immoral for a wife to pay her husband’s debts, nor has the general public an interest in her abstaining from so doing. The restraint imposed upon her by the law is solely for her benefit and well being. The rule is economical, not moral; and its policy is in favor of a class, and not of the public at large. True, the class is a numerous and important one, but married women cannot be said to constitute the public. The public justice, police, order, safety, revenue, health, religion or morality, is not involved in preventing wives from devoting their property to the payment of their husbands’ debts. Looking next to .the collateral doctrines of the law that ought to be considered in connection with the restrictive legislation which we are construing, the great *742doctrine of protection to innocent purchasers presents itself. Bona fide purchasers, for value, and without notice, are generally recognized as occupying a very high stand in courts, both of law and equity. Certainly, the general rule applicable to them is, that when they deal with an apparent owner, clothed with the proper indicia of title, derived from the proper source, pay their money and take a conveyance, acting the while in good faith and without notice of any latent infirmity in the title to which they trust, they are unaffected by such infirmity should it afterwards prove to exist. The only other doctrine sufficiently relevant and important to be called upon in this discussion is that of estoppel. No person has a right deliberately to mislead another to the latter’s injury. Whoever, being of full age and of sound mind, does so-, is responsible for the consequences. Were a married woman incapable in law of conveying her property at all, all the world would be bound to take notice of her disability. But such is not her incapacity ; on the contrary, as we have seen, her general power over her own is as ample as if she were a man. She can buy and sell with perfect freedom, from or to the whole world except her husband or her trustee, so that she does it for her own benefit. Now, when she makes a conveyance, such as her ordinary power renders her competent to make, and upon the face of it acknowledges a consideration and the payment of it, not disclosing that her husband’s debt was any part of the consideration., or that the whole transaction was not for her sole benefit, and delivers that conveyance to the purchaser, she does an act calculated to mislead any person to whom the purchaser may offer the property for sale, and to whom her conveyance may be exhibited as evidence of title, if in fact her husband’s debt was concerned in the consideration. She deliberately sends forth one accredited as owner, who, as between her and him, is not the owner. If, trusting to the document which she has signed, sealed and delivered, any person should be honestly misled by it, why should she not abide the conse*743quences ? If she has been taken at her word, why should she not be required to make her word good, and be estopped from recalling or contradicting her own solemn utterance ? Let her be allowed to say that her deed is void, provided she does so in due time, that is, before it has injured any innocent third person; but after it has been trusted and acted upon as being what it purported to be, let her be condemned to perpetual silence. Though an instrument may be “ absolutely void,” this does not imply that there is no limit to the time within which its void character may be insisted upon. Truth is always precious, but it may become too late to assert it. It may be “ more unjust and productive of more evil to hear the truth than to forbear the investigation.” Code, §3753. Not always is the consideration of a deed open to inquiry, but “ when the principles of justice require it.” Ib., §2690. Our conclusion is, that a conveyance amenable to section 1783 of the Code is “ absolutely void ” as between the maker and all persons affected with notice, but that a subsequent bona fide purchaser, for value, and without notice, is protected. Compare 60 Ga., 29.
3. Is the evidence in the record sufficient to affect Sutton, the vendee of Epping, and defendant in the ejectment, with notice? We think so, clearly. He was warned before he either paid his money or took a conveyance, that Mrs. Aiken was still the owner. This, without more, was enough to put him on inquiry into the facts, and whatever would do that constitutes notice. Code, §2790.
Judgment affirmed.