The plaintiff in an action of ejectment .against Bell relied upon a Sheriff’s deed executed in 1881, in pursuance of a judgment rendered in 1879 against a Mrs. Moore who was the common owner of title of both parties.
Eleven years prior to the rendition of the judgment, the judgment defendant had conveyed the lands described in the Sheriff’s deed to her grandson, J. W. Moore.
In a suit brought by one Allen, a creditor of Mrs. Moore, the St. Francis Chancery Court declared the conveyance by Mrs. Moore to her grandson a fraud upon Allen’s rights as a creditor, set the deed aside and ordered that the lands be sold to pay his debts.
The decree was introduced in evidence by the plaintiff in ■.this cause to show that the conveyance to the grandson, through whom the defendant claims title, had been canceled, and that the title was thereby divested from the grandson and vested again in Mrs. Moore; and the court tried the cause upon that theory.
But the decree established nothing except that the conveyance was void as against Allen’s right to enforce the payment of his debt.
The plaintiff in the case, being a stranger to that suit, took nothing by the decree and .could build no estoppel against J. W. Moore or his grantee upon it.
Fraudulent Conveyances Who may avoid. The conveyance was good between the parties and against all the world except creditors of Mrs. Moore, who were in position to attack it for fraud. Millington v. Hill, 47 Ark., 301; Norwood v. Driggs, 50 ib., 42. If the plaintiff in this action occupied the position of a creditor entitled to attack the conveyance, he could avoid it upon proper proof. Hershey v. Latham, 42 Ark., 305; Waite on Fraudulent Conveyances, p. 51. But the Allen decree showing that the deed had been adjudged a fraud upon the rights of another creditor in a suit to which the plaintiff in this action was not a party, did not prove that the conveyance was a fraud on his rights.
Reverse the judgment and remand the cause for a new trial.