delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff sought to recover the land, by virtue of an unrecorded deed from Henry Melton to her ancestor, made in 1860, and followed by possession by him, under the deed. The defend*639ants claimed the land under a chain of title from Henry Melton, consisting of a deed from him to Arnold, in 1869, and from Arnold to Anderson, in 1871, and from Anderson to defendants. These deeds were severally recorded, as required by law, and each contains a statement of a pecuniary consideration, on which it is made. There was evidence that the ancestor of the plaintiff died in 1862, and that his widow and the plaintiff, then an infant of tender years, resided on the land, and that it was next occupied by Arnold, who, in 1869, received a conveyance of it from Henry Melton,
There is no evidence that Arnold or Anderson or the defendants had any notice of the unrecorded deed under which the plaintiff claims, nor is there any evidence, other than the deeds, of the payment of any valuable consideration by any of the grantees.
Thus the question is presented : Did it devolve on the defendants to show by evidence, other than the deeds under which they held, payment of a valuable consideration by them or some one in the chain in order to clothe themselves with the character of purchasers for value, or could they rely on their chain of title, apparently perfect, until doubt about it was created by some evidence? In other words, may purchasers rely on the muniments of title, spread upon the records designated by law as the repository of the history of titles to land as being truthful memorials of the consideration expressed in them, until something is shown inconsistent with what they state?
It must be admitted that the multitude of opinions answer in the négative, and some respectable courts and authors so declare; but in this, as in many other matters, truth is found with the few, and we do not hesitate to stand with them against the many. The fundamental error of the view denying effect as prima fade evidence to the statement of the consideration in a deed consists in detaching this statement from the instrument, and treating it as a mere receipt, and subject to the rule res inter alios aeta, when, in truth, it is part of the conveyance, not an essential part, it may be, but an almost invariable accompaniment of conveyances of land generally true, and to be taken as true, in the first instance because it is part of the memorial of the transfer of' title to land *640required by law to be evidenced by writing and spread upon record, for the information of all who have to trace the title. It is part of the res gestee, and where the thing done is admissible, the accompaniments are admissible,
May not all assume that the deed found upon record, not only conveyed the land, but speaks the truth as to the consideration on which it was made ? This statement is no more res inter alios than the deed itself. Why receive the deed as evidence of a conveyance, and dissect it, and reject its statement of the consideration on which it was made ? The argument for the erroneous view was exhausted in Kimball v. Fenner, 12 New Hamp. 248, in which the decision was distinctly based on the fact that the contest was between the-grantee and existing creditors when the deed was made, and the court denied that the deed from Fenner was even prima facie evidence of the consideration it recited, but held that notes proved to-have been executed by him, and on which judgment had been rendered, were evidence in favor of his creditors against his grantee of his debt to them, that is:, Fenner’s notes proved his debt to the-plaintiff, but Fenner’s deed was not evidence, even of the lowest character in favor of his grantee as to its consideration. What inconsistency !!
Were Fenner’s notes and the judgment on them any less res inter alios than Fenner’s deed to the party against whom they were held evidence of his indebtedness ? Fenner’s notes or the judgment on them were evidence of the fact that he owed what they showed, and Fenner’s deed conveying the land and stating the consideration on which it was based was equally available as evidence to his grantee.
Any other view treats the deed as prima facie fraudulent, whereas, “on general principles a deed is prima facie valid, and its recitals true, and it requires no evidence to support it until it is attacked for fraud,” not, by merely alleging that it is fraudulent or without consideration, but by showing it.
This is certainly the settled rule in the controversies about conveyances alleged to be fraudulent. Bump on Fraudulent Con. 575, and cases cited in note.
*641The question here involved was decided in Huntley v. Buckner, 6 S. & M. 70, and Brown v. Baxter, 10 S. & M. 268. The latter case involved the very principle now being considered, viz.: the value of the recital of the consideration of the deed as evidence, in a controversy between the creditor of the grantor existing when the deed was made, and others claiming under him, and the reasoning of the New Hampshire court Si the case cited above was vigorously com-batted by Sharkey, C. J., who, speaking of some Alabama cases, said: “ A debtor has a right to sell, and convey his property — he may prefer creditors. This is the general rule. The exception to it is, that he cannot convey to defraud creditors. He who wishes to bring a deed within the exception must make his proof. The presumption of law is always against bad faith. These Alabama cases reverse the rule, and establish this new doctrine, that it is fraud in law for a man to convey property, who owes a debt. The rule which would require the purchaser to prove the fairness of the transaction amounts to this.”
It is certainly true that the rule that requires the holder of a legal title shown by successive conveyances to support his title by proof in the first instance of actual payment of the consideration stated in the deeds to have been paid, would, in many instances, impose burdens hard to be borne, and be productive of much mischief, and of no good, as far as we can see.
We adhere to the rule which has hitherto prevailed in this state, as we understand it, and which is supported by- the courts of New York, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. Jackson v. McChesney, 7 Cow. 360 ; Wood v. Chapin, 13 N. Y. 509 ; Lacustrine Fer. Co. v. L. G. & Fer. Co., 82 N. Y. 476; Gough v. Henderson, 2 Head. 628 ; Cocke v. Trotter, 10 Yerg. 213; Haywood v. Moore, 2 Humph. 584; Bayliss v. Williams, 6 Cold. 440; Hoyt v. Jones, 31 Wis. 389.
We would not have made this extended examination of the question but for its practical importance, and that counsel discussed it as an open question in this state.
Were there no decisions of the question here or elsewhere, we would not hesitate to declare that in view of our system of record*642ing titles to land, a conveyance acknowledging payment of the purchase-money is prima facie evidence that the grantee was a purchaser in good faith, for a valuable consideration.
While possession of the land under the unrecorded deed was the -equivalent of registration of the deed, while the possession under it lasted, when the record of deeds showed a perfect chain of title, one purchasing under that, was not bound to look beyond the record and to a former occupancy of the land under a deed of which such party is not shown to have had notice.
It follows that the court below should have ruled for the defendants instead of for the plaintiffs, as it did, and the judgment is reversed and cause remanded for a new trial in accordance with this opinion.