The error first assigned is, that the court below erred in sustaining the demurrer to the additional answer of P. P. Lowe and wife, as to improvements and expenditures made by him upon the premises in controversy.
It appears from the petition and original answer, that P. P. Lowe and Anne, his wife, in right of the said Anne., had been in peaceable possession of said premises (lot No. 98S in the city of Dayton), for several years prior to the commencement of the suit, improving the same and claiming title thereto, under a deed duly executed to them and William Bomberger, as heirs of George W. Bomberger, deceased, by the sheriff of Montgomery county, on a judicial sale of said lot, made in good faith and for value, to their said ancestor as the property of William M. Seely, who, as the petition avers, then was, and still is, the owner of said premises. The additional answer alleges, that when said lot came into the possession of Lowe and wife it was vacant and unoccupied, and that while in their possession P. P. Lowe had innocently *267expended large sums of money, in said additional answer specified, for taxes from 1846 to 1859, inclusive, and for curbing, guttering and filling up said lot under tbe orders of tbe city council, and also in erecting a house thereon. The additional answer asked that, in. case the deed should be set aside, the amount of Lowe’s expenditures, after deducting all rents received, which are specifically stated, should be ascertained by the court before ordering a sale, and the amount thus ascertained paid over to him out of the proceeds of the sale.
The facts stated in the additional' answer are not pleaded in bar of the action^ as the counsel for defendant in error seems to suppose, but as creating a right in equity to a portion of the proceeds, if a sale should be ordered, as demanded by petitioner.
The action is a suit in equity, to subject lands, fraudulently aliened, to the payment of a judgment against the grantor, in the hands of the grantee’s heirs, who, as admitted by the demurrer, were ignorant of the fraud, and made the improvements innocently, while in possession of the premises.
It would seem from this statement, that the relief asked should have been granted in the same action, in analogy to the relief given in actions for the recovery of real estate, under the “ act for the relief of occupying claimants of land.” Equity had obtained jurisdiction of the parties and subject matter, and should, therefore, in order to avoid a multiplicity of suits, retain the cause and do complete justice between the parties. That this may be done, in such cases, by courts of equity, is well settled in this state. Henry v. Doctor, 9 Ohio Rep. 49; Salmond v. Price, 13 Ohio Rep. 369.
It is true, that the fraud of Bomberger, found by the court below, avoids the title cast by descent upon his heirs; but they are not charged with actual knowledge of the fraud, and are admitted by the demurrer to have made the improvements innocently, while in possession of the lot; and we are of the opinion that the fraud of the ancestor, of which they were ignorant when the improvements were made, should not deprive them of compensation for their expenditures; especially where the laches of the creditor, as in the present case, *268left them for a series of years in possession of the premises, thereby inducing a belief that their title was indisputable.
In our opinion, the demurrer to the additional answer should have been overruled, and the court, having found the transfer fraudulent and void, should have directed an investigation to ascertain the amount of the expenditures for which the defendant, Lowe, was thus equitably entitled to compensation ; and this brings us to notice the decree pronounced by the superior court, to which exception is also taken.
The decree orders a salé of the premises to satisfy the judgment, but “ saves the right of defendants under the occupying claimant law,” and directs an appraisement of the lot “ free from improvements made thereon by said defendants.”
This decree is liable to several objections:
1st. Even if it were a case to which the statute was, in terms, applicable, the court, having possession of the cause, should have administered relief in pursuance of its provisions; but the suit not being of that character, the court should have granted the relief in analogy to the statute, and permitted the defendants to retain possession, until such relief was accorded.
2nd. A portion of the improvements, the curbing and guttering done under the order of the city council, are not wpon the premises, but necessarily enhance the value of the lot. The 'effect of these improvements could not be disconnected from the lot in its valuation by the.appraisers, and would not, perhaps, be a subject for compensation under the statute. So, too, the taxes paid by the. defendant, whereby the lot; was saved from forfeiture, are not within the letter of the statute in actions other than suits against purchasers at tax sales; but they are all, we think, clearly within its spirit, and when administering relief in analogy to the statute, may very properly be made subjects of equitable compensation.
3d. A still more serious objection to this decree is, that instead of terminating litigation, it inaugurates further controversies. It authorizes, if it does not invite, subsequent litigation as to the value of the improvements, and has. *269therefore, a direct tendency to embarrass or prevent all sales under it. It expressly exempts the improvements from valuation and sale, and affects to confer upon the purchaser a title to the naked lot, subject to the right of the defendant to establish, in further proceedings, the value of the improvement's upon it. The amount of such future recovery is necessarily uncertain, and but few would be willing to hazard the purchase. A sale, under a judicial order, ought always to confer upon the purchaser a title freed from all claims of the litigant parties.
3. It is insisted that the court erred in permitting Seely, one of the defendants, after the decease of George M. Bom-berger, the ancestor of plaintiffs in error, to prove a fraudulent combination between himself and said George, to defraud the plaintiff below and prevent his subjection of said lot to the payment of his judgment.
Waiving the question whether the fraudulent grantor, in suits by creditors to set aside the conveyance, is an adverse party to his grantee, in the sense of section 313 of the eode^ it is sufficient for us to say, that the present case does not come within any of the exceptions created by that section. Bomberger’s administrator was not, and, indeed, could not properly have been, made a party to the suit below.
Seely, though a party to the suit, is a competent witness, under section 310, and section 313 incapacitates him from testifying, only in those cases, “ where the adverse party is the guardian of an idiot, lunatic or deaf and dumb person, or the executor or administrator of a deceased person, or the guardian of a child or children of a deceased person, when the facts to be proved transpired before the death of such deceased person,” etc. This section sedulously avoids extending its protection to adult heirs as such, though its propriety could hardly have escaped consideration in drafting the provisions as to executors, administrators and guardians. The section has been revised, altered and modified several times by the legislature, and it would be going too far for us, on its assumed propriety, to add a disqualification to those already *270specified, and thus in effect to repeal pro tanto, section 310, of the code.
4. It is insisted that the court also erred in rendering judgment for plaintiff below, without proof that Seely had no property subject to levy, that fact having been putin issue, it is said, by the pleadings.
The petition avers, that “ the said Seely has no property whereon to levy,” while the answer says merely, “ these defendants do not admit that said Seely has no property on which to levy.” Here certainly is no denial of the averment, much less any affirmation that Seely had such property, the proper way to controvert such negative averment. Nor is there any reason stated for the absence of such affirmation or denial. There was then no such controverting of the averment, as put the plaintiff upon proof of its truth. Code sec. 127. A mere call for proof unaccompanied by a denial, would not have imposed such obligation upon the plaintiff. Bentley v. Dorcas, 11 Ohio St. Rep. 309.
5. It is also claimed, that the absence of an averment in the petition, of the issuance of an execution upon the judgment and its return of no property subject to levy, is fatal to the plaintiff's action, and that the demurrer to the answer, reaching back to the petition, requires a reversal of the judgment for this cause.
Section 458 of the code, which, in this respect, is but a reprint of section 16 of the act directing the mode of proceeding in chancery (Swan’s Stat. of 1841, p. 704), makes the fact of no property in the judgment debtor, and not the return upon an execution, the basis of an action to subject the debtor’s equitable interest in real estate, etc. Under the chancery act above referred to, it was well settled, that the issuance of an execution and its return was not necessary, if the fact of no property is averred in the petition. Gilmore v. Miami Exporting Co. et al. 2 Ohio Rep. 294; Piatt v. St. Clair’s Heirs et al. 6 Ohio Rep. 227. The statute confers the right of action, and, it would seem, if it is made to depend on the want of property in the judgment debtor subject to levy, that the averment of such want of property, is ab *271that is necessary, and indeed much more satisfactory, than the averment that an execution had been returned indorsed no property found. Such a return is, at most, only evidence of the fact, and may be true although the debtor in fact had such property. We see no occasion, therefore, to disturb the rule heretofore sanctioned by this court and clearly defensible upon principle.
Lastly, it is claimed that the finding of the superior court, that the transfer of lot No. 988, from Seely to Bomberger, deceased, was fraudulent and void, as against the defendant in error, is contrary to the evidence.
The bill of exceptions purports to set forth all the testimony given at the trial. We have carefully considered the testimony thus set forth, and notwithstanding the apparent conflict between the witnesses, we are by no means prepared to say that the court erred in finding that transfer fraudulent and void, nor even, that we should have found differently upon the same testimony.
We do, however, for the reasons hereinbefore stated, find that there was error in sustaining the demurrer to the additional answer of P. P. Lowe, and also in the rendition of the order or decree shown by the record.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
Sutliee, C. J., and Gholson, Brinkerhoee and Scott, JJ , concurred.