OPINION
In this case, we consider whether the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act (UFTA), NRS Chapter 112, was properly applied to a se*230cured creditors’ transfer of assets to a third party following the secured creditors’ improper repossession of their business. We also take this opportunity to examine the standard to be used in determining whether a transferee has a good faith defense to a fraudulent transfer action under the UFTA. We adopt an objective, rather than a subjective, inquiry into whether the transferee knew or should have known of the debtor’s fraudulent purpose in transferring the assets. But here, because we conclude that the district court failed to determine whether a fraudulent transfer under the UFTA occurred in the first instance, we reverse the district court’s judgment as to the third party and remand this case for a new trial.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
This appeal and cross-appeal arise out of a dispute over the sale, repossession, and subsequent resale of a small business by its original owners. Ralph and Penny Grant sold the assets, including the goodwill and customer base, of Nevada Small Engines for $250,000 to respondent/cross-appellant First Boston Financial, LLC. First Boston paid $70,000 at the close of escrow and executed a promissory note for $180,000 payable in monthly installments. First Boston made the first four payments, but was late making the fourth payment. Apparently, because of the late payment and without giving notice to First Boston, the Grants immediately repossessed the business and began operating it again themselves. First Boston filed a complaint against the Grants, alleging breach of contract and conversion.1
While that action was pending, the Grants sold the business, through a private sale, to appellants/cross-respondents Hans Joseph Herup and Herup Holdings, LLC (Herup) for $199,060.88 in cash. Before the sale, the Grants and Herup executed an addendum to the purchase agreement, which referenced “pending litigation” as follows:
Buyer is aware of pending litigation between the Seller herein and the former Buyers of Nevada Small Engines, Gardnerville, Nevada, which has no legal effect on the current business assets or operation. Seller herein indemnifies Buyer herein from any liability of such litigation.
The escrow instructions included the same clause. After the Grants sold the business to Herup, First Boston amended its complaint to add a fraudulent transfer claim against Herup.2 First Boston specif*231ically sought to void the transfer between the Grants and Herup. First Boston also sought compensatory and punitive damages and injunctive relief as part of its fraudulent transfer claim. In the district court, Herup defended on the ground that he was a good faith purchaser for value, thereby precluding a judgment against him under the UFTA.
At some point during the course of litigation and before trial, the Grants disappeared. Given their failure to comply with requests for admissions, the district court granted partial summary judgment to First Boston on the liability portion of its breach of contract and conversion claims against the Grants and conducted a bench trial on the issues of the Grants’ damages and Herup’s liability and damages.3
Following the trial, the district court found that Herup was on inquiry notice of First Boston’s claim because of the addendum to his contract with the Grants and, thus, could not establish a good faith defense under the UFTA. The district court then allocated damages between the Grants and Herup, finding that returning the business to First Boston would be unfair because of the passage of time and because First Boston never fully paid for the business. Herup was assessed damages of approximately $81,000, and the Grants were held liable for over $336,000.
Herup appeals, claiming that he should not have been subject to any damages because he acted in good faith in purchasing the business. First Boston cross-appeals, arguing that Herup should be liable in the amount of $199,060.88, the purchase price Herup paid to the Grants.
DISCUSSION
This case requires us to interpret and apply the UFTA, which Nevada has adopted and codified in NRS Chapter 112. While we will not disturb a district court’s findings of fact if they are sup*232ported by substantial evidence,4 the construction of a statute is a question of law, which we review de novo.5
We conclude that the district court failed to determine, as required by the UFTA, whether a fraudulent transfer occurred under NRS 112.180(1)(a), which is a prerequisite to setting aside the transfer or imposing damages, and whether Herup acted in good faith. Consequently, we reverse the district court’s judgment with respect to First Boston’s claims against Herup and remand this matter for a new trial against Herup only.6 We also take this opportunity to clarify the standard to be used when evaluating a transferee’s good faith defense to a fraudulent transfer claim under the UFTA and adopt an objective standard.
Prima facie case of fraudulent transfer
The UFTA is designed to prevent a debtor from defrauding creditors by placing the subject property beyond the creditors’ reach. At the outset, we note that the district court never specifically determined that the Grants, who were initially secured creditors with respect to First Boston’s promissory note, became “debtors” liable on a “claim” to First Boston within the meaning of the UFTA when they repossessed the business.7 However, the district court did state that the Grants “wrongfully foreclosed upon the business and repossessed its assets” and that they “did not have legal right to take possession, much less sell the property.”
When reviewing a district court’s judgment, we apply the rules of construction that pertain to interpreting other written instruments.8 We have previously explained that when unclear, a judgment’s interpretation is a question of law for this court.9 Additionally,' we have stated that a judgment’s legal effect must be determined by construing the judgment as a whole, and that, in the case of an ambiguity, the interpretation that renders the judgment more reasonable and conclusive and brings the judgment into har*233mony with the facts and law of the case will be employed.10 Construing the order as a whole here, we conclude the district court found that a creditor-debtor relationship existed between First Boston and the Grants.
Three types of transfers may be set aside under the UFTA: (1) actual fraudulent transfers;11 (2) constructive fraudulent transfers;12 and (3) certain transfers by insolvent debtors.13 In its conclusions of law, the district court cited only the statutory provision concerning actual fraudulent transfers, NRS 112.180(1)(a), which provides that
[a]transfer made or obligation incurred by a debtor is fraudulent as to a creditor, whether the creditor’s claim arose before or after the transfer was made or the obligation was incurred, if the debtor made the transfer or incurred the obligation:
(a) With actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud any creditor of the debtor ....
NRS 112.180(2) sets forth several factors that the district court may consider in determining a debtor’s actual intent, including whether:
(a) The transfer or obligation was to an insider;
(b) The debtor retained possession or control of the property transferred after the transfer;
(c) The transfer or obligation was disclosed or concealed;
*234(d) Before the transfer was made or obligation was incurred, the debtor had been sued or threatened with suit;
(e) The transfer was of substantially all the debtor’s assets;
(f) The debtor absconded;
(g) The debtor removed or concealed assets;
(h) The value of the consideration received by the debtor was reasonably equivalent to the value of the asset transferred or the amount of the obligation incurred;
(i) The debtor was insolvent or became insolvent shortly after the transfer was made or the obligation was incurred;
(j) The transfer occurred shortly before or shortly after a substantial debt was incurred; and
(k) The debtor transferred the essential assets of the business ....
While several of these factors may be relevant here, the district court failed to document its findings, if any, with regard to the Grants’ actual intent to defraud First Boston.
Indeed, the district court erroneously concluded that the Grants’ intent was not at issue, stating that “[t]he parties stray from the fundamental issue in this case when they argue about the intent to defraud. [First Boston] does not have to prove that the Grants or Herup intended to defraud [First Boston] to recover the property.” To the contrary, NRS 112.180(1)(a) plainly provides that, for the district court to enter judgment in favor of a creditor under that statute, it must first determine whether the debtor “actually] inten[ded] to hinder, delay or defraud any creditor of the debtor.” (Emphasis added.) Because the district court made no such determination here and failed to consider the factors set forth in NRS 112.180(2), we reverse the district court’s judgment as to Herup and remand this matter to the district court for a new trial.
Good faith
Even if we were to assume that the district court properly found that the Grants actually intended to defraud First Boston under NRS 112.180(1)(a), the district court failed to properly consider Hemp’s good faith defense. NRS 112.220(1) provides a complete defense for an action for avoidance under NRS 112.180(1)(a) and states,
A transfer or obligation is not voidable under paragraph (a) of subsection 1 of NRS 112.180 against a person who took in good faith and for a reasonably equivalent value or against any subsequent transferee or obligee.14
While the district court considered Hemp’s good faith defense in the proceedings below, the court, in concluding that Hemp was not *235a good faith purchaser, referred to concepts of negligence, bona fide purchaser status, bad faith, and good faith. Further, the district court did not determine whether Herup had paid reasonably equivalent value for the repossessed business.
We have not previously discussed the standard to be applied in determining good faith within the meaning of NRS 112.220(1). While this concept of a good faith transferee is embodied in the UFTA,15 it is not defined. Thus, we take this opportunity to clarify the standard to be applied in determining when good faith has been established to provide a complete defense to an action for avoidance under the UFTA.
Herup asks this court to adopt the standard stated in Park Hill Corp. v. Sharp, wherein a Washington appellate court held that a money judgment may only be awarded “against a transferee if the transferee ‘knowingly accepted the property with an intent to assist the debtor in evading the creditor’ ” and place the transferred assets beyond the creditor’s reach.16 Herup, however, overlooks that in Eagle Pacific v. Christensen Motor Yacht, a different division of the Washington appellate court rejected the Park Hill holding and concluded that the plain language of the UFTA permits entry of judgment even without proof that the transferee knowingly accepted the property and intended to assist the debtor in evading the creditor.17
*236Faced with this split of authorities in a case addressing Washington’s version of the UFTA, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit determined that Eagle Pacific was more consistent with the plain language of the UFTA.18 Additionally, the Fifth Circuit noted that “this provision of the UFTA ... is ‘virtually identical’ to the corresponding provision of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 548, and cases interpreting that statute are consistent with the interpretation arrived at in Eagle Pacific.” 19 The Fifth Circuit court cited cases in which courts have held that “good faith is determined by looking at what the transferee ‘objectively knew or should have known instead of examining the transferee’s actual knowledge from a subjective standpoint.’ ”20
A majority of courts applying the UFTA hold that a transferee must prove that he received the transfer in objective good faith.21 That is, good faith must be determined on a case-by-case basis by examining whether the facts would have caused a reasonable transferee to inquire into whether the transferor’s purpose in effectuating the transfer was to delay, hinder, or defraud the transferor’s *237creditors.22 Constructive notice may be inferred from knowledge of facts that impose a duty to inquire.23 While a transferee’s lack of actual knowledge of the transferor’s fraudulent purpose is relevant to determining whether the transferee received the transferred property in objective good faith, that fact alone is not dispositive.24
NRS 112.250 directs this court to apply and construe the UFTA in Nevada “to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law with respect to the subject of this chapter among states enacting it.’ ’ Given the Legislature’s intent that this court interpret the UFTA in Nevada to conform to other states’ interpretations of their respective versions of the UFTA, we conclude that, in order to establish a good faith defense to a fraudulent transfer claim, the transferee must show objectively that he or she did not know or had no reason to know of the transferor’s fraudulent purpose to delay, hinder, or defraud the transferor’s creditors. Accordingly, on remand, the district court must determine whether the Grants made a fraudulent transfer under the UFTA, whether Herup acted in objective good faith in purchasing the business from the Grants, and whether Herup paid reasonably equivalent value for the business for purposes of the good faith defense under NRS 112.220(1).25
CONCLUSION
We conclude that the district court failed to make specific findings of fact with respect to whether the Grants’ transfer of the busi*238ness to Herup was fraudulent, and whether Herup was a good faith purchaser within the meaning of the UFTA.26 Accordingly, we reverse the district court judgment as to Herup and remand this matter for a new trial consistent with this opinion.
Parraguirre and Saitta, JJ., concur.