STATEMENT BY THE COURT.
In 1898, J. II. Price conveyed to his son, Earl R. Price, eighty acres of land, whereon was a two-story house of seven rooms, for the consideration of $3250, which was paid in the following manner: $1000 thereof to be a gift to his son; $500 to be paid in cash, and $1750 to be evidenced by the son’s note to the father. The deed to Earl R. Price was delivered, but not recorded, and he took possession of the land and lived there until August 15, 1908. Just prior to that date, he was pressed by his father for the payment of the balance due on the note given for part of the purchase money. Not being able to comply with this demand it was finally agreed between them that he should quitclaim the land, then worth $3200, to his father, who would thereupon surrender the note and an account for tases paid, then amounting to $3175. This was done. The father did not record the quit-claim deed to him. Just prior to the reconveyance of the land, the house thereon was burned, for which the son collected in insurance at one time $1000 and later a subsequent installment of $500. The son was insolvent and then .indebted in the sum of $1000. About $790 thereof evidenced by his notes and the remainder by the notes of himself and his father. He gave $800 of the insurance money to his wife. The father who had received back his warranty deed from his son, withheld it from record under the advice of his attorney until the 5th day *619of April, 1909. On March 5, 1909, the son filed a petition in the Federal court at St. Louis seeking to be adjudged a voluntary bankrupt. He listed the claims heretofore mentioned, some of which in the meantime had been reduced to judgments against him. One of these creditors after his house was burned, sought unavailingly to collect his claim, and tried unsuccessfully to get the defendant to influence his son to pay.
Plaintiff James E. Pew was appointed trustee in the bankruptcy proceeding and instituted this suit for the purpose of annulling the reconveyance of the land by the son to tbe father on the ground that it was a fraudulent preference under the Bankrupt Act. His petition on the point is to-wit:
“Plaintiff further states that after making the execution and delivery of said above deed, from the said Earl R. Price, bankrupt, to his father James H. Price, the said deed was on purpose, and intentionally withheld from the recorder’s office in the county of Pike, State of Missouri; that said deed was not and had not been on the 5th day of March, 1909, the date the said Earl R. Price was adjudged a bankrupt, filed for record, nor recorded in the recorder’s office in the county of Pike and State of Missouri.
“Plaintiff further states that the said conveyance made as aforesaid was made within four months of the filing of the petition, and the adjudication of the said Earl R. Price a bankrupt, within the meaning of the bankrupt enactment, and is therefore void as against the other creditors of the said Earl R. Price, bankrupt.”
The answer was a general denial and a claim of a vendor’s lien, and alleged that the deed given was withheld from record upon agreement that it should in that way secure the note for the balance of the purchase money. The answer also averred the foregoing facts and prayed for general relief.
*620At the end of the trial the court refused certain instructions asked by plaintiff and declared the law to be that he could not recover under the pleadings and evidence, and gave judgment for the defendant from which this appeal is taken.
OPINION.
I.
BOND, J.(After stating the facts as above.)— This being an action in equity instructions have no place in it. [Troll v. Spencer, 238 Mo. 1. c. 92; Anthony v. Kennard Bldg. Co., 188 Mo. 704; Gerstner v. Payne, 160 Mo. App. 1. c. 296; Epstein v. Railroad, 143 Mo. App. 135.]
The only question presented by this appeal is for whom, under the case submitted, the decree should go; or has the plaintiff made out a case for equitable relief by a preponderance of the competent evidence contained in the record?
Preference: ^ NotVRecordéd. The legal questions presented are: first, whether the reconveyance by the son to the father was a voidable preference under the Bankrupt Act? Second, if not, whether it was a fraudulent disposition of his property, and hence voidable as to his creditors or their representatives of the grantor? A.s to the first question. The language of the provision of the Bankrupt Act bearing on it, is that, “Where the preference consists in a transfer, such period of four months shall not expire until four months after the date of the recording or registering of the transfer, if by law such recording or registering is required.”
It is not essential to the conveyance of real estate between parties, that the instrument of transfer should be either registered or recorded. Here the deed from the son to the father was delivered more than four months 'before the bankruptcy proceeding was begun, and the possession of the land followed the *621deed. The grantee was thereupon invested with full title as against his son. [R. S. 1909, sees. 2809, 2810, 2811.] "We see no occasion under these facts to stretch the Bankrupt Act by construction beyond the'natural import of its terms. These do not bring the transaction between the parties within its provision. There has been some diversity of view as to the meaning of the last clause above quoted. Its present language resulted from the amendment of 1903. ^
In his valuable work on Bankruptcy, Mr. Collier (9 Ed., p. 799), in speaking of the meaning of the terms contained in the last clause above quoted, says: ‘ ‘ The failure to record a deed until after the grantor’s adjudication as a bankrupt, is not sufficient .to make it an unlawful preference, in the absence of a fraudulent agreement, where, under the State law, the unrecorded instrument is valid between the parties and against general creditors.” He, however, concedes that there are eases which hold that if recording or registration is required for any purpose, though not for all, it is to be deemed as required within the meaning of the above provision of the Bankrupt Act. He then states as his own conclusion on the subject the true rule to be as follows: “The purpose of the amendment will be effectuated by construing it as referring to transfers which required recording or registration to make them valid as against general creditors.”
This statement of the law is fully sustained by the able judgment of Sanborn and Carland, Circuit-Judges. [Sturdivant Bank v. Schade, 195 Fed. 188.] The' question in that case was the same as the one ' presented here. There the trustee of a bankrupt corporation sought to annul a transfer by it of certain notes, which were secured by a deed of trust, to a bank as collateral security. The transfer of the notes to the bank was made more than four months before the corporation hypothecating them became a bankrupt, but the deed of trust securing them was not recorded *622for four months before said bankruptcy. Tbe contest was between tbe bank and tbe trustee of tbe corporation on these facts. Tbe court held, after a review of our decisions, beginning with Davis v. Owenby, 14 Mo. 170, and including Harris on Machine Worke v. Bowers, 200 Mo. 219, that these constructions of tbe Missouri statute (R. S. 1909, secs. 2809, 2811) were controlling and established tbe law to be, that the grantee of an unrecorded deed takes title as against tbe general creditors of tbe grantor who have not, by execution or attachment, procured tbe sale of tbe land before tbe recording of tbe deed. Tbe court further held that tbe trustee of tbe bankrupt corporation must be deemed as having a lien on tbe land described in tbe trust deed, and since that bad not been enforced by him before tbe bank put its trust deed on record, be bad no rights superior to tbe bank. We think tbe conclusion thus stated is clear in logic and sustained by tbe Missouri cases cited in tbe opinion. Tbe application of that rule to tbe present case affords a complete solution for tbe first question under review. Tbe facts here are that tbe reconveyance from tbe bankrupt to bis father was made more than four months before tbe proceódings in bankruptcy were begun and tbe quit-claim deed was actually recorded before tbe present suit of tbe trustee was instituted. So that, •when this step was taken, tbe defendant in this case bad put himself in a status which would have protected him against an execution or an attachment creditor of bis grantor, who bad not theretofore caused a sale of tbe land; and hence, under tbe rulings of tbe Federal court, be was equally protected against tbe trustee in bankruptcy.
This being so, it is unnecessary to deal with tbe question as to whether tbe defendant bad reasonable grounds to believe tbe reconveyance to him would work a preference. For whether that was true or not, tbe fact that this occurred outside of tbe time wherein *623preferences are forbidden by tbe Bankrupt Act, relieves it from attack as a violation of that act.
We have not overlooked the decisions cited by the learned counsel for appellant from the courts of appeals. [Landis v. McDonald, 88 Mo. App. 335; Babbitt v. Kelley, 96 Mo. App. 529.] Neither of these cases are in point, for they relate to a construction of our statutes as to the recording of mortgages of personal property, which are different in terms and legal effect from the statutes governing the conveyances of land. [Harrison v. South Carthage Min. Co., 95 Mo. App. 80; R. S. 1909, sec. 2861.] In the latter case, as has Ijeen seen, the grantee whose deed is not recorded, takes the title as against prior or subsequent creditors of the grantor who do not procure a sale of the land by legal process before the recording of the deed. In the former case (chattel mortgages, etc.), the instrument is, if unrecorded, invalid as to subsequent creditors (Babbitt v. Kelley, 96 Mo. App. 1. c. 534; R. S. 1909, sec. 2861), and is good against prior creditors where possession of the property' is taken before such creditors fix a lien thereon. [Landis v. McDonald, 88 Mo. App. 335.]
II.
Conveyance-Preference.' The second question concerns the character of the transaction between the father and son, as judged by the law of this State defining fraudulent conveyance and valid preferences of creditors, for if the deed from the son to his father was fraudulently contrived it may be set aside for that reason, although not amenable to the provision of the Bankrupt Act.
The law is well settled, that an insolvent debtor has the right to prefer, in payment of his debts, one creditor over another, provided the payment is made and received in good faith and not with intent to *624hinder, delay, or defraud any other creditor, except so far as that might necessarily happen, by the mere act of paying in full the just debt of the preferred creditor. [Growney v. Lowe, 234 Mo. 689; Cole v. Cole, 231 Mo. 1. c. 260, and cases cited.]
The facts and circumstances in this case showed that the property was conveyed for its reasonable value and to discharge an honest indebtedness, and they further show that neither party to the transaction had any purpose, by its accomplishment, to defraud any other creditor of the grantor. It was not therefore in contravention of the Statute of Frauds. [R. S. 1909, sec. 2881.] c
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Woodson, P. J., Lamm and Graves, JJ., concur.