The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff, Bertha W. Smith, brought this suit to quiet her title to an eighty-acre tract of land and a number of city lots in the city of Topeka, to which J. C. Dolman and other of the defendants made some claim, the nature of which, it is alleged, was not known to plaintiff. She recovered judgment quieting her title and barring the defendants from any interest in the property, from which Dolman appeals.
It appears that E. M. A. Smith, the father of plaintiff, died intestate August 11,1920, leaving as his only heirs his widow and his two daughters — F. A. Richenbacker, the wife of W. J. Richenbacker, and the plaintiff. Previous to his death, and on July 27, 1915, he executed a deed purporting to convey the real estate involved herein, which was recorded on October 26, 1922. The defendant Dolman recovered a judgment against F. A. Richenbacker and W. J. Richenbacker, on September 17, 1921, and in his answer alleged that the deed to plaintiff was not a valid instrument of conveyance, and that as the father of plaintiff died intestate, F. A. Richenbacker inherited an interest in the real estate, and he asked that the deed to plaintiff be adjudged void and the real estate to be the property of .the heirs at law of Smith, and that the judgment be declared to be a lien on the title or interest belonging to F. A. Richenbacker or her husband. Much testimony was taken with relation to the execution of the deed to plaintiff and of its delivery to her, it being claimed
“Delivery may be effected by words without acts, or by acts without words, or by both acts and words. Whenever it appears that the contract or arrangement between the parties has been so far executed or completed that they must have understood that the grantor had devested himself of title, and that the grantee was invested with it, delivery will be considered complete, though the instrument itself still remains in the hands of the grantor.” (p. 718.)
Much is made of the fact that the deed was not recorded until after the death of Smith, but this is only a circumstance which of itself is not controlling. The testimony, though not entirely satisfactory, tends to show an intention on the part of Smith to pass the title, and while some of the circumstances militate against the view of a completed transfer, the whole evidence relating to the execution and delivery of the deed fairly raised a question of fact for the trier of the facts, and the general finding of the court is a finding that an effective execution and delivery of the deed had been made which vested the title in plaintiff. It follows that the judgment of the trial court must be affirmed.