dbmverhd the opinion op thu court.
Th.eod.ore Schwartz and Frederick Janssen were members of the late banking house of Theodore Schwartz & Co., at Louisville, Ky. Janssen held the legal title to a block between Twenty-sixth and Twenty-seventh streets and Broadway and Elliot avenue, known as the “West End” property, and Schwartz held the title to the “Christy Woods” property, consisting of some thirty-eight acres of land in the suburbs of the city. Both pieces were in fact the property of the firm.
In the cyclone of March, 1890, a tobacco factory of the firm was badly damaged, and in order to rebuild it Janssen sought his friend, the appellant Meier, a Cincin*142nati tobacconist of means, then temporarily in Louisville, and offered to sell him the “ West End ” property. After some discussion, the trade was consummated at the price of fifteen thousand dollars. Meier went home, and Janssen sent him a deed reciting a consideration of $24,225 cash,, giving as a reason that the firm owned other property in the neighborhood, and that the recitation of a lower consideration would depreciate that property. During the-trade Meier proposed that if he should resell the property at a higher price he would pay Janssen the profit. And it was agreed that the deed was not to be recorded, the-reason assigned being that if they found a purchaser soon,, as was expected, this arrangement would dispense with the necessity for an extra deed. Meier sent the money by checks on the Merchants National Bank of Cincinnati,, payable to Janssen, who indorsed them to the firm.
At the time of this transaction, and indeed for years-before, Schwartz & Co. were hopelessly insolvent, but this, was wholly unknown and wholly unsuspected. Until in the spring of 1891 none stood higher than the members of this firm in the social and business circles of Louisville and elsewhere. As conceded by counsel for theappellees, “ they had the absolute confidence of the public,, because of their supposed conservative methods.” Their assets were showy, consisting of valuable real estate.. Their liabilities were unknown, and supposed to be insignificant.
In December following this alleged sale, Schwartz wrote-Meier at Cincinnati that they were again in need of money, and that he wanted to sell him the “ Christy Woods ”' property. Meier was in Louisville shortly afterwards, and at first declined to buy any more real estate, but to accom*143modate Schwartz finally agreed to take that property at twenty-two thousand dollars provided he would take in the “West End” property at the price he had paid Janssen for it. This Schwartz agreed to do. The unrecorded deed to the “’West End” property was then surrendered, and the sum of seven thousand dollars paid in cash. On December 19, 1890, a deed was made to Meier by Schwartz and wife, which was at once recorded in the proper office. The recited consideration was twenty-eight thousand dollars, as it was said that it would be easier to sell the property at its real worth if the price was so fixed. It was also agreed in writing that Schwartz was to effect a sale of the property within two-years, and Meier was not to sell it in the meantime, unless-at a profit, which was to be divided between the. parties to the transaction. Meier was to deed back the property to Schwartz or to any one whom he 'might designate, within the two years, upon being repaid the $22,000 and interest, less any rent received by him.
On March 19, 1891, Schwartz & Co. made a deed of assignment of their property for the benefit of all their creditors, and on the following day the appellees, Elinsbach and others, brought this suit to set aside a number of conveyances of real estate made by the firm and its members to sundry persons, upon the ground that they were made in contemplation of insolvency and with the design to prefer certain creditors to the exclusion of others. Among the conveyances so attacked was that of Schwartz and wife to the appellant, Meier, of December 19,1890, and with this only we have to do on the appeal.
The chancellor, in an interesting opinion, held that the grantors were, on December 19th, and indeed long before,. *144hopelessly insolvent and knew it. That the pre-existing debt, satisfied by the conveyance of December 19th, was created in March, 1890. That both these conveyances were mortgages in fact, though conditional sales in form. That the mortgage in March, while good between the parties without being recorded, was not good under the act of 1856 against creditors, because not recorded within thirty days after its execution. That Meier occupied, therefore, the position of an unsecured creditor, “and hence a payment to him of a pre-existing debt, thus not secured, must be considered as the payment of an antecedent, unsecured debt, and hence within the statute.”
In this conclusion we have not been able to agree with the learned chancellor. A careful reading of the statute, we think, will show that it can not be applied either to the mortgage of March or of December. It goes without argument that the purpose of the act was to inhibit a debtor — thus assuming the existence of a debt — from preferring one creditor over another.
The relation of debtor and creditor is assumed in the statute itself, and the relation must exist before the statute can be applied. The debt which the insolvent debtor can not give preference to, by a sale, mortgage, assignment, etc., is a pre-existing debt. The preference of the debtor " to pay or secure a pre-existing creditor in contemplation of his impending insolvency is the act denounced by the statute. This can not occur when the creation of the debt and thei execution of the instrument securing that debt are cotemporaneous or simultaneous acts.
. The act of Schwartz & Co., or of Janssen for them, in mortgaging the West End property in March and simultaneously getting the sum of $15,000, is not an act either *145preferring a pre-existing creditor or paying or securing a pre-existing debt. The act of Schwartz in mortgaging the Christy Woods property, it is true, secured a preexisting debt to the extent of $15,000, but the act of preferring or the intent to prefer is wholly lacking. . The creditor got nothing he did not have before, and was therefore not preferred. Certainly not to the exclusion in whole or in part of other creditors.
The chancellor seems to have found his trouble in an attempt to apply the latter part of the statute under consideration to the case at hand, and it is in this attempt that he, as well as counsel for the appellees, fall, as we think, into error. After providing in the body of the section that every sale, mortgage, etc., made by a debtor in contemplation of insolvency and with the design to prefer one or more creditors to the exclusion of others, shall operate as an assignment, the section concludes with this proviso : “ But nothing in this article shall vitiate or affect any mortgage made in good faith to secure any debt or liability created simultaneously with such mortgage, if the same be lodged for record within thirty days after its execution.” (General Statutes, chapter 44, article 2, section 1). Now certainly it would seem self-evident that before trying to apply this proviso we should first find a case to which the body of the section can be applied.
In order to hang a thief you must first catch him, as “ catching comes before hanging.” In order to apply this proviso you must first find a case in which an insolvent debtor, or one in contemplation of insolvency, has made a mortgage or sale, etc., with the design tor, prefer one creditor to another.
*146If a given case have not the elements called for in the body of the act, we may rest assured that an attempt to apply the proviso will be a misfit. With the essential conditions of the statute in question ascertained to be-inapplicable to the mortgages now under investigation,, we could safely stop short of discussing the state of case-which the statute, in its proviso, is said not to vitiate or-affect. It is enough to know that the statute does not-apply to the state of case under investigation. The act of Schwartz in making the December mortgage was not a preferential act in the meaning of the statute; nor was the act of Janssen such an act in making the mortgage of March, 1890. But if we may so divert, let us see what is meant by the latter-part of this section. We-think it is simple and easy of application.
First, we must know that the mortgage mentioned in-the body of the section, that is, the one denounced as a preferential act, is not the mortgage mentioned in the-proviso which is created simultaneously with the debt secured by it. The one is exactly what the other is not. The one is a preference, the other not. How then was^ it thought necessary to say the former shall not affect or-vitiate the latter if recorded within thirty days ? which, is the same thing as saying that the former shall vitiate or affect the latter unless so recorded. Under the operation of the statute, by the execution., of the prohibited' mortgage or sale, a transfer of all the property and effects-of the debtor is made to his creditors and for the benefit of all alike, provided, however, that notwithstanding such legal assignment, the transfer is not-to overreach a mortgage made in good faith to secure a debt created, simul*147taneously with such mortgage if the same be lodged for record within thirty days after its execution.
The preferential act, or, so to speak, the act of bankruptcy, operates necessarily not backward, but instantly and forward. After committing such an act a man may still sell his property, and if tlie purchaser buys it in good faith he is protected; and the bankrupt may still mortgage his property in good faith for a consideration simultaneously received, and this transaction is protected if the mortgagee puts his mortgage to record within the time prescribed, but if he pockets his mortgage, then the equity of the legal assignees, the creditors to whom the effects of the bankrupt have been transferred under the statute by virtue of the preferential act of -the- debtor, overreaches the equity of the negligent mortgagee. Not only is the after-given mortgage thus overreached unless recorded, but a mortgage which is given to secure even in part only a pre-existing debt sets the statute into operation ; although it may also secure a debt simultaneously created therewith, it must be recorded within the time prescribed else the mortgagee is not projected or secured as to any part of his debt. If such a mortgage be recorded in time, the mortgagee’s equity is prior to that of the general creditor to the extent of his simultaneously created debt.
In the case under consideration, we have a negligent mortgagee who failed to put his mortgage on the record after getting it in March, 1890. But where is the antecedent preferential act of the debtor which is to sweep his estate into hotch-potch for the benefit of his creditors ? So far as is shown by the record the first act of the insolvent firm, or any of its members, coming within the *148condemnatory provisions of the statute, was on March 12, 1891. Then, for the first time, was the statute against preferences set in motion, and the rights of the appellant secured in good faith long before that date are not to be affected by it. He is entitled to have his debt paid in full, and the judgment is reversed, with instructions to enter an order to that effect.