Persons standing in the relation of parent and child or of brothers “may deal with each other in good faith just as others not so related may do.” In such cases the presumption of fraud may arise where an insolvent person conveys valuable property to a near relation for less than its reasonable value, if the transaction is witnessed only by the parties and persons so related and they withhold explanation by refusing to go upon the stand and testify. Banking Co. v. Whitaker, 110 N. C., 348; Helms v. Green, 105 N. C., 264; Brown v. Mitchell, 102 N. C., 372; Reiger v. Davis, 67 N. C., at page 189.
*387The doctrine applicable in such cases is founded upon a familiar and recognized rule of evidence. “ When effective proofs are in the power of a party who refuses or neglects to produce them, that naturally raises a presumption” (says Best in his work on Evidence, p. 277) “that those facts if produced would make against him.” Generally where parties withhold evidence which it is exclusively within their power to produce “ the law puts the interpretation upon such conduct that is most unfavorable to the suppressing party.” It is the willful or negligent failure to furnish evidence under his control and not accessible to his adversary, not the relationship of the parties, that calls for explanation. Wharton on Evidence, secs. 1266 to 1269; Helms v. Green, supra. The existence of near relationship between parties to a suspicious transaction often constitutes additional evidence of fraud to be weighed by the jury. But in the case at bar the inquiry was whether a deed of assignment made by J. B. Bridgers on the 24th of June, 1893, to the defendant J. D. Bottoms as trustee, conveying certain property to secure the alleged indebtedness of the grantor or assignor to Bridgers & Garris, was in fact executed not in good faith, but to hinder, delay and defeat the claims of the creditors of said J. B. Bridgers. The evidence of the successive transfers of property among the members of his family was admitted without objection and went to the jury with other circumstances bearing upon the main issue as to the character of the conveyance to Bottoms. But upon no known principle of evidence could we hold that any suspicious circumstances attending other distinct transactions would shift the burden of proof or make it incumbent upon the jury to find that the Bottoms deed rvas executed with intent to defraud in the absence of explanation. The deed of assignment was not shown to have been executed in a secret family conclave. It does *388not appear from the record that Bottoms sustained any nearer relation certainly than that of a trusted friend, nor can we conclude without evidence that there was any secrecy in the execution of a paper which was registered a few days later. “ It was admitted by the parties in open court during the examination of witnesses that at the time of the making of the deed by J. B. Bridgers to J. D. Bottoms, etc., the said Bridgers had property besides that mentioned in the deed sufficient to pay his debts.” So that there was no proof of a secret transaction between relations or of a withholding by them of explanations as to matters peculiarly within their knowledge and bearing upon the issue. If the grantor retained property sufficient and available to satisfy all of his debts the deed could not (nothing more appearing) have been declared fraudulent, had it been a voluntary conveyance to the grantor’s child instead of an assignment to a stranger for the benefit of creditors.
In both of the paragraphs of the complaint in which the financial status of J. B. Bridgers is mentioned the plaintiff alleges not that he was, when the deed was executed, but that “he is” (now, at the date of verifying the complaint) insolvent. The equivocal denial of that allegation in the answer is tantamount to an admission, but is not at all inconsistent with the other admission made on the trial, that at the previous date of the deed of assignment Bridg-ers retained property sufficient to pay his debts. It is not strange or unusual for persons, by some unwise step or unfortunate deal, to sacrifice in a day the best financial standing and become suddenly not only insolvent but hopelessly bankrupt. The instruction given by the Court in so far as it declared the relationship of the trustor and cestui que trust, as an abstract principle, was certainly correct, if not so in its application to the circumstances of this case. *389But it was error in this or any other case to lay clown the broad proposition that the proof of the existence of near relationship between a grantor or assignor and the grantees or beneficiaries named in a deed amounts to a prima facie showing of fraud, so as to make it incumbent on the parties upholding the deed to offer affirmative testimony to show good faith or submit to a verdict against them oii an issue of fraud. In order to exclude any conclusion to the contrary we deem it proper to say that the ruling of the Judge below in the first instance, that it was within the sound discretion of the Court to permit counsel to comment on the failure to offer J. B. Bridgers and W. K. Bridgets, was correct, and if the setting aside of the verdict had depended solely upon the soundness of that view of the law it would have been error to grant the new trial. Hudson v. Jordan, 108 N. C., 10.
For the reasons given we think that the Judge erred in the instruction given as to the effect of the evidence and very properly corrected the error before the matter passed beyond his control. Judgment Affirmed.