In addition to their general verdict the jury, pursuant to request of the parties, returned twenty-three special findings. The court gave thirty-one instructions, and the defendant asked eight, which were refused. It is claimed *287that eighteen of these special findings are not supported by the evidence or are not responsive; that the court erred in the admission of evidence, in giving sixteen of the instructions given, in refusing to give three of the instructions asked by defendant, and that the general verdict is not supported by the evidence, so that the errors insisted upon by appellant are thirty-nine in number..
To determine each of these assigned errors seriatim would extend this opinion to a length entirely unwarranted by the importance of the questions presented. We will endeavor so to consider the case as to compress it within appropriate limits. It is not claimed by defendant that the note sued on did not create a liability to Rogers to the amount of the note. In his original answer defendant states that he knew of no reason why judgment should not be entered against him in the garnishment proceedings, and in the answer to the substituted petition he asks only that the judgments in the garnishment proceedings may be set off against the note. This is all the defendant can legally claim. He could not defend against the note by showing that it was executed in consideration of a transfer of real estate in fraud of creditors. To such a defense the maxim nemo allegcms suam turjoitudmem est audiendus applies. This consideration very much simplifies the case, and narrows the questions of which a consideration is necessary to its determination.
The jury found specially that Rogers in good faith indorsed said note to A. P. Beadle, on or about the 9th day of August, 1869, and that Beadle was the true owner and holder thereof at that date. If this finding is supported by competent evidence, and the plaintiffs are not estopped from denying the liability of defendant to the garnishment creditors, it must be decisive of the case; for defendant was not garnished until the 18th of August, 1869, and the judgments against him as garnishee were not entered until in February, April, and May, 1872, and the defendant admits that he knew of the transfer to Beadle in August, 1869.
If, therefore, the note was assigned to Beadle in good faith *288on the 9th of August, 1869, the defendant was not liable thereon to the creditors of Rogers at the time the garnishee judgments were entered against him, and they constitute no defense to the note, even though it be admitted that the plaintiffs took the same, not as owner in fact, but merely for collection.
It is claimed, however, that this finding of the jury is not supported by the evidence, and that the transfer to Beadle was made for the purpose of placing the note beyond the reach of creditors.
It is not practicable without too much incumbering our reports to review at length the evidence upon which questions of fact are determined by a jury, and it is not our custom to do so.
It is the peculiar province of the jury to respond to the facts, and when they have done so, and a motion for a new trial has been overruled, this court very reluctantly interferes with the verdict.
Evidence was introduced tending to show that the farm sold, and in consideration of which the note was executed, was the homestead of Rogers, and not liable for his debts, that he sold it for the purpose of voluntarily devoting a portion of the proceeds to the payment of his debts, that Beadle at the time of the assignment assumed the payment of some of these debts, and executed his note to Rogers for $500, which amount Rogers intended to invest in a new homestead. It -was no fraud upon creditors to make whatever disposition he pleased of property exempt from execution.
Whilst it must be admitted that there are circumstances casting grave suspicion upon the bonafides of the transfer, and which might lead us to resolve the question differently were it before us as an original one, to be determined solely from the evidence, yet we cannot say that this special finding is so far without support in the evidence as to justify us in setting it aside. Did we overturn every verdict, while we feel' that sitting in place of the jury we would have reached a different conclusion, we would invade the province of the jury, and render a determination of fact by it a mere expensive farce.
*289In all of the garnishment judgments, indemnifying bonds were either filed or ordered to be filed, so that defendant’s liability on the Rogers note being conceded, he can sustain no loss by being held liable to plaintiff. Besides, he knew of the assignment long before these judgments were entered against him, and lie should have shown this fact to the court. In any event there is nothing of which the defendant can justly complain.
II. The court admitted evidence tending to show that the farm for which the note was given was the homestead of Rogers. This evidence was objected to, and the admitting of it is assigned as error. Appellant’s counsel in their reply, however, concede that the evidence was admissible for the purpose of rebutting the idea that Rogers intended to defraud his creditors, and they say they requested the court to so instruct the jury, and that it was not proper to consider the homestead question, or the exempt character of the note given for it for any other purpose, and that he refused to do so. It is apparent, however, that if this evidence was considered for any other purpose by the jury, it worked no prejudice to the defendant under the views above expressed.
III. In the garnishment proceeding of Day, Tilden & Co. against Coffman, the plaintiffs filed their petition of intervention, to which Coffman filed his answer, and afterward plaintiffs filed their motion to dismiss their intervention petition, which was sustained. Appellants claim that the issue in all the garnishment proceedings was the same, and that by thus intervening plaintiffs are estopped from now denying defendants’ liability to the plaintiffs in those cases.
IJpon this branch of the case the court instructed the jury that if Dalhoff & Co. appeared in the garnishee cases and became a party thereto, it was their duty to set up and plead all their defenses against the right of said creditors to hold said Coffman as garnishee, and if they failed to do so, or failed to defeat the garnishee proceedings in those eases, they cannot in this case dispute the right of said creditors to recover, hut if plaintiffs appeared by petition of intervention, and by leave of *290court dismissed tbeir petition before a final submission of the case, then sucb dismissal would be without prejudice to again trying said issues in this case.
This instruction, we think, fairly presented the law applicable to this feature of the case. Plaintiffs were under no obligation to intervene and test the creditors’ right to a judgment in that case. Having appeared voluntarily and filed their petition of intervention, there is no reason why they should not be allowed to dismiss the same, and withdraw their appearance, at any time before final submission; and such dismissal, without any express order to that effect, would be without prejudice to their right to contest the creditors’ claims afterward, in the appropriate action.
The above view, we believe, disposes of every question material to the proper disposition of the case.
Affirmed.