This suit is to set aside a conveyance of land made by Charles Gr. Smith to his -brother, Abram P. Smith, on the fifteenth of June, 1873. The land conveyed was all the land owned by said Charles Gr., and lay in Andrew county, Missouri. The plaintiffs are creditors of said Charles, who died in February, 1876. The circuit court rendered a judgment setting aside the conveyance, from which defendant, Abram Smith, has appealed to this court. The plaintiff’s demands allowed against the estate aggregate about $1,300, and the land in controversy, at the date of the conveyance, was worth between seven and eight thousand dollars. The debts of C. G. Smith at the time of the conveyance to his brother, excluding the debt to the latter, were inconsiderable compared with the value of the land conveyed, and the personal proy»erty owned by him. The petition charges that, at the time of the conveyance, C. G. Smith was insolvent. That the conveyance to Abram was without consideration, and made with intent to defraud the creditors of C. G. If the debt claimed by Abram be excluded from C. G.’s liabilities, the testimony shows that he was not insolvent, owing less than three thousand dollars, and owning property worth between ten thousand and eleven thousand dollars.
Upon these undisputed facts it is difficult to conceive a motive for the conveyance, inconsistent with good faith. It'is not alleged that it was made to enable the grantor to defraud subsequent creditors, and the debts ■subsequently contracted by the grantor are not of a magnitude to warrant such an imputation. But, aside from -all this, we think that the testimony establishes the bona Jides of the transaction.
*48The wife and children of C. Gr. Smith testified to declarations made by C. G. Smith, before the deed was executed, to the effect that he intended to make the conveyance in order to get time to settle his security debts, about one thousand dollars. They do not say that 0. G. Smith was not indebted to Abram in the amount named, as the consideration for the deed. They did not pretend to know. They had no conversation with Abram on the subject, and their testimony, and a letter from Abram to-Charles, dated May 1, 1872, in which he acknowledges the receipt of a draft for $2,210, and states that it leaves-in his hands a balance of one hundred and three dollars, in Charles’ favor, and asks wliat he shall do with it, is-the principal evidence relied upon to establish the allegations of the petition. The plaintiffs took and read the-deposition of Abram Smith, in which, in a candid, clear and straightforward manner, he gives an account of the transactions between himself and his brother, showing-the latter indebted to him for money borrowed, in the sum of about $5,600, and, as to the several items of that indebtedness, is corroborated by another brother, and by Ayres, Ribbie, Ratskin, Hatfield and Sanders, citizens of the highest respectability of Morgan county, Illinois, merchants, bankers and lawyers. Charles G. Smith lived in that county for many years, until 1805, when he-immigrated to this state. He owned a small farm in Illinois, upon which there was a mortgage. He was-greatly embarrassed, and the evidence tends to prove-that he was in fact insolvent. His brother Abram assumed and paid a number of his debts, and loaned him $1,300-when he left for Missouri. In March, 1868, $2,700, and these amounts, added to the debts of his brother, which he had assumed and paid, aggregate $5,600. He. explains, in his testimony, the letter written to Charles, in which he acknowledged a balance of one hundred and three dollars due to Charles, as follows: That in the fall of 1871 he loaned Charles two thousand dollars, and, in. *49May, 1872, received the draft for $2,210, which was one hundred and three dollars more than enough to pay the ■debt and asks what he should do with it, and was told to ■pay a physician’s bill, twenty-five or thirty■ dollars, which he did, and remitted the balance to Charles. Mr. Ayres, a member of the banking firm of M. P. Ayres &■ Co., doing business at Jacksonville, Illinois, testified that ■their books showed numerous- checks drawn by Abram in favor of C. Gr. Smith, from 1865 to 1868, and among them a check for two thousand dollars October 1,1866.
It will be observed that Charles had a large family, thirteen or fourteen children, and was in an embarrassed condition, including in his indebtedness what he owed the defendant. Abram had been assisting him, advancing him money for the purchase of cattle, and dividing’ the profits with him, and it is by no means strange that, instead of crediting that small balance upon his large ■ claims against his brother, he remitted it to him. He felt that what Charles owed him was safe, for he testifies that he did not know the extent of his indebtedness to others, and, if he had, it was not of an amount to make him uneasy. In 1873, at the instance of Charles, he took ■the land in payment of his debt. No witness contradicts Abram Smith as to any fact testified to by him, while, as to nearly every fact stated by him, he is corroborated by other disinterested witnesses. There is no evidence of any. fraudulent intent on the part of Charles, except his declarations to his wife and children, and the-most charitable view of their testimony is to admit that C. Gr. Smith made the statement testified' to by them but the record discloses a motive for his concealment from them of the amount of his indebtedness to Abram. " One of the sons testifies that in a conversation between his parents, his mother was fretting, and his father told her that “by being saving it would not belong before she could get it back again ’ ’
*50No doubt his purpose was to conceal from his wife the extent of his indebtedness, and thus relieve her of the anxiety on the subject, which made her uneasy and fretfulbut the evidence does not leave room for doubt that Charles owed Abram $5,600 for borrowed money, with interest on $2,900 from 1865, and on $2,700 from March, 1868. Mr. Sanders, an old and intimate friend of C. Gr. Smith, testified that he saw C. Gr. Smith at Savannah, a few days before the deed was made, and Smith told him he was going to Illinois to secure Abram for the money he owed him. Said Abe had helped him when he needed it, and he thought he ought to secure him while he could. Saw him again after he returned from Illinois, and Charles said that on a settlement with Abe they found he owed Abe as much as the land was worth, and he had deeded the farm to pay it. The preponderance of the evidence on every issue made by the pleading is against the plaintiffs, and the judgment is reversed and the cause dismissed.
All concur.