It is contended by the plaintiffs in error, that a judgment for cost alone, rendered in favor of a defendant against the plaintiff, does not create a lien on the land of the party against whom it is rendered. This question involves the construction of our statutes, subjecting land to the payment of judgments; for at common law the lands of a debtor could not be sold or in any manner made liable to the payment of debts. By the act of 1807, (Clay’s Digest 199,) it is enacted, “ that all persons, who shall recover any debt, damages or cost by the judgment of any court of record within this State, may at their election prosecute writs of fieri facias, elegit, or capias ad satisfaciendum, within the year, for taking the goods, lands, or body of the person or persons against whom such judgment is obtained.” It is however contended, that a judgment for cost alone cannot create a lien on the land of the party against whom it is rendered, because this statute gives no other process against land, except the writ of elegit, the form of which is prescribed by the act, and allows the lands of the defendant to be extended for the debt and damages only, but not for costs, eo nomine. Besides, that under our practice, the plaintiff or the successful party is not entitled to receive the costs, as it is due to the officers of court and to the witnesses summoned in the cause, unless it is made to appear that he has actually paid such costs to those entitled to receive them; therefore, it could not have been the intention of the Legislature to put the plaintiff in possession of the land of the defend*646ant, under this process, to be held by him until the costs were, paid or received from the rents and profits, as he might not be entitled to retain the costs thus realized.
I do not deem it necessary to determine whether a judgment for costs alone would create a lien on land, under the act of 1807, for it is very clear to my mind, that by the act of 1812 (Clay’s Dig. 205) all judgments and decrees of courts of record in this State create a lien on the lands of the party against whom they are rendered. The language of the act is, “ Hereafter lands, tenements, and hereditaments shall be subject to the payment of all judgments or decrees of any court of record within this State, and the clerk of such court shall frame the execution accordingly,” &c, I know that our courts have usually ascribed the lien on land created by judgments of record to the act of 1807, which merely gives the writ of elegit, by which the lands of the debtor may be extended.— Morris v. Ellis, 3 Ala. 560; Campbell v. Spence, 4 ib. 543; Burke v. Jones et al. 13 ib. 167. But whether the act of 1812 does create a lien in favor of judgments, independent of the act of 1807, has never been determined by this court, so far as I have been able to discover, and the question for the first time is presented for adjudication.
The act of 1807 does not in express words give to judgments the effect of creating a lien on land. It merely gives the judgment creditor the right to sue out the writ of elegit, by which a moiety of the lands of which the defendant -was seized at the time of the rendition of the judgment is liable to be extended in satisfaction of the judgment. This right has been construed into a lien on the land. — Morris v. Ellis, 3 Ala. 543. If the right to extend the land in satisfaction of the judgment is correctly construed as a lien upon it, I ask, why deny the lien to the right to sell absolutely? We perceive no reason why we should hold that a lien is created by one statute, but not by the other; both subject lands to the satisfaction of judgments — the act of 1807, by the process of elegit— the act of 1812, by a common fieri facias. In Maryland, there is no statute declaring that judgments shall create a lien on lands, but the act of 5th George II., subjecting lands to sale in payment of debts, in the same manner as chattels, is still in force in that State. This act of Parliament has been con*647strued as creating a lien on the lands of the defendant from the time of the rendition of the judgment. — Tayloe v. Thompson, 5 Peters, 358, and cases there cited.
We think both the acts of 1807 and 1812, before re-fered to, should be construed as creating a lien on the lands of the defendant from the time of the rendition of the judg- • ment, and that the plaintiff may elect to enforce or execute his lien, either under the one or the other of those acts. As we have come to the conclusion that 'all judgments and decrees of courts of record create a lien on the lands of the party against whom they are rendered, by virtue of the act of 1812, there can be no doubt but that a judgment for costs alone will create a lien on the land of the party against whom it was rendered, for without doubt, under this act, the execution for-cost may go- against the goods and chattels, lands and tenements, in the same manner that an execution may issue on any other judgment or decree, and such a judgment must like any other create alien on the land of the defendant from the time of its rendition. To say that it only created a lien from the time the cost was taxed by the clerk, would be to deny the lien to the judgment, which is the act of the court, and to refer it to the ministerial act of the clerk. The statute that-creates the lien does, not justify such a construction.
2. The return on the execution was not essential to enable the plaintiff to maintain his action; all that is-necessary to enable a purchaser at sheriff sale to recover in ejectment is the' judgment, execution and sheriff’s deed. He cannot be affected by any irregularities of the sheriff, either in not giving the notice required, or in the return he may make on the execution. — Love & Williams v. Powell, 5 Ala. 58. In the case of Driver v. Spence, 1 Ala. 540, the purchaser to make out his title offered in evidence the execution under which the land was sold. This- was objected to, on the ground that the levy endorsed on the writ did not correspond with the land de--scribed in the sheriff’s deed.. This court held, that the objection was properly overruled. These authorities we think hold the correct rule. The title of a purchaser who has purchased under a valid judgment and execution, and who has paid the purchase money, should not be made to depend on the return, of the sheriff, or -whether any return is ever made on the writ *648or not. — Heath v. Black, 7 Blackford, 154; Henly v. Branch Bank of Mobile, at this term. From this view, it follows that it was unnecessary to read the endorsement on the execution, showing the levy, and consequently the evidence of the sheriff which was intended to explain it, was immaterial and unnecessary, for it could not affect the right of the plaintiff to recover. He acquired no aid from this testimony and could not be injured by its rejection. We could not therefore reverse the judgment for the admission of this evidence, even if we were to hold that parol proof could not be received to explain or vary the legal effect of a sheriff’s return, unless upon a direct proceeding for the purpose of amending it.
3. But there can be no doubt, we think, that the court erred in rejecting the proof offered by the defendants, tending to show that the sale and purchase of the land was brought about for the purpose of defrauding the creditors of Jonathan Steele, and was intended to delay and hinder them in the collection of their debts. All the authorities agree, that a deed procured or obtained with the view or intent to delay, hinder or defraud creditors is absolutely void against those who are intended to be injured by it. That the deed purports to be made by a sheriff in pursuance of a sale under execution cannot impart to it vitality, or enable the fraudulent grantee to consúmate his illegal purpose. Whether the deed be direct from the fraudulent grantor to the fraudulent grantee, or whether it be procured by means of a sale under an execution, when once the fraud is established, it is null and void, and can form no impediment to creditors in subjecting the land to the payment of Iheir debts. — Carter v. Castleberry, 5 Ala. 277, and cases there cited; Duncan & wife v. Forsythe, 3 Dana, 229. The court should have admitted the evidence tending to show that the deed obtained at the sheriff’s sale was fraudulent, and was intended to hinder and delay the creditors of Jonathan Steele, and should also have admitted the evidence, tending to show that the deed from Badger to the plaintiff was without consideration, and that he had notice of the fraud, for if he is not a purchaser for a valuable consideration and without notice of the fraudulent design intended to be consummated by procuring the deed by means of the sale under the execution, then he is affected with the *649fraud, and occupies no higher ground than the purchasers at the sheriff’s sale would were they the plaintiffs. This error must reverse the judgment, and as the question whether Badger, the immediate grantor of the plaintiff, was a competent witness to prove the execution of the deed from himself to the plaintiff, can be avoided upon another trial, we do not deem it necessary to examine itl
Let the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded.