This is an appeal from a decree of the' circuit court of Linn county adjudging certain conveyances of the defendant, John Ziehr, to his wife, Emma Ziehr, and to Judge W. H. Brownlee as trustee for her, to be fraudulent and void.
The trustee is a mere formal party and has no interest in the cause save as the holder of the legal title.
One of the deeds purports to have been made by John Ziehr to his wife on December 22, 1891, and recorded March 17, 1892, and conveys the residence of John Ziehr in Brook-field and a brick building known as his saloon property, for' the consideration of love and affection. The other deed, made-long after the levy of the attachment, and long after the accruing of the debts for which the property was sold, was to W. H. Brownlee, as trustee, for Mrs. Ziehr, and was recorded February 23, 1895.
John Ziehr inherited the said real estate from his father in 1890. Previous to this time he and his brothers, George and William, were in partnership in the coal, wood, beer and ice business in Brookfield, and also engaged in draying. He-*408was married to bis codefendant, Emma Ziebr, in 1889. Sbe brought bim no property and was possessed of none in ber own right. In 1890 be received as bis share of bis father’s estate a residence worth three thousand dollars; the saloon property worth six thousand dollars and an ice-house worth about $500. In the partition of the property the defendant John Ziehr obligated himself to his mother, brothers and sisters to the amount of seventeen hundred dollars, and to secure one of the brothers $450 mortgaged the ice-house for that suin, and subsequently sold it for thirty-five dollars subject to that mortgage. To liquidate the claims of the others he made an overdraft of $800 on the Bank of Brook-field and continued to owe his mother $200 in 1892.
Outside of the foregoing real estate John Ziehr owned some personal property, several horses and mules, drays and personal effects, all of which was afterwards sold under a chattel mortgage for three hundred and fifty dollars. He was a partner'in a saloon and obtained $320 for his share therein in January, 1892. He testified, however, that he kept $500 in money on hand at his home as “a reserve.” He testified also to book accounts due him to the amount of seven hundred and fourteen dollars, but on cross-examination it appeared these were so largely offset by counter accounts of merchants and others to whom he was indebted, that they could scarcely be called assets.
After the dissolution with his brothers, John Ziehr, the defendant, continued in the ice, coal and beer business alone, and it was soon apparent that his brothers were selling better ice than he was and he began to look about for an artificial ice plant.
He had little or no capital invested in his business at this time. He bought coal and beer on time and relied on «piling it to meet his payments. No one from his evidence can approximate what his real financial condition was for several years. He says he was making money but the result demon*409strates that be was either mistaken or has secreted his property. He owed the coal men and the brewing company of whom he bought, considerable money, and he made them payments, but it appears that when he paid them he increased his indebtedness to the Bank of Brookfield which permitted him to overdraw on the faith of his ownership of property.
The evidence does not show the exact date of the delivery of the deed he made directly to his wife and which bore the date of December 22, 1891, but it does appear that between that date and its record, March, 1892, he was indebted to the Bank of Brookfield from seven hundred to one thousand dollars which debt was a running account and increased from time to time until the spring of 1894, when it reached $2,400, and has never been paid. On the 22d of December, 1891, he owed Anheuser-Busch $137 and this sum increased to $460, before the record of the deed in March, 1892. The indebtedness increased until the spring of 1894, when it amounted to $1,800, and has never been paid. This business was done at Brookfield and these creditors did not know that he had put to record the deed to his wife, at Linneus, the county seat. It is entirely clear that this credit was extended to him on the assumed ownership of the dwelling house and saloon property.
The evidence of his partner, Gordon, tends to establish that in October, 1891, John Ziehr conceived the plan of erecting an artificial ice plant which he ascertained on a visit to St. Louis would cost $20,000. With this purpose in view he conveyed the only available real estate he had to his wife and by this deed practically rendered himself insolvent. After making this deed he continued to be the ostensible owner of this real estate as if it was his own. He gave it in to the assessor for 1891,1892 and 1893, as his own. He.paid the taxes out of his own money, insured it in his own name, and paid for the insurance out of his own funds to the local agency in Brookfield. Gordon, his tenant, knew nothing of the transfer, *410and continued to pay him the rent monthly, and John Ziehr receipted him in his .own name therefor. He says himself he used these rents in his own business and never paid his wife a cent. He kept no account of it with her. He contracted for expensive improvements and paid for them out of his own money. In 1894 for the first time he caused the property to be assessed to his wife and had it insured in her name, and never until pressed by DeGraw, who had loaned him $6,000, did he state that the property belonged to his wife. In the m ñau time he had become indebted to the amount of thirteen thousand dollars.
When he and Gordon went to DeGraw to borrow of him $6,000, DeGraw told them that he would not take security on any unfinished building like the ice plant, but would advance the money and take as security his saloon property and other property. When this statement was made, John Ziehr assented, and did not by word or deed indicate that he did not own the property, but said that they wanted to get the money along from time to time, as they needed it, and when he got the full amount of $6,000 he would secure it as desired. Ziehr was regarded as the responsible party, and according to the evidence it was fairly understood between DeGraw, Ziehr and Gordon that Ziehr was to secure the $6,000 by deed of trust on his saloon property and other property sufficient to make ample security. This was in the spring of 1894. And on the strength of these representations and his apparent ownership of this substantial property, DeGraw, through Linn County Bank, from time to time advanced to Ziehr and Ziehr & Gordon $6,000, and when security was asked by De-Graw on the saloon property as promised, John Ziehr pleaded business engagements from time to .time, but promised to give the security and have it fixed up as soon as possible, and when pressed by Arbuthnot, acting for Bank of Brookfield and DeGraw, he claimed that his wife objected to signing the deed of trust. These pretexts and excuses by Ziehr continued *411for sometime, and when at last DeGraw and Arbntknot proposed to accept tbe deed without tbe signature of bis wife be could “trim” no longer and announced to them “that bis property was in bis wife’s name.” So, with tbe debt of tbe An-heuser-Busch Brewing Company, it was created and tbe credit given to bim on tbe faith of bis ownership of these two pieces of property. He bad no other tangible property available to creditors.
John Ziebr’s claim on tbe trial that be was solvent until tbe spring of ’94 when be commenced tbe construction of tbe ice plant and that be lost bis wealth in the ice plant venture is completely exploded by a consideration of tbe record in this case. He only claims to have invested in tbe ice plant $3,500 in all. Gordon says be invested only $3,300, including the work be did and bis draying.
He got from tbe Bank of Brookfield.$ 2,400
Erom Anheuser-Busch. 1,846
Erom Linn County Bank. 1,000
Making a total of.•.$ 5,200
This sum of $5,200 be got personally. This sum is aside from tbe $5,000 got by Ziebr & Gordon from DeGraw and is aside from tbe $2,000 or $3,000 debts contracted by Gordon & Ziebr and their indebtedness to Ered W. Wolff for machinery. He claims that bis dray, ice, coal and beer business was profitable,1 that be was making money all this time, but according to bis own statement be only claims to have invested in the ice plant $3,500 of bis own individual money. This would leave bim a net reserve of tbe money obtained by bim of Bank of Brookfield, Anheuser-Busch and DeGraw alone between one thousand, seven hundred dollars to two thousand two hundred dollars, individually to himself.
Suits were brought by tbe Anheuser-Busch Company against John Ziebr for $1,846 and tbe Linn County Bank for tbe sum of $5,000. Tbe Bank of Brookfield and also the *412Linn County Bank bad also brought suits by attachment against Ziehr for $2,400 and $1,000 and interest, both of which last mentioned suits were transferred to the Sullivan County Circuit Court on the application of the defendant, John Ziehr. Under these attachments the property described in the petition had been levied upon, and the same property was levied upon and sold under the judgments obtained by Anheuser-Busch Brewing Company and Linn County Bank above mentioned in the Linn County Circuit Court, and at the sheriff’s sale of said property by agreement of all these creditors the respondent, ITarry Lander, became the purchaser of the property described in the petition for the benefit of all these creditors, and he thus prosecutes this suit.
As already stated the circuit court rendered a decree that the deed to the homestead was not fraudulent, but that to the saloon property was void as to his creditors, and confiscated the rents paid by Gordon after the attachment.
It is to reverse that decree this appeal is prosecuted.
I. The deed from John Ziehr to his wife Emma, of date December 22,1891, on its face declares the consideration therefor was only love and affection, and was therefore a pure gratuity, but in addition to this recital it is made entirely clear that the wife had in no way contributed to the acquisition of this property. She had only been married to defendant John Ziehr about two years when the deed was executed. She brought him no estate whatever by her marriage, being entirely without means. This property was not the product of the joint savings or labor of John Ziehr and his wife, but was inherited from his father. Being voluntary and without any pecuniary consideration moving from the wife, it was void as to all existing creditors of John Ziehr. [Jordan v. Buschmeyer, 97 Mo. 94.]
It having been shown and conceded that the deed was made to the wife of property inherited and acquired by his means during coverture the transaction as to all existing *413creditors was fraudulent in law. [Patton v. Bragg, 133 Mo. 595; Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances (2 Ed.), p. 200.]
Tbe case presents no feature which, requires a court to uphold the deed in equity though it was void at law. [Woodsworth v. Tanner, 94 Mo. 124.]
While the deed was fraudulent at law because voluntary as to existing creditors, it has long been held in this State that a voluntary conveyance as to subsequent creditors, although the party be indebted at the time of its execution, is not fraudulent per se as to them, but the fact whether it is fraudulent or not is to be determined by all the circumstances. [Pepper v. Carter, 11 Mo. 542; Payne v. Stanton, 59 Mo. 158; Frank v. Caruthers, 108 Mo. 569.]
What then are the circumstances which would justify a court in holding a conveyance fraudulent as to subsequent creditors? The proof of prior debts, the insolvency of the debtor at the time of the conveyance or though solvent rendered insolvent by the conveyance he makes; a design or purpose to hinder, delay or defraud those to whom he is about to become indebted, are some of the marked indicia of fraud. In a word, an intent to contract debts and a design to avoid the payment of such debts by the conveyance. It was pointed out by this court in Snyder v. Free, 114 Mo. 360, that the statute simply requires “an intent 'to defraud” to be shown. Applying these tests to the facts of this ease, and we have a grantor, not only indebted at the time of the conveyance, but that conveyance confessedly gratuitous and voluntary of all the property to which creditors would naturally look for the payment of their debts. That conveyance is kept off of record for three months. It is true that this deed was after-wards recorded at the county seat, but it must be borne in mind that John Ziehr lived in Brookfield and the property was all there, and that he continued to use it and control it just as he always had, and that as a matter of fact it was not *414suspected by DeGraw when be loaned bim six thousand dollars tbat tbe property was in tbe wife’s naine. It requires no corroborative evidence to demonstrate that DeGraw or any other prudent investor would not have loaned John Ziehr six thousand dollars had he known that the very property on which he was to be secured was in Ziehr’s wife’s name. Nor did the record of this deed under the circumstances relieve it of its fraudulent character. [Bump on Fraud. Conv. (4 Ed.) sec. 293, and cases cited.]
Much stress is laid by counsel for defendants upon the fact that the items due the Brookfield Bank at the date of the conveyance were afterwards paid, but as to this contention we answer that a great deal depends upon the mode 'in which this is done. Proving that prior debts have been paid amounts to nothing, if, as in this case, it appears Ziehr was contracting other debts to an equal amount. Any other rule would simply permit a debtor to take the property of subsequent creditors and give it to his grantee. A mere change of creditors while the debt continues, will not cheat the statute. [Bump on Conv. (4 Ed.), sec. 296, and cases cited; Brown v. McDonald, 1 Hill’s Ch. loc. cit. 304; Taylor v. Coenen, 1 L. R. Ch. Div. 636; Madden v. Day, 1 Bai. (S. C.) loc. cit. 340, 341; Antrims v. Kelly, 4 Nat. Bankruptcy Reg. 189.] That John Ziehr kept up his credit by paying old debts with the proceeds of goods purchased and overdrafts from time to time we think is abundantly established.
But that this evidence makes out a case of actual, intentional fraud, can scarcely be questioned. John Ziehr had learned that an ice plant would cost him nearly or quite $20,000. Heknew he had no other property on which he could possibly expect a loan to erect so costly an establishment, except his real estate. His subsequent conduct convicts him of a deliberate purpose to defraud. He testifies himself that aside from this property in dispute he had nothing at all, because the $3,500 which he attempts to say he had has van-*415isbed and left not a trace behind. When he came to DeGraw to borrow the money he permitted DeGraw to believe he still owned the saloon property. He admits DeGraw told him he would not take a lien on the ice plant. Indeed at that time he did not even own the land on which it was later constructed.
It is absolutely incredible that DeGraw would have considered the loan at all if he had not supposed Ziehr owned the saloon property, as he had nothing else with which to secure DeGraw.
He was exercising every indicia of ownership. When he told DeGraw he would give him ample security he knew he had nothing but this property. His shuffling and procrastinating when DeGraw required the deed of trust which he had promised to give are in harmony with his deception throughout.
Without recapitulating all the evidence it is sufficient to say that it would be against all reason and conscience to permit John Ziehr, through his wife, to continue to enjoy this property as he has from the execution of the deed, after having contrived to obtain the money of his creditors to a large amount on the faith of his ownership, and cover it up in his wife’s name when she had not invested a farthing in it. The courts of equity can not countenance a scheme like this.
The circuit court properly found that it was John Ziehr’s property when it was attached and sold and that plaintiff as the trustee of an express trust had a right to have the deeds to his wife canceled and held for naught, and under the prayer for general relief, the rents and profits were properly adjudged also to plaintiff for the creditors.
The decree is affirmed.
Sheewood and Bubgess, JJ., concur.