— The appellees and others brought this suit in the Sullivan Circuit Court against appellant and another as the heirs of Eliza Robbins, deceased, to obtain partition of certain real estate situate in said county, of which it was alleged she died seized leaving the plaintiffs and defendants as her heirs at law, who, it was alleged, inherited from her said lands as tenants in common.
Upon the issues formed, a trial resulted in a judgment for the defendants, which was on appeal reversed in this court. Spencer v. Robbins, 106 Ind. 580.
After the return of the cause to the lower court, the venue was changed to the Gibson Circuit Court, where a trial resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, which, on appeal, was reversed in this court. Robbins v. Spencer, 121 Ind. 594.
On the return of the cause to the Gibson Circuit Court again, some of the parties having dropped out of the case by disclaimers left the material matters to be tried to be the issues formed on appellant’s answer and cross-complaint, the substance of which is, that as to so much of the land described in the complaint, to wit: The southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section 23, township 7 north, of range 9 west, and the west half of the southeast quarter of said northeast quarter in Sullivan *486county, Indiana, he is the exclusive owner and the plaintiffs own no part of the same; that he derived title thereto by deed of conveyance by Eliza Robbins to William M. Robbins and the appellant, together with other lands conveyed to them by said Eliza on April 28, 1869, and that subsequently said William and appellant divided said land so conveyed them, and they executed conveyances thereof to each other by which the entire interest in the last named tracts were vested in the appellant.
It is further averred that at the time said Eliza so conveyed said lands to them she was seized in fee simple thereof, and he and his brother took possession of the same, improved and repaired the same by clearing, fencing and making other lasting and valuable improvements thereon. The cross-complaint asked that appellant’s title be quieted.
The appellees pleaded non est factum to the deed mentioned in the answer and cross-complaint, thereby denying the execution thereof by Eliza Robbins. An agreement made in open court between appellant and appellees admitted plaintiff’s cause of action, unless it was defeated by the said deed of Eliza Robbins.
So it is accordingly agreed by counsel on both sides that the question to be determined in the trial court was whether the said deed of Eliza Robbins was ever executed. The appellant and William M. Robbins were sons of said Eliza. The other parties were children and grandchildren of said Eliza. She died in 1882 and prior to the commencement of this suit.
The action of the court in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial is assigned as the only error.
Among the grounds therein specified is that the verdict is contrary to, and not supported by, the evidence.
It is earnestly insisted that there was no evidence whatever to support the verdict, not that the verdict is con*487trary to the weight of the evidence, but that it has no evidence to support it. When that occurs, the verdict is an error of law.
The positive evidence clearly establishes the execution and delivery of the deed of Eliza Robbins to appellant and his brother, William M. Robbins. This evidence is corroborated by a large amount of circumstantial testimony. But there is a considerable amount of circumstantial evidence tending to countervail the evidence of delivery. The whole evidence, therefore, was not free from conflict, and in such a case we can not weigh it. We can not reverse in such a case unless the evidence tending to support the verdict or finding alone considered is insufficient to establish the truth of the verdict, excluding from consideration the evidence on the other side. Cleveland, etc., R. W. Co. v. Wynant, 134 Ind. 681.
If there is evidence, either circumstantial or positive, from which a fact might be inferred, and such fact is found in the trial court, this court can not disturb such finding, though the preponderance of the evidence seems to be against it. Stanton v. Kenrick, 135 Ind. 382.
The circumstantial evidence tending to contradict the delivery of the deed, if there had been no other evidence, was sufficient to warrant the inference that it was in fact never delivered.
The land embraced in the deed was a farm, and the home place of the said Eliza Robbins during her lifetime. Her husband was dead prior to the time the deed is claimed to have been made by her to her two sons.
One Bart Spencer was called by the appellees as a witness in rebuttal, and testified that he was a grandson of Eliza Robbins, a son of Martha Spencer, at one time a plaintiff in the suit, and was such plaintiff at the time he testified; that he had a conversation with his grand-
*488mother in 1881 or 1882, but his best recollection was that it was in 1881, which was twelve years after the deed in controversy purported to have been executed. He was asked how he had gone with his grandmother, Eliza Robbins, from her house to the house of his mother on that occasion, to which he answered: “We went in a buggy.”
He was asked: “What conversation did you have with your grandmother with reference to the land?” To which he answered: “The conversation began as we were passing by her land. * * * She was speaking about that of all her real estate she didn’t have a hoof left. She said, I have my land and home, and they came very near getting that away.”
He was asked who she was speaking of, to which he answered: “With reference to Bish and Anthony.”
The evidence shows that William M. Robbins was called and known by the name of Bish.
In another conversation, afterwards, on April 29,1882, he testified that “She said she was about to make a deed to Jonathan’s boys for the land, and asked me what I thought of it. I told her I thought it would be the best day’s work of her life, as he was broken down in health,, and I did not think there was one of them that would object to it. She said she was going to deed it to his sons instead of to Jonathan', because he was insolvent. The fact is, I think she had already done it then and there.”
Jonathan was one of her sons.
Proper and seasonable objection was made by appellant to the introduction of this testimony, which was overruled and proper exceptions taken.
It thus appears that the trial court held it to be the law that for the purpose of disputing appellant’s title the appellees might prove statements and declarations in *489derogation of appellant’s title by his grantor in his absence, and long after such grantor’s deed purported to convey the title from her to appellant and his brother. The admission of this evidence is one of the grounds specified in the motion for a new trial.
When the case was here the first time, it was said on this point that “it is well settled that declarations of a grantor, after he has parted with his title, made in the absence of the grantee, in disparagement of the title of the latter, are not admissible. McSweeney v. McMillen, 96 Ind. 298.”
A case very similar to the one now before us was Thompson v. Thompson, 9 Ind. 323. That was a suit to recover land, and each party claimed from the same former owner, one J. A. Thompson — William Thompson through a deed, and Martha E. Thompson through a will made by J. A. Thompson. It is there said: “The defendant gave in evidence, over the plaintiff’s objections, declarations made by J. A. Thompson in 1846, when the plaintiff was not present, to the effect that he had bought William out, and that he owned all the property himself. Other declarations of the deceased, made at different times after the alleged conveyance to the plaintiff, to a similar effect, were given in evidence, over the plaintiff’s objection, to which he excepted. As some of the instructions given at the instance of the defendant, assumed that there might have been a surrender of the deed, or a reconveyance by William to James, this testimony may have had an important bearing upon that question. We think its admission was erroneous. The general rule is well settled that the declarations of a vendor, made after his conveyance, are not admissible in evidence to defeat it. Doe v. Moore, 4 Blackf. 445, and authorities there cited.”
*490But we are met with an objection from the appellees to the consideration of the question raised by the admission of Bart Spencer’s testimony, on the ground that any error there may have been therein was waived by a written agreement entered into by the parties. It is claimed by the appellees that it was admitted under such written agreement entered into by the parties, and hence no error was thereby committed.
The agreement mentioned provides that “in all cases where any witness has heretofore testified and has since died, or is not present to testify orally, and such testimony is contained in the transcript or bill of exceptions of this cause in the Supreme Court, either party shall have the right to use such testimony of any such witness or witnesses as set out in such transcript, and such evidence as shown by such transcript shall be taken and treated as the evidence of such witness.”
In addition to the fact that it does not clearly appear from the record that the witness Bart Spencer did not appear and testify orally in court as above recited, we think that the written agreement above recited will not bear the construction contended for by the appellees’ learned counsel. It contains no agreement to waive any objection to the admissibility of any of such testimony because it does not even provide that such testimony may be introduced or admitted in evidence. It does provide that either party shall have the right to use such testimony, and such evidence shall be taken and treated as the evidence of such witnesses; that is, the agreement in effect waived the necessity of the production of the witness in court, and in lieu thereof agreed to treat the contents of the transcript purporting to be his evidence as the evidence of such witness precisely the same as if he were produced' and had so orally *491testified; that did not waive any objection to tbe competency of the witness nor to the competency of the testimony. In short, there was no agreement that such testimony should be read in evidence on the trial of the cause except as a [mere substitute for the production of the witness in court, and his orally testifying to the facts. There was, therefore, no waiver of objection to the admissibility of Bart Spencer’s testimony.
But it was claimed that the declarations given in evidence by that witness were competent because Eliza Robbins was in possession of the land, and that such declarations were competent to explain the character of her possession. And appellees’ learned counsel cite Creighton v. Hoppis, 99 Ind. 369, and many other cases in support of this contention which we will notice further on. We are informed by the briefs on both sides, that the trial court admitted these declarations on the ground that so long as Eliza Robbins remained in possession that was an act proper to be shown to defeat the deed, and that her declarations concerning the ownership of the land were competent as a part of the res gestee-, that is a part of the act of possession. There are exceptions to the general rule already stated, and the question arises, does this case fall within any such exceptions? That question seems to have been directly involved in Thompson v. Thompson, supra, from which we have quoted the general rule. It was further said in that case that: "It appeared in evidence that the deceased claimed the land in question as his own, until his death; that he was in the continued occupancy of it; that he built a house upon it worth some $400 or $500, and had laid the foundation and prepared the materials for another, at the time of his death; that he had planted an orchard; and that at all times since 1839, he had appeared to be the owner.” And yet, as we have seen, the admission *492of declarations of the deceased made after the conveyance to the plaintiff, and in his absence, in disparagement of such conveyance was held erroneous on account of the general rule that declarations of a vendor after his conveyance are not admissible to defeat it. The case of Creighton v. Hoppis, supra, cited and principally relied on by appellees,was entirely different from the case now before us. That was a suit for possession of land, and the defense was that the deed relied on by the plaintiff to recover though absolute on its face was intended as, and was really a mortgage. Hence the retention of possession by the grantor was inconsistent with the absolute character of the deed, and so was the making of lasting and valuable improvements while thus retaining the possession, the proof of which was permitted.
It was said in that case that “Possession by the person who has executed an instrument purporting on its face to be an absolute conveyance of land, is in its nature equivocal, for it may be that he was in possession as tenant, or as a mortgagor, or by the mere sufferance of the grantee. As the possession may be equivocal, it becomes material to show its true character, and, in order to show this, what was done by the person in possession may be proved. * * * We do not hold, nor mean to hold, that declarations unaccompanied by an act' are admissible; on the contrary, we understand the rule to be against their admissibility. Nor do we hold that declarations accompanying an act are competent, where the act itself can not be proved, but we do hold that where the act is competent, so also are the declarations made at the time it was performed. Even in such cases, it is only declarations explanatory of the act and immediately connected with it that are admissible. Narratives of a past transaction, although given at the time an act is done, are not competent. In order that the declarations may *493be competent, it must appear that they relate to the thing then done, and that they have a direct connection with it. * * * It is sufficient to establish their competency, if it appears that they were made in connection with some act relating to the character of the possession.”
Here the fact of possession by Eliza Robbins and her right to possession were wholly immaterial to the question in controversy, namely, whether she had in fact executed and delivered the deed to William M. and Anthony S. Robbins. Because, when the case was here before,, it was adjudged, both times, that the legal effect of thi deed was to vest in William M. and Anthony S. Robbins a fee simple, reserving a life estate therein to the grantor, and that she was thereby entitled to the possession during her life. Robbins v. Spencer, supra; Spencer v. Robbins, supra.
Here the possession of Eliza Robbins was not equivocal, needing no explanation. If she had not in fact executed the deed to her two sons, it is conceded on all hands that she was the owner and entitled to the possession. If she had in fact executed the deed, she was entitled to the possession during her life, according to the terms' of the deed. So that, in any event, her possession was not equivocal, nor did it need explanation. Her possession had no bearing on the question in dispute as a fact, one way or the other. Her possession was consistent with either contention. It was not a material fact on either side of the controversy. Therefore, possession not being a material fact, it was not competent, and could not be legally proven on either side to throw light on the question whether the deed had actually been executed. And, according to the case cited, declarations accompanying such possession are not competent. Her possession being consistent with her deed to her two *494sons, it was not equivocal, nor did it need any explanation why it should continue while the deed existed.
Besides, her declarations were mere narratives of a past transaction, and had no relation to anything then done-. Such declarations are held incompetent by the case cited by appellees. See, also, Doe v. Moore, supra.
It was farther said in the case quoted from that “it is the general rule that where an act is competent, so also are the declarations accompanying the act. * * * ‘This ancient rule of the law necessarily implies, that the acts and declarations of the occupant are good evidence to demonstrate the character and intent of the possession. ’ Williams v. Ensign, 4 Conn. 456. * * * ‘The rule of law is, that where it is necessary, in the course of a cause, to inquire into the nature of a particular act, and of the person, who did the act, proof of what the person said, at the time of doing it, is admissible in evidence, for the purpose of showing its true character, * * * as constituting a part of the res gestee.’ ”
It was not necessary, in the case now before us, to inquire into the nature of the possession, because, as already observed, the possession was wholly immaterial, and therefore incompetent evidence. Not so where the grantor remains in possession after the execution of a deed absolute on its face, but claims that it was but a mortgage, as was the case in Creighton v. Hoppis, supra.
That case not only does not support appellee’s contention, but it even supports the contention of the appellant. The next case cited by appellees is Steeple v. Downing, 60 Ind. 478.
The declarations there held competent were made by the grantor in disparagement of his rights in the land prior to his grant, he having no other title than naked possession. Manifestly that case has no bearing on this.
*495The next case cited by appellees is McConnell v. Hannah, Admr., 96 Ind. 102.
A horse and buggy belonging to the decedent in his lifetime had been levied on by execution against him, and bought in by his daughter, who lived with him on a farm, where he still remained in possession of the property. It was claimed that he had furnished the money with which his daughter bought it in. His administrator claimed the property. His continued possession after the sale of the property on execution was at least equivocal; it called for explanation as to the character of such possession. His declarations therefore, while buying feed for the horse in offering to mortgage the property to secure the price of the feed, were competent as a part of the res gestee, as was there correctly held. Clearly that case has no application to the case at bar.
The next case they cite is Brown, Admr., v. Kenyon, 108 Ind. 288. The decedent, Brown, held a note and mortgage against Kenyon and the latter claimed that the decedent had agreed that he should furnish him a home and board during his natural life in full satisfaction of the debt and that he had performed that agreement.
The note and mortgage remained in the possession of the decedent, the payee, until his death. His declarations, while boarding with Kenyon, inconsistent with such an agreement, were excluded. After stating the general rule this court there said: “ ‘But an exception thereto is that when declarations, qualifying and giving character to an act proper to be given in evidence, accompany that act, they are admissible whether self serving or not, because they are a part of the res gestee. ’ * * * In order that such declarations accompanying an act may be competent as a part of the res gestee, manifestly, the act itself must be material to the issue involved. * * * In the case before us, there is no question as to *496the ownership of the notes and mortgage, while Brown, the payee, was alive. He was the owner, and entitled to the possession of them. That was in no way called in question by appellee. The only question for trial was, as to whether or not the agreement set up in the answer was entered into between the parties, and if so, whether or not appellee had performed his part of that agreement. * * * The possession by Brown was not an act material to the issue tendered by appellee’s answer. Nor would the declarations, which appellant proposed to prove, in any proper sense, qualify or give character to the act of possession by Brown. Those declarations would tend to overthrow the case as made by appellee’s answer and his witnesses, but as they did not accompany an act material to the issue to be tried, they were not a part of the res gestee, and hence not competent. They were purely declarations of a party in his own favor in the absence of the other party, and hence fall within the general rule which excludes such evidence.”
This case also not only does not support appellees’ contention, but directly and strongly supports that of the appellant. The above quotation, and the principles therein announced, are in every respect directly applicable to, and conclusive of, the question now under consideration against the appellees.
That case, in its statement of the general rule and exception, is suppórted by the following additional cases: Winne v. Glidewell, 17 Ind. 446; Kieth v. Kerr, 17 Ind. 284; Burkholder v. Casad, 47 Ind. 418; Garner v. Graves, Admr., 54 Ind. 188; Campbell v. Coon, 51 Ind. 76; Tedrowe v. Esher, 56 Ind. 443; Kennedy v. Divine, 77 Ind. 490; Stribling v. Brougher, 79 Ind. 328; Daniels v. McGinnis, Admr., 97 Ind. 549; McSweeney v. McMillen, 96 Ind. 298; Tyers v. Kennedy, 126 Ind. 523; Durham v. Shannon, 116 Ind. 403.
*497Appellees also cite Mans v. Bome, 123 Ind. 522; Bunberry v. Brett, 18 Ind. 343; Bunnell v. Studebaker, 88 Ind. 338; Kuhns v. Gates, 92 Ind. 66; Durham v. Shannon, supra, and Lowman v. Sheets, 124 Ind. 416, in support of their contention that the declarations of Eliza Robbins were admissible because she was in possession. We have examined these cases and find them not in point for the same or similar reasons for which we held the cases cited by appellant above examined inapplicable. The appellees also cite Tedrowe v. Esher, supra, and Riehl v. Evansville, etc., Assn., 104 Ind. 70, in further support of their contention.
The declarations of the grantor made after he had parted with his title, tending to impeach the title of his grantee, which was held admissible in those cases, fell within another well known exception to the general rule that such declarations are inadmissible, and that is where there is a conspiracy or common purpose on the part of the grantor and grantee in such conveyance to defraud a third person. In both cases it was held that there was sufficient proof of such conspiracy to bring the cases within that exception. After reviewing our cases, we conclude that there is no principle of law on which the ruling of the trial court can be sustained in admitting the evidence of the declarations of Eliza Robbins in derogation of her previous conveyance in the absence of the appellant. Such evidence came directly within the well established general rule excluding proof of such declarations, and did not fall within any exception to such general rule.
Other questions are discussed in the briefs arising out of other grounds specified in the motion for a new trial, but those questions may not arise on another trial, and for that reason we deem it unnecessary to decide them. *498In the condition of the evidence, the improperly admitted testimony of the declarations of Eliza Robbins may have had a controlling influence in producing the verdict, and hence we can not say the error of admitting such evidence was harmless.
Filed Oct. 30, 1894.The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to sustain the motion for a new trial.