Thomas M. Clark by deed conveyed his land and personal property, in trust, to secure the payment of two debts to his son, J. Thomas Clark, and also a debt to the trustee of his wife. The question for decision here is, whether these debts are payable pari passu out of the trust fund—proceeds of the sale of the land conveyed—or whether one of the debts, called the Staples debt, secured to the son, is entitled to priority. This debt was represented .by a judgment recovered by the executors of Abram Staples against the grantor, and at the date of recovery bound the lands afterwards conveyed. It is described in the deed as an “execution in the name of Abram Staples’ executors against the said Thomas M. Clark, issued from the clerk’s office of the circuit court of Patrick county on the 6 th day of January, 1871, which execution amounts to the sum of eight hundred and ninety-eight dollars and two cents, principal, interest, and costs, said J. T. Clark having settled the same with said executors.”
It is contended by the creditors of J. T. Clark that this judgment is a subsisting lien on the lands of the debtor, prior and paramount to the lien of the deed of trust, and not disturbed or affected by the deed. It does not appear that J. T. Clark was in any way liable for this judgment or the debt represented by it. If, therefore, he paid it, either voluntarily or at the request of his father, without any agreement or understanding that he was to have the benefit of the judgment, or that it was to be transferred or *264assigned to him, the debt was satisfied by the payment, and the lien extinguished both at law and in equity. There would be no ground for substitution in such a case. That equitable principle, in the absence of special agreement, applies only where the payment is made by one who is surety for the debt or is compelled to pay it in order to protect his own interest. The most reasonable inference from the recital in the deed is, that the parties considered the judgment satisfied, the lien extinguished, and that the son was a creditor at large for the amount paid. J. T. Clark, in his answer to Mrs. Clark’s petition, avers that he purchased and took an assignment of the judgment. But this statement, as well as what he says in regard to his intention in taking the deed, is not responsive to any allegation of the petition. It is affirmative in its character, and not substantiated by any evidence in the cause. No assignment is produced and no attempt made to show that any ever existed. The burden of proof was upon him, or upon those claiming under him. But assuming that he was, as he claims to be, a bona fide purchaser for value of the judgment, and that it was a lien on the land at the time it was conveyed, was the priority which attached to the lien affected by the deed ? He did not disclaim, but on the contrary unequivocally assented to and accepted the deed, as attested by his signature and seal thereto.
Looking to the provisions of the instrument, the statute applicable to it, and the relation of the parties, we are of opinion that the purpose, as also the legal effect, was to secure all the debts without giving preference to either or any of them. They are not classified or arranged with a view to any particular order in the payment, but simply enumerated and described, the deed concluding with the provision, in general terms, that “ it shall be lawful at any time after the 20th December next, for the said Daniel G. Hatcher [the trustee] to sell to the highest bidder, for *265ready money, by advertising and giving twenty days’ previous notice, tbe aforesaid property, or so mucb thereof as will satisfy tbe aforesaid debts, interests and costs.” This is tbe sole declaration witb regard to tbe powers and duties of tbe trustee. Wherein tbe deed is silent, however, tbe law speaks. Our statute (Code of 1873, chapter 113, sections 5, 6) provides that a deed of trust to secure debts- or indemnify sureties may be in a certain form (which is given), or “ to tbe same effect ”; and defines tbe duties of tbe trustee in such a deed. It will be seen, on examination, that tbe object is to prescribe tbe duties and regulate the conduct of tbe trustee only so far as tbe deed fails to do so. When sale is made of tbe trust property, tbe trustee is required, in terms, to apply tbe proceeds “ first to tbe payment of expenses attending tbe execution of tbe trust, including a commission tq tbe trustee of five per cent, on tbe first three hundred dollars and two per cent, on tbe residue of tbe proceeds, and then ■pro rata (or in the order of priority, if any prescribed by the deed) to tbe payment of tbe debt secured,” &c.
In tbe present case, tbe deed, if not in tbe exact form prescribed by tbe statute, is unquestionably “ to tbe same effect.” From tbe language employed, it is quite apparent that tbe draftsman bad tbe statute in mind and intended to conform to it. It must be presumed that tbe deed was made witb a knowledge of tbe law on tbe part of those who executed it; and, as no priority is “ prescribed by tbe deed,” tbe law declares that tbe debts secured shall be paid pro rata. And this construction, as we think, is in accordance witb tbe real intention of tbe parties. It is not believed that tbe grantor, in securing debts to bis wife and son, designed to make any distinction between them. If any preference bad been contemplated, we should expect to find it plainly expressed in tbe deed.
In determining tbe question of priority, we have not-*266"been influenced by the report of Commissioner Moir, filed in the case of Campbell’s Adm’r v. Clark’s Adm’r and others, and improperly copied by the clerk into the record of this ■cause, of which it was not a part.
The decree under review, so far as it accords priority to the Staples debt under the deed of trust, must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in order to final decree, in conformity with the views expressed in this opinion.
Decree reversed.