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 of which was made October 17, 1916, and the second the following day. On the 21st day of October, three days subsequent to the date of the last payment, this note is stamped paid, and, considering all of the facts and circumstances, there is not the least doubt of its payment in full. The plaintiff had no other claim or obligation against Person excepting a note dated October 2, 1917, for $2,000, signed by the Western Building Company by J. H. Jensen, and one dated November 22, 1917 for $500, signed by the Western. Building Company, by Knutson and Jensen. Neither of these notes was signed by Person. He, however, in suit brought to recover upon them, was held liable, on the theory that he was one of the partners in the Western Building Company. The judgment recovered is that which plaintiff seeks to have paid by first having the sale of the premises, lots 7 and 8, denominated and declared one in fraud of creditors, and then by appropriate proceedings to have the premises sold and the proceeds applied to the payment of its judgment. It is clear, however, that, at the time of the sale of the premises by Person to his wife, he was in no manner indebted to the plaintiff. The evidence also clearly establishes that he did not know that he was indebted or was under any liability to the plaintiff at any time between the sale or until after the transfer. He did not know of any claim against him except the two $1,500 notes, one of which was a renewal of the other, and, as renewed, paid, until the commencement of the action by the plaintiff to recover on the $2,000 and $500 notes. It is therefore clear that he did not sell and transfer his property to his wife with intent to delay or defraud his creditors or any of them. Whether the transfer is fraudulent is a question of intent. It must clearly appear that there is a fraudulent intent to render a conveyance void. Dalrymple v. Trust Co., 9 N. D..306, 83 N. W. 245; Stevens v. Meyers, 14 N. D. 398, 104 N. W. 529; Bernauer v. McCaull-Webster Elevator Co., 41 N. D. 561, 171 N. W. 282.

If Person had creditors at the time of the sale or the transfer of the premises, that fact alone would not be sufficient to avoid the conveyance. It must further appear and be established as a fact that the conveyance was made with the intent to defraud creditors; this plaintiff wholly failed to do. The trial court has found as a fact that there was no intent to defraud creditors by the sale or conveyance of the property in question. That finding is amply sustained by the evidence. Aside from this, it must be remembered that the purchaser Edla R. Person, according to the proof, paid in cash the full amount of the purchase price, which was the approx-