The case comes up from a decree, sustaining a demurrer to the bill.
The bill was filed by John Craft as a creditor of G. W. Wilcox & Co., and it seeks to have set aside and annulled a mortgage of certain property executed by the debtors to W. D. Brown & Co., and several subsequent grants of the same property. All of said grantees are made parties defendant. The mortgage to W. D. Brown & Co., which is assailed as fraudulent and void, was executed and duly filed for record on the 5th of June, 1890. On the 5th of August, 1890, two months subsequent to the execution of the mortgage and its registration, complainant’s debt was contracted. The bill is filed in the *380name of John Craft, and on behalf of all other creditors who may come in and make themselves parties complainants. It is averred generally that there were existing creditors at the date of the mortgage, but no particular debt is mentioned and no creditor named and none have come in and requested to be made parties complainant. The bill must be considered at present without reference to any other creditors, if there be such. Voluntary conveyances, or where entered into with a fraudulent intent, are valid between the parties, and can be avoided by a subsequent creditor only upon averment and proof of-actual fraud, that it was executed with fraudulent intent and for the fraudulent purpose of defeating subsequent creditors 'in the collection of their claim. — Seals v. Robinson & Co., 75 Ala. 363; 3 Brickell Dig. 515, § 119.
The bill charges that the mortgage was "without valuable consideration, false, simulated and fictitious, that the grantee had knowledge of the fraudulent intent of the grantor, and aided the purpose and the intent to defraud future creditors.” The averments are sufficient on this point. There is a statement in the bill, not altogether in harmony with the averment, and that is, that the mortgagors "have paid on said indebtedness an amount exceeding three thousand dollars, but that W. D, Brown & Co. claim there is a large balance yet due,” which complainant denies ; but we are not called upon to consider this question, if it merits consideration. Complainant’s claim was reduced to judgment October 15th, 1890. Subsequent to this, 16th of November, 1890, G. W. Wilcox, John Whyte, Caroline Whyte, who compose the firm of G. W. Wilcox & Co., and David Corbett and Charles Cummins were incorporated as the Peach Bloom Lumber Company. The bill avers that subject to the mortgage to W. D. Brown & Co., the mortgaged property was sold and transferred to the corporation in payment of the stock subscribed, that in fact nothing was paid for it by any of the subscribers to stock or corporators or corporation, and that this was done to hinder, delay and defraud complainant, by the members of the-firm of Wilcox & Co., "which was known to the other subscribers for stock and corporators, that they participated in the fraud and aided in the fraudulent purpose.” The bill avers that the corporation was insolvent, and ceased to do business and sold out the property to J. W. *381Meyers, wlio subsequently transferred Ms interest therein to Wallis Glover and W. H. Stewart & Son, and that Wallis Glover and W. H. Stewart are now in the possession of the property, controlling and claiming it. The bill avers that neither Meyers nor Glover and Stewart & Son, nor Stewart “paid any valuable consideration to said corporation, and that said purchase was on credit, with the knowledge of the insolvency of the corporation, and that the sale was made to hinder, delay and defraud complainant. It does not charge that the grantees from the insolvent corporation participated in the fraudulent intent. A voluntary grantee from a fraudulent grantee can not claim to be an innocent purchaser. The fraud of his grantor will be visited upon him. The rights of an innocent grantee in property, who purchased from a fraudulent grantor upon a credit, and becomes bound for the purchase money, is not raised by the demurrer, nor is the want of consistency in these averments presented. See Pickett v. Pipkin, 64 Ala. 520; Seals v. Robinson, 75 Ala. 363; McGhee v. Imp. Co., 93 Ala. 192. The specific grounds of demurrer are: 1st. That the bill is multifarious; 2d. There is • no equity in the bill inasmuch as it appears that the mortgage was executed prior to the contract of the debt of the complainant.
The whole purpose of the bill is to reach and condemn certain property conveyed by the debtor, to the satisfaction of complainant’s debt. The property is traced through several successive grantees to the present holders. The conveyances to the mortgagees and to the corporation and corporators are charged to have been made with a fraudulent intent, in which the grantees participated. Actual fraud is averred. The bill avers that the sale'or transfers from the corporation, and from Myers were without consideration. The bill has equity, and is not objectionable on the grounds of multifariousness.
Reversed and remanded.