(after stating the facts). The principle of law applicable to cases of this sort is stated in Wilks v. Vaughan, 73 Ark. 174, 83 S. W. 913, as follows: ‘ ‘ Conveyances made to members of the household and to near relatives of an embarrassed debtor are looked upon with suspicion and scrutinized with care; when voluntary, they are prima facie fraudulent; and, when the embarrassment of the debtor proceeds to financial wreck, they are *519presumed conclusively fraudulent as to existing creditors.”
The rule as thus stated has been repeatedly quoted and applied by this court according to the particular facts in each case. All of these decisions are cited and many of them reviewed in the opinions and dissenting opinions in Home Life & Accident Co. v. Schichtl, ante, p. 31; and Gavin v. Scott, ante, p. 234.
Counsel for appellees concede that the principles of law above quoted are. settled by the uniform current of our own decisions, but they contend that the facts of this case are, in all essential respects, similar to those in Brady v. Irby, 101 Ark. 573, 142 S. W. 1124, Ann. Cas. 1913E, 1054, and that this case should be ruled by it. We do not agree with counsel in this contention. In that case, the court found the facts to he that, when the voluntary conveyance was made by the husband to his wife, he owed a large amount of existing indebtedness and did not own property sufficient to pay it. Such was the finding of the chancellor, and this court held that his finding was sustained by a preponderance of the evidence. The court further said that the facts presented a case where -a husband, engaged in business and involved in debt resulting in insolvency, made a voluntary transfer of property to his wife. From the testimony, the result of such transfer was to reduce the assets of the husband to such an extent as to delay and hinder his creditors in the collection of their debt, and, under the rule above stated, the conveyance was held to be fraudulent.
There is nothing in the facts as shown in the case at bar to establish that W. 0. Fenton, while heavily in debt and in embarrassed financial condition, made a voluntary conveyance to his wife. It is not a case where the assets of the husband did not greatly exceed the amount of his indebtedness. It was not shown that Fenton was engaged in any speculative venture at the time that the conveyance to his wife was made, and it is not shown that the result of the transfer was to reduce his assets *520to such an extent as to delay and hinder appellees in the collection 'of their debt.
The transfer from Fenton to his wife was made on the 10th day of January, 1923. It is true that he was indebted to appellees at that time, but the amount claimed by appellees in their suit against him was only $559.37, and they only recovered judgment against him in the sum of $437.90, with six per cent, interest per annum from July 1,1921. The undisputed evidence shows that the property in question was worth $8,000, and rented for $80 per month. The only other indebtedness shown by the record to have been owed by Fenton at that time was his debt to H. C. Pride, which amounted to $1,663.90, and which was secured by a mortgage on the lots in question. For aught that appears to the contrary, at the time the conveyance from Fenton to his wife was made he might have had other property amply sufficient to pay any judgment which appellees might have secured against him in their pending suit. As above stated, the ámount claimed by the plaintiffs in that suit was only a little over $500, and it is not shown that Fenton owed any other debt. When these facts are considered, together with the fact that the property greatly exceeded in value the amount of his debt, we do not think that, it has been established that Fenton was insolvent at the time he made the conveyance to his wife, or that his financial embarrassment was such that it led to his-insolvency.
Again, it is insisted by counsed for appellees that the insolvency of Fenton was shown by the molla bona return of the sheriff. In making this contention reliance is had upon the case of Tidwell v. J. H. Askew & Co., 165 Ark. 57, 262 S. W. 988. We do not think that case supports the contention of. appellees. The general rule is that equity will not interfere in aid of the collection of a debt while a remedy at law exists.
In the Tidwell case the return of nulla bona was held to make out a prima facie case of insolvency sufficient to give a court of equity jurisdiction to set aside the fraudulent conveyance. The nulla bona return showed that the *521debtor, at that time, had no property, real or personal, upon which a levy might be made. Hence a recourse to equity might be had to cancel any fraudulent incumbrance or transfer of his property which might obstruct the legal remedy by preventing a sale of such property for its full price under execution. In that case, the court said that the facts developed by appellees in the proof showed that appellant, Tidwell, rendered himself insolvent by stripping himself of substantially all of his property except that which was exempt.
No such state of facts is shown hy the record in the present case. In order to bring this case within the facts of the Tidwell case, appellees should have shown that Fenton had no other property subject to execution at the time he ipade the conveyance to his wife. The conveyance to his wife was made on the 10th day of January, 1923. The return of nulla bona was made on the 26th day of October, 1924. Thus it will be seen that the return of nulla bona was made a year and nine months after the conveyance. Proof that Fenton had no property subject to execution on the 26th day of October, 1924, falls short of showing that he did not have property subject to execution on the 10th day of January, 1923.
The result of our views is that appellees failed to prove facts sufficient to bring- the case within the well-established rule of this court above announced. It follows that the decree must be reversed, with directions to dismiss their cause of action.