294 N.W. 457 | Minn. | 1940
Of course, if the mother merely handed the daughter the deed to read with no present intention to pass title to the daughter, there was no legal delivery. Nor was there such delivery if the daughter refused to accept it, indicating such intention by destroying the deed. On the other hand, if the mother delivered the deed to the daughter with the intention to thereby pass title, and the daughter accepted it, the mother could not, by forcibly or otherwise repossessing herself of the deed, reacquire title. Nor if there had been such a delivery as to pass the title to the daughter could the title revert to the mother by the destruction of the deed by the daughter or anyone else. Whether delivery of a deed has been made so as to pass title from the grantor to the grantee is a fact issue to be determined by ascertaining that the grantor intended such result from what took place. A delivery valid in law does not necessarily mean a manual handing of the deed by the grantor to the grantee. It may be delivered and received by an agent of either party to the deed. The grantor may make a legal delivery by causing the deed to be recorded without it first coming into the hands of the grantee. It may be delivered by the grantor to a third party, if there be no right reserved to the grantor to recall it. The subject of delivery is quite fully treated and authorities cited in Babbitt v. Bennett,
The eighteenth finding is challenged as not sustained by the evidence. The part thereof which is determinative of this appeal is this, in substance, that on or about May 15, *456
1932, appellant sold her home, the land herein involved, to respondent and delivered to her a deed thereto for the consideration of $3,000 paid. From what has already been stated, the only conflict in the evidence is as to the amount of the purchase price, the ownership of the $3,000 appellant withdrew and appropriated from their joint bank account, and what actually happened to the deed handed to respondent by appellant. The court properly gave the parties wide range in receiving testimony touching the source and origin of the joint bank account, and the financial and other dealings between the mother and daughter. If the full purchase price asked for the home was received by the mother from the daughter's money it would tend strongly to show that the deed the mother handed the daughter conveyed the title the mother had, and that the latter intended the same to pass by the delivery of the deed. The evidence is not of the same character as that which caused a new trial in Weston v. Weston,
Because the proceeding is one to register title, many findings necessary and appropriate therein were made. One of these was that the taxes on the land to be registered had been paid. Upon appellant's motion to amend that finding the court added this paragraph to the findings of fact: "That the taxes assessed against said property for the years *457 1931 to 1937 inclusive were paid with funds belonging to the applicant" (respondent). This additional finding is assailed as not supported by the evidence. We conclude that there is evidence to sustain this finding. Respondent and appellant lived together in this home most of the time after their joint bank account was established. Appellant's income is not clearly shown. Respondent testified she had a steady monthly income of about $100 a month, and also that, from the time the deed was given her, she gave appellant the cash money to pay the taxes on the home as the same became payable.
The order denying a new trial is affirmed.