The appellee brought this suit to set aside a conveyance executed by John A. Hunsinger to Peter Hun-singer, alleging in his complaint that it was executed to defraud the creditors of the grantor.
The claim of the appellee to subject the land to sale on execution was based on-a judgment obtained against John A. Hunsinger for the seduction of the appellee’s wife, and on the trial the court permitted the appellee to prove a conversation with Peter Hunsinger, in which, he spoke of the intimacy between John A. Hunsinger and the appellee’s wife, and of the probability that it would cause great loss to John A. Hunsinger.
There was no error in admitting this evidence. It tended to show that the grantee had knowledge that there was an existing claim against his grantor, and it was, at least, some evidence tending to impeach his good faith. It tended to prove that the appellee had a claim against the grantor prior to the execution of the conveyance, and that the holder of the claim was a creditor, for one who has a cause of action for the seduction of his wife is, in legal contemplation, a creditor of the wrong-doer. One having a legal right to damages capable of enforcement is a creditor. Bishop v. Redmond, 83 Ind. 157; Shean v. Shay, 42 Ind. 375 (13 Am. R. 366); Rogers v. Evans, 3 Ind. 574; Wright v. Brandis, 1 Ind. 336; Smith v. Culbertson, 9 Rich. 106; Damon v. Bryant, 19 Mass. 411.
It is always competent to prove the grantee’s knowledge of the grantor’s indebtedness, in suits to set aside fraudulent conveyances.
There was no error in admitting in evidence the transcript of the judgment recovered against John A. Hunsinger. The judgment was competent for the purpose of establishing the claim of the appellee, but, of course, did not bind the appellant Peter Hunsinger further than it established the fact that the appellee was a creditor of his grantor.
No objections were made to the form of the clerk’s certifi*393•cate of the transcript on the trial, and it is too late to make them now.
Several of the questions discussed by counsel are effectually disposed of by the general statement, that, in a suit to set •aside a fraudulent conveyance, the plaintiff is not confined to evidence of the one transaction, but has a right to give evidence of the general course of business between the grantor and the grantee, as well as of distinct transactions.
The statements of the grantors, by whom a fraudulent conveyance is executed, are admissible against themselves, and can not be excluded from the jury on the objection of the grantee, although they may not bind him. In this instance, the statements of the grantors were competent at least as against themselves, and were rightly admitted. The declarations of the grantors will, however, be admissible against the grantee wherever it appears, either by direct or circumstantial evidence, that they and the grantee were acting in concert. Bishop v. Redmond, supra; Daniels v. McGinnis, 97 Ind. 549; Riehl v. Evansville, etc., Ass’n, 104 Ind. 70.
The question as to whether a conspiracy existed, is one peculiarly for the trial court, and where there is any evidence at all supporting the decision of that court upon the question, it will be respected by this court. Huckstep v. O’Hair, 8 Ind. 253; Smith v. Freeman, 71 Ind. 85; Card v. State, 109 Ind. 415.
In this instance, there was evidence tending to show that all of the defendants to the suit had combined to prevent the appellee from collecting his judgment, and that to effect this purpose conveyances were executed and attempts made to prevent him from obtaining the testimony of material witnesses.
The trial court did not err in admitting the deposition of John F. McKee. The witness stated in his deposition that he was ill and unable to appear in court, and the presumption is that the illness continued. Aside from this the record •shows that the certificate of a physician was read to the court, *394and although it is not in the record, we must presume that it sustains the ruling of the court, for the presumption, in the, absence of countervailing facts, is always in favor of the rulings of the trial court.
Filed April 19, 1887.It is only where there is a very clear and prejudicial abuse of discretion in permitting leading questions to be asked, that a judgment will be reversed, and certainly no such abuse appears here. There are, indeed, many cases holding that a judgment will not in any event be reversed on the ground that leading questions were permitted.
It is the settled rule in this court, that questions on cross-examination must be limited to the subject covered or entered upon in the examination in chief. This rule disposes of the-points made upon the refusal of the trial court to permit the appellant to propound several questions to the appellee.
A person who pays the purchase-money after notice of the fraudulent purpose of his grantor is not entitled to protection as a bona fide purchaser. In order to entitle a purchaser to protection, it must appear that he bought the land and. paid for it before notice of the fraud. Rhodes v. Green, 36 Ind. 7; Anderson v. Hubble, 93 Ind. 570.
In this case there is evidence fairly tending to show that the grantee had notice of the grantor’s fraudulent purpose before payment of the purchase-money, and tending, also, to show that the grantee, at the time he accepted, the conveyance, assented to that fraudulent purpose.
Judgment affirmed.