On the eighteenth day of September, 1875, Lester W. Platt executed and delivered to the defendant in error a chattel mortgage on all his personal property to secure the payment on demand of the sum of $2,203.00. The mortgage was filed for record on the day of its execution. Platt died in a few days after the execution of the mortgage in question, leaving a will’wherein Elvira Gr. Platt and the defendant in error were named as executors. On or about the fourth day of January, 1876, the defendant in error took possession of the property described in the mortgage and advertised the same for sale as required by the statute. On or about the nineteenth day of January, 1876, the treasurer of Platt county by his deputy levied upon certain mules and horses conveyed to defendant in said mortgage to satisfy taxes due and delinquent from Platt for the years 1873, 1874 and 1875. The. property' so seized was placed in the custody of the plaintiff in error, as bailee. The defendant in error, Anderson, brought an action of replevin, and on the trial of the cause in the court below recovered a judgment for the possession of the property, to reverse which Hedman brings the cause into this court by a petition in error.
The mortgage contained the following provision: “That until default be made by the said mortgagor in the performance of the condition aforesaid it shall and may be lawful for him to retain possession of the said goods and chattels and to use and enjoy the same.” The property *398mortgaged consisted of mules, horses, colts, ponies, oxen, cows, young cattle, sheep, swine, farming utensils, the crops on the farm, an undivided half of certain buffalo robes, household goods, and the stock of goods in the store. The stock of goods was worth from $300 to $500, a portion of which was Indian goods. One Keller was the clerk of the mortgagor at the time of the execution of the mortgage, and remained in the store and continued to sell goods as before the execution of the mortgage, until the defendant in error took possession of the same. There is no testimony showing the amount of sales, but no part of the proceeds were applied on the mortgage debt. The Indian goods were in the meantime exchanged for other goods which were more salable and which are still undisposed of. During the time mentioned, the defendant in error resided at Platt’s late residence, and was occasionally in the store, and knew of the sales aforesaid, and made no objection. Other property included in the mortgage was used in Platt’s family or sold to pay debts against the estate; but it appears that sufficient property remained at the time the defendant in error took possession to satisfy the mortgage. It also appears from the evidence that the defendant in error had loaned Platt about $2,000 in money on or about the first day of October, 1874, and that the mortgage in question was given to secure the payment of the same.
On the trial, of the case the court instructed the j ury that: “ If from all the evidence you find that a contract was entered into by and between the said Lester W. Platt and Anderson, by which the said Platt was to, and did, reserve to himself the right to sell and dispose of the property included in such mortgage, such contract would render the mortgage inoperative and void as to creditors. It is not necessary that such contract be included in the mortgage or even in writing; proof that such contract was made in parol is sufficient.”.
*399“ In considering tbe question of fraud you may take into consideration the fact that after the execution of the mortgage, the morgagor Platt by his agent continued to keep possession of the stock of goods in such mortgage mentioned, and continued to sell and dispose of the same with the knowledge and without objections on the part of said Anderson, not that such sale would of itself raise a conclusive presumption of fraud, but it is a circumstance for you to consider in determining the question of a prior contemporary agreement for the sale of such goods by the mortgagor Platt.”
“ The fact that the plaintiff being the mortgagee stood by and allowed the mortgagor to sell a part of the property mentioned in the mortgage would not of itself; unaccompanied by other facts, make the mortgage void-It would do no more than discharge the lien which he holds on the goods which he allowed to be sold, but if you find from the evidence that it was the agreement and intention of the parties that Platt should sell the goods in the store and appropriate the proceeds to his own use then you should find for the defendant ” (plaintiff in' error).
The last instruction and that preceding it were excepted to by the plaintiff in error, who requested a number of instructions to the effect that the mortgage was fraudulent and void as to creditors, which were refused by the court, to which the plaintiff excepted.
In Tallon v. Ellison and Sons, 3 Neb., 75, this court held that a mortgage of goods and chattels, with .possession and fower of sale i/n the mortgagor, was void as against the creditor of the mortgagor. In such a case the illegality of the transaction appears on the face of the instrument, -and it is the duty of the court to pronounce it fraudulent as to creditors, Monteith v. Bax, 4 Neb., 171; it being presumed, where the mortgagor is permitted by the *400terms of the instrument to dispose of the property in all respects as his own, that the transaction was not entered into in good faith as security for the payment of a debt, but as a mode of covering up property in order to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors. But to render a conveyance of property, not fraudulent on its face, void as to creditors, the fraudulent purpose must be shared by both the grantor and grantee. If a mortgage is made to secure a bona fide debt, and the mortgagee has no notice of a fraudulent intent on the part of the mortgagor, such mortgage will be held to be valid. And when a mortgage contains no unlawful provisions, it can only be declared void by proof of fraud in fact, which under our statutes is a question for a jury to find.
The question of fraudulent intent is generally determined from the existence of other facts which tend to show it. In but few instances can it be shown by direct testimony, and must therefore be established by circumstantial evidence; but the questions as to the existence of facts showing a fraudulent intent are alone for the j ury to determine, and not for the court. If, however, certain facts are conceded to exist, the question of their sufficiency to indicate a fraudulent intent becomes a question of law, which the court must determine. But the question of the credibility of witnesses rests entirely with the jury. In the case at bar, the testimony of the witnesses is not embodied in the record. We are merely told what thé parties proved.
The so-called proof is very vague and indefinite. We are told that the store was kept open “ until'about forty days after Platt’s death. The amount of sales does not appear, but no part of the proceeds of said sales was applied to the satisfaction of said mortgage.” As to the groceries,'we are told that a part were sold, a part were used in Platt’s family, and the rest remained undisposed of. When we remember that it is shown that *401the entire stock was only of the value of from $300 to $500, it is apparent that the sales were inconsiderable, and they may have been of the most trifling character and be consistent with the so-called proof in the record.
, The mortgage not being fraudulent on its face, the question of fraudulent intent was properly submitted to the jury, who found in favor of the defendant in error. It is well settled in this court, that the verdict of a jury will not be set aside unless clearly against the weight of evidence; but a mere difference of opinion between the court and jury will not authorize the court to set aside a verdict. Seymour v. Street, 5 Neb., 79. Blackburn v. Ostrander, 5 Neb., 219.
As it does not affirmatively appear that the verdict is erroneous the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.