delivered the opinion of the court:
The appellant filed thirty-three assignments of error in the Appellate Court, all of which he renews in this court. The greater number of these assignments relate to matters affecting only the other parties to the proceeding and in which appellant has no concern. Such other parties do not complain, and he cannot do so for them. The orders commanding the appellant to deliver property to the receiver and to make an accounting, and the money decree entered against him, affect the appellant, and the assignments of error in respect of such orders- and the decree are all upon which he is entitled to be heard.
It is strenuously urged the superior court, as a court of equity, was without jurisdiction to enter any order or decree in the case, for the reason, it is insisted, it appeared upon the hearing that the execution issued on the judgment in favor of the appellee bank was held by the sheriff but eight days, and was then returned by direction of the attorney for the judgment plaintiff. The bill alleged the issuance of the execution and return nulla bona. But the allegation was superfluous, for the reason-the bill did not seek to reach and apply equitable assets of the judgment debtor to the satisfaction of the judgment, but to set aside a fraudulent transfer of the stock of merchandise which, as the bill alleg'ed and the evidence abundantly established, Mrs. Leslie, Miller and the appellant had collusively caused to be made to the appellant for the purpose of hindering and delaying the creditors of the judgment debtor. It was therefore unnecessary to the maintenance of the bill it should be alleged and proven that an execution had been issued on the judgment and-returned “no property found” wherewith to satisfy the judgment. Dillman v. Nadelhoffer, 162 Ill. 625; Comstock-Castle Stove Co. v. Baldwin, 169 id. 636; Hughes v. Noyes, 171 id. 575.
A judgment creditor may, át once on the entry of his judgment and the creation of a lien thereby or thereunder, file a bill in equity to remove a fraudulent conveyance of the property of the judgment debtor. The judgment does not, however, constitute a lien on personal property. A lien on such property may, however, be created by the issuance of an execution and placing the same in the hands of the sheriff to execute, and when that is done a bill in equity may be filed to set aside an alleged fraudulent conveyance of personal property of the judgment debtor in order the lien of the execution may be enforced. In such state of case it is immaterial whether an execution had been issued and returned nulla bona prior to the filing of the bill. Newman v. Willetts, 52 Ill. 98; Comstock-Castle Stove Co. v. Baldwin, supra; Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances, (4th ed.) sec. 535.
The bill in the case at bar did not aver that an execution had been issued and was then in the hands of the sheriff to be executed. The appellant did not demur to the bill, but filed an answer thereto. The appellant by his answer refused to admit or deny the allegations of the bill with reference to the return of the execution on the judgment, but averred the complainant had not exhausted its remedy at law before filing the bill. A supplemental bill, and appellant’s answer thereto, merely reiterated the averments of the original bill and answer with reference to the return of an execution nulla dona. The proof disclosed the issuance of an execution and a return thereon, as before stated. The appellant insisted the proof also showed the return was at the direction of counsel for the plaintiffs, and under the ruling in Scheubert v. Honel, 152 Ill. 313, did not show the complainant had exhausted its legal remedy. Appellant also insists in this court that a court of equity was wanting in jurisdiction to entertain the bill, for the reason, as he urges, it was not proven by the return the sheriff was unable to find property upon which to levy the execution. The appellee insisted, and now insists, it appeared from the proof the sheriff returned the execution, not because of any direction given by counsel for complainant so to do, but because he was unable to find any property upon which to levy the execution.
It appeared from the evidence that counsel for the complainant requested the sheriff to return the execution, but it quite clearly appeared the execution was returned because of the inability of the sheriff to find any property whereon to make a levy, and not by reason of the request or direction of counsel. It was not essential to the jurisdiction of a court of equity in such cases as this that an execution should have been issued and returned nulla dona before filing the bill. Whether it was essential that an execution should have been in the hands of the sheriff and a lien thereby created was not mooted in the bill, the answer, or otherwise in the record. If the appellant desired to challenge the jurisdiction of the court to entertain the bill on the ground a lien did not exist in favor of the judgment creditor, he should have done so by demurrer to the bill or by his answer. He did not raise that defense in any way in the trial court and has not raised or insisted upon it in this court. The relief granted by the court is not foreign to equity jurisdiction, and the cause having been thus submitted, heard and determined, the appellant could not, had he desired so to do, now be heard to urge it was necessary to the jurisdiction of a court of equity it should have been alleged and proven that an execution had been issued on the judgment and lodged in the hands of the sheriff at the time the bill was filed. Stout v. Cook, 41 Ill. 447; Monson v. Bragdon, 159 id. 61; Kaufman v. Wiener, 169 id. 596.
There is no force in the objection that it was error to allow the supplemental bill to be filed. The argument in support of the objection is, that the original bill was defective and it could not be aided by setting up matters which subsequently arose, and that the complainant in the bill had been defeated upon a hearing of the issues thereunder before the supplemental bill was filed. We do not think there was any defect in the original bill, or that the supplemental matters set up in the supplemental bill were without connection or relation to the grounds of recovery relied upon in the original bill, or that the supplemental bill made a new case. The original bill and supplemental.bill both proceeded upon the same general ground of fraudulent conspiracy on the part of defendants to the bill, including appellant. The amended or supplemental bill sets up, in addition thereto, the composition agreement, by the terms of which the judgment due the appellee bank was to be paid in full, and the claims of Mrs. Leslie and Miller, reduced to the amounts justly due them, were also to be paid, and which agreement also provided for the payment of percentages upon other indebtedness of said George A. Leslie. Aside from this, the appellant did not abide his demurrer to the supplemental bill, but made answer thereto.
In support of the insistence the case made by the original bill had been heard and decided adversely to the complainant therein, it is urged it appears from a certificate of evidence preserved by the appellee bank that the chancellor, when the investigation was being had as to the withdrawal by Mrs. Leslie of her objections filed to the report of the master, stated to her, in substance, that he did not agree with the conclusion reached by the master that the note was fraudulent upon which the judgment in her favor against her husband had been entered, and inquired if she, with this knowledge of the court’s views, still desired to withdraw her objections to the master’s report. Mrs. Leslie answered that she adhered to her course in withdrawing her objections to the report. The evidence disclosed not only that the appellant participated in the fraudulent scheme to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of said George A. Leslie through the medium of the collusive judgments in favor of Mrs. Leslie and Miller, but that Mrs. Leslie had become satisfied the appellant, having obtained the possession of her husband’s property as purchaser at the sheriff’s sale, intended to defraud and wrong her out of any benefit therefrom. This fact, no doubt, had its influence in inducing her to withdraw her objections to the report of the master and enter into the composition agreement with the other of her husband’s creditors, whereby she was allowed a claim in the amount justly due her. We think the evidence taken before the master justified the conclusion that Mrs. Leslie had no legal, enforceable demand against her husband for the greater part of the amount of her note, and that, though she may have been free from a fraudulent intent in taking the note in an amount largely in excess of the amount legally due her from her husband, yet that she knew that the note given to Miller for $7104.16 by her husband was fraudulent except as to the sum of $1000, and, as found by the final decree, she, with her husband, Miller and the appellant, entered into a fraudulent scheme to place the property of her husband beyond the reach of his creditors through the medium of judgments to be entered on the notes held by her and Miller and sales of her husband’s property by virtue of executions issued on such judgments. These facts so disclosed by the proofs taken before the master no doubt also aided Mrs. Leslie in determining she ought not to persist in her objections to the report of the master. The chancellor, on the occasion in question, entered no order or decree with reference to the report of the master, and the statements made by the chancellor from the bench as to the view he then entertained of the evidence reported by the master had no effect as a judicial determination of the cause or any issue or contested fact in the case. The supplemental bill reiterated the charge made in the original bill, that Mrs. Leslie, her husband, Miller and the appellant perpetrated a fraud upon the creditors of the husband through the medium of the judgments in favor of Mrs. Leslie and Miller, and the final decree found and declared the charge sustained by the evidence taken in the case.
While the appellant cannot be permitted to keep alive litigation in which others alone are interested, yet as the original and supplemental bills alleged, and the decree found, that the appellant was a party to the conspiracy to defraud the creditors of George A. Leslie, we have considered the evidence bearing upon that charge of fraud. Without extending the opinion by a recitation of the proof, we state our conclusion to be that the evidence removed every doubt of the guilt of the appellant of the charge against him.
The court had full jurisdiction to require appellant to account for the property of George A. Leslie which came into his hands as purchaser at the sheriff’s sale under the agreement entered into by said appellant, Mrs. Leslie and said Miller with the fraudulent intent and purpose of hindering, delaying and cheating the creditors of the said George A. Leslie. We need not recite the various orders made by the court requiring the appellant to appear and make report and submit to an examination in respect of such property and his acts and doings with relation to it. These orders the appellant persistently and contumaciously evaded and failed and refused to obey. Finally, on the 17th day of February, 1899, nearly two years after the entry of the first of the orders made by the court requiring him to deliver up the property in question and to account, he filed an affidavit for the continuation of the investigation against him under the last of the orders, on the ground of alleged illness. The allegations of the affidavit were admitted as evidence and a continuance denied, and he thereby avoided cross-examination of his statements. He stated therein that on the same day he received the goods from the sheriff he sold the entire stock of merchandise to one David Rankin for the sum of $3250, and had collected only $298.35 from the accounts due to said George A. Leslie, making a total of $3518.85 received by him from both sources; that he acted, in disposing of the goods, under the orders of Mrs. Leslie; that he has paid expenses and become liable to pay other sums, but the exact amount whereof he does not know; that he had read the testimony given by George A. Leslie, Mrs. Leslie, Ezra T. Miller and Charles Thompson, and that he specifically denied each and every statement made by each and every of such witnesses in contradiction of the statements made in his affidavit. Upon the consideration óf the entire evidence, including this affidavit, the chancellor reached the conclusion the alleged sale of the merchandise to Rankin was a mere pretense, and that the appellant had in his hands, or had converted to his own use, the goods received by him from the sheriff as purchaser at the execution sale and should account to the receiver for their value, and also account for the additional sum of $298.35 collected from those who were indebted to said George A. Leslie, together with interest from the date of the refusal of appellant to obey the first of the orders entered by the court requiring him to deliver the goods to the receiver or render an accounting. The court found from the proof that the goods were of the value of $7560.25, and that the total amount to be accounted for by the appellant, including interest, was $8483.34. The decree ordered appellant to pay that amount to the receiver within forty-five days.
The complaint of the appellant that he was allowed no compensation for his services as “trustee,” as he styles himself, “of Mrs. Leslie and Miller,” hardly demands discussion. The law does not award compensation for the doing of illegal acts, and does not recognize that any one is entitled to recompense for services rendered in furtherance of a conspiracy to wrong and defraud creditors.
There is no lack of testimony to sustain the finding that the goods delivered to the appellant were of the value of $7560.25. The quantity of the goods which went into the hands of the appellant was determined by the production of the invoice of the purchase thereof by said George A. Leslie and proof of daily sales made from the stock by Leslie, supplemented by other satisfactory proof as to the stock delivered by the sheriff to the appellant. The values of the goods were fixed by the invoices of their purchases from the wholesale dealers. It appears that if valued at retail prices the stock would have been, appraised at mpre than $9000.
The statements of the appellant in his affidavit for a continuance, and the testimony of S. A. French, father of the appellant, are relied upon to establish that the goods were sold to Rankin for $3250. Said S. A. French was solicitor for Mrs. Leslie in the proceeding until she thought she had reason to suspect both solicitor and his son, the appellant, intended to cheat and defraud her out of the property of the husband in the hands of the son. She then employed other counsel. The appellant, as before shown, avoided cross-examination, his ex parte affidavit for a continuance being accepted as testimony 'in the case. S. A. French testified that Rankin bought the stock of goods and paid the appellant for them in currency. He denied that he ever had any of the money alleged to have been paid by Rankin; said his son, the appellant, did not have a bank account, but when he (the son) had more money than he wanted to use he deposited with the witness, but denied receiving any money paid by Rankin. It was proven Mrs. Leslie, as part of the money to be paid her under the fraudulent agreement, received from the Frenches §200 in a check signed by S. A. French, father of the appellant. A number of checks payable to David Rankin, and having endorsed thereon what purported to be the signature of David Rankin, and endorsed also by S. A. French, were deposited to the credit of S. A. French in the Metropolitan National Bank of Chicago. It was proven these checks were given for goods sold to different parties out of the stock of goods owned by George A. Leslie and delivered by the sheriff to the appellant under the sale on the executions in favor of Mrs. Leslie and Miller. The sales for which such checks were given were made after the date given by the Frenches as the time when the alleged sale was made to Rankin. It was proven the name of David Rankin appearing on the checks as endorser was not in the handwriting of David Rankin. Other testimony introduced in behalf of the appellee bank as to statements and admissions of appellant left it beyond doubt the appellant had the goods and was disposing of them after the date of the pretended sale to Rankin. The checks deposited by S. A. French were for goods sold out of the stock owned by Leslie after the date of the alleged sale of those goods to Rankin. Upon the whole evidence the chancellor was fully warranted in finding the sale to Rankin was a mere pretense, invented with the design and purpose of enabling Garrie S. French to relieve himself of liability to accpunt to his co-conspirators in the fraudulent scheme to defeat the creditors of George A. Leslie, or to account to the receiver for any sum above the amount falsely represented to have been received from said David Rankin for the goods.
The decree is right, and it is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.