The appellee, Comfort E. Stanley, is the widow and also the administratrix of the estate of Henry L. Stanley, deceased. This action was brought by the appellants, as claimants against the estate of said decedent, to set aside as fraudulent two deeds, one given by Henry L. Stanley and wife to the appellee, Abe Ackerman, and one from said Ackerman to Henry L. Stanley and Comfort E. Stanley, "as husband and Avife, and to subject the land so conveyed to the payment of said claims. Comfort E. Stanley answered the complaint by general denial, and also by a special plea to which a demurrer was sustained. She also filed a cross-complaint asserting her ownership of said land in fee simple, and asking to have her title quieted. The facts were found specially by the court, with conclusions of law; (1) that the deeds in question should be set aside as fraudulent against creditors; (2) that Comfort E. Stanley was the equitable owner of the undivided one-half of said land, and (3)' that the remaining undivided one-half of the land should be sold in payment of the debts of said estate, subject to the right of the widow to the one-third thereof. The appellants contend that the court erred in its second and third conclusions of law, and also in overruling the motion for a new trial. The appellees assign cross-error as to the first conclusion of law, ánd also as to the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the special answer. The cross-errors, however, cannot be considered. Appellees took no exception to the first conclusion of law, and they have not discussed in their *353brief the alleged error of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the special paragraph of ánswer. Moreover, we do not think there was any error in the rulings complained of. See, as to the affirmative answer, Crow v. Carver, 133 Ind. 260.
The facts as found by the court show: (1) That on August 26,1884, the land in question was conveyed to Henry L. Stanley by his father for $4,000.00, of which sum $2,000.00 was treated as an advancement by the father of said Henry L., and the remaining $2,000.00 paid by the father of Comfort E., as an advancement to her husband and herself. She and her husband soon after joined in a receipt showing that her father had advanced’her said sum of $2,000.00; (2) that the deed for the land -was written, signed, and acknowledged in the absence of Henry L. and his wife, and afterwards, on the same day, Henry L. Stanley, together with his father and his wife’s father, went to the office of the justice who had written the deed, and where the same was ready for delivery, at which time and place the deed was delivered to Henry L. by his father, his wife’s father also then and there paying to Henry L.’s father said $2,000.00, the one-half of the purchase price of said land, for and on behalf of his said daughter; (3) that the conveyance so made was executed to and in the name of Henry L. Stanley alone, without the knowledge or consent of his said wife; (4) that the deed so made was accepted by said Henry L. Stanley, and duly recorded; (5) that on December 12, 1887, Henry L. Stanley.purchased two lots in the town of Albion for $1,100.00, and placed the title thereto in the name of his wife, for the purpose of paying her the amount her father had put in the real estate in question, and thereafter he made improvements on said lots until he considered that he had *354made good to her the amount, her father had advanced to them; that he owed no debts at the time when the title to said lots was so vested in his wife; but there is no evidence that she accepted or agreed to accept, and she did not accept the title to said lots in lieu of or in satisfaction of any right, title, or interest she had in the lands in question; (6) that on April 16, 1889, Henry L. Stanley purchased- a second tract of land, paying part cash and assuming a mortgage debt for the remainder. This mortgage being foreclosed, he and his wife executed another mortgage on the same land to obtain money to pay off the first mortgage debt; (7) that on October 12, 1893, Henry L. Stanley and his wife conveyed the land in controversy to the appellant Ackerman, and on the same day, and as a part of the same transaction, Ackerman reconveyed the land to Stanley and wife, to be held by them by entireties; (8) that there was no consideration for either of the said conveyances, but they were both made for the purpose of placing the title to said real estate in the joint names of Henry L. Stanley and his wife, with the full knowledge on their part that the land would thus be jfiaced beyond reach of the creditors of Henry L. Stanley, and the further purpose of cheating, hindering, delaying, and defrauding such creditors; (9) that until several days after her husband’s death, Comfort E. Stanley had no knowledge at any time that her husband was indebted to anyone except as to the mortgage debt mentioned in finding six, and also a debt due to the appellant, Walker, which latter debt is likewise secured upon the property for which the indebtedness was incurred; (10) • that the land in controversy, on October 12/1893, when it was conveyed to Henry L. Stanley and wife to be held by entireties, was worth $3,200.00; (11) that Henry L. Stanley was then insolvent, and so remained *355until his death, November 6,1893; (12) that on November 21, 1893, Comfort E. Stanley was appointed administratrix of her husband’s estate, and is claiming to be the owner of the real estate in controversy by reason of the conveyance mentioned in finding seven; (13) that the estate of Henry L. Stanley is insolvent; (14) that the mortgage mentioned in finding six has been foreclosed, and there remained a balance of the judgment thereon due and unpaid after the sale of the mortgaged land, which balance is still unpaid; (15) that other claims filed and allowed against said estate, and claims filed but not allowed, all remain unpaid; (16) that appellant’s several claims, in the amounts named, are just claims against said estate; (17) that all said indebtedness was contracted and in existence on the 12th day of October, 1893, when the transfers in dispute were made; (18) that the entire personal estate of Henry L. Stanley, over and above the $500.00 taken by the widow, is $125.80, being but a very small part of the indebtedness aforesaid.
There can be no question that the first conclusion of law, namely, that the conveyances under which Comfort E. Stanley claims title to the land in controversy are fraudulent and void as against the creditors of Henry L. Stanley, deceased, and that they should be set aside as to such claims. The findings show that at the time said conveyances were made, Henry L. Stanley was hopelessly insolvent; that he died a few days thereafter, still insolvent, and that his estate is insolvent. It is, besides, expressly found that the conveyances were made without consideration, and with the purpose of cheating, hindering, delaying and defrauding the creditors of Henry L. Stanley. These findings are abundantly supported by the evidence.
But, in its second conclusion of law, the court held that Comfort E. Stanley is the owner of the equitable *356title to the undivided one-half of said land. If this conclusion is correct, it must be by reason of the first four findings made by the court. The first finding , shows the making of the deed to Henry L. Stanley by his father. One-half the consideration for this deed was remitted by way of advancement from the father to the son. The other one-half was paid to Henry L. Stanley’s father by his wife’s father, “as an advancement to him and his wife Comfort E. Stanley,” and for which, shortly thereafter, the wife’s father took a joint receipt from the young husband and wife, “showing that he had advanced her said sum of $2,000.00.” A father may make an advancement to his daughter by paying for land, the deed to which is taken by her husband in his own name. Baker v. Leathers, 3 Ind. 558. The father may thus make the advancement in the manner he thinks best, and, even if the daughter should object, still he might, by will or otherwise, thus fix the portion to be given to her. The property belongs to the father to do with as he deems best; and it does not follow that because the advancement is so made the land does not belong wholly to the husband. There is nothing in the findings or in the evidence to show that any trust in favor of Comfort E. Stanley was created by the deed to her husband. That deed was made to him by his father, and was completed and ready for delivery before his wife’s 'father paid any part of the $2,000.00. The matter was wholly arranged by the respective fathers. As a matter of fact, though, the daughter did give her consent that the payment by her father of a part of the purchase price of the land held by her husband should be taken as an advancement to her. By the joint receipt given by her and her husband to her father, she, so. far as she had any control over the matter; ratified the act of her father, and thus agreed that the deed should be held by her husband as owner of the land.
*357In Hileman v. Hileman, 85 Ind. 1, where a father had made an advancement to his daughter by reducing the price of land conveyed by him to her husband, it was held that the husband, in the absence of any agreement or understanding then had, was not liable to his wife, as trustee or otherwise, for the amount of the advancement. “The transaction,” said the court, “amounted to a gift to the husband.”
The record also shows, in the case at bar, that the theory upon which the appellee, Comfort E. Stanley, proceeded during the whole trial was, that she was the owner in fee simple of all the land in controversy by virtue of the deeds found by the court to be fraudulent. The complaint asked simply to have these deeds set aside, and that the land be sold to pay the debts of the decedent. She answered to this by a general denial, and by filing a cross-complaint asking to have her title quieted as to all the land. Her evidence as given in the record shows the same theory, and the court expressly finds this to have been her claim. But it has often been held that a party cannot seek relief on one theory in the pleadings, still less in the pleadings and evidence introduced, and then ask to have relief given on another theory. Johnson v. Pontious, 118 Ind. 270, and cases there cited.
In addition, there can be no question that the legal title to the land in controversy was in Henry L. Stanley, under the deed from his father. Even, therefore, 4f the appellee might, against the appellant’s complaint, defend her right to an undivided one-half of said land by an appeal to the equity side of the court, still she then would be required to do equity as well as to ask it. The court finds that she received from her husband the two town lots, with improvements thereon, as an equivalent for the amount paid by her father towards the purchase price of the land held by *358her husband. This town property she still holds under the claim that she did not agree to accept it for the purpose for which her husband gave it to her. This is not doing equity, but standing on her legal right. In a court of conscience, she cannot have the legal right to one property, given to her on equitable considerations in relation to the other, and also have the equitable right to the other property against the legal right of its owner, who had given her the equivalent of any possible equitable interest she might have in it. If law prevails over equity as to the deed held by her, so should it also as to the deed held by her husband.
Appellee must therefore fail, whether we consider her legal rights or her equitable claims. It was of course competent for the husband and wife so to transfer this property that they might hold it by entireties, whatever reasons they might have for so doing, provided, only, they did not thus predjudice the rights of bona fide creditors. The legal title of the husband, which he retained for over nine years, will be upheld for the protection of' such creditors. In the absence of any lien under which she is liable, the widow has, of course, her statutory one-third interest in her husband’s lands; but the facts in this case do not disclose any further interest of hers against creditors in the land in controversy.
The court therefore erred in its second conclusion of law, while, in the third conclusion of law, it should have been found that all, instead of the undivided one-half of the land in dispute, ought to be sold in payment of the debts of the estate, subject to the widow’s rights in the undivided one-third thereof.
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to the court to restate its conclusions of law in accordance with this opinion, and to render judgment thereon in favor of the appellants.