The plaintiffs and defendants are the widow and children of Charles Haeg, deceased, late of Hennepin county, and his sole heirs at law.
The deceased and the plaintiff Albertina Louisa Haeg, his wife, in his lifetime, and on the. 17th day of July, 1889, executed certain deeds of conveyance of his real property, in separate parcels, to his several children, parties to this action, intending thereby to make a division thereof among them. Among these deeds was one running to the defendant Fred Haeg as grantee of the forty-acre tract'in controversy here. These deeds he intended to have delivered to the several beneficiaries just before or immediately after his decease, which subsequently occurred, on 3d day of February, 1891.
The deeds were not in fact actually delivered to the grantees until after his decease, and on this ground, and the further ground also insisted on by the plaintiffs, that they were not in his lifetime delivered to or placed in the custody of a third party, in trust to deliver to the grantees at the appointed time, they claim that they never took effect as conveyances, and they therefore ask to have the same set aside and annulled.
We will first inquire whether the record discloses evidence tending to show that the deeds were placed in the control, custody, or *37possession of a third party, with instructions to deliver them to the grantees named, in pursuance of his declared purpose, and sufficient to support a finding of such delivery to him. We observe that no objection is made to the form or sufficiency of the findings of the trial court, and no claim is made by the plaintiffs’ counsel in their brief that the delivery to such party was in escrow, nor any point made that the second or final delivery to the defendants was dependent on the performance of any condition.
As just suggested, we are to consider simply, on this branch of the case, under the issues made and the briefs of counsel, the sufficiency of the evidence to justify a finding in defendants’ favor on the point suggested. We are not to consider whether the case made in defendants’ favor is strong or weak, for if there is evidence, as we think there is, reasonably tending to show such delivery, this court will not reverse the trial court upon the question. O'Kelly v. O'Kelly, 8 Met. 439. If the deed was duly executed, and was delivered to such third party (in this case one Edward B. King) in the lifetime of the grantor, to be delivered after his death to the grantee, it was a good delivery upon the happening of the contingency, and related back, so as to divest the title of the grantor, by relation from the first delivery. O'Kelly v. O’Kelly, supra; Foster v. Mansfield, 3 Met. 412. It appears that the deceased grantor in this case had definitely determined upon the division of his property among his children, as provided by the deeds in question, as early as the year 1889, and it was so understood between him and his wife and other members of his family; and he accordingly employed an attorney to prepare the deeds, and, as the court finds, they were duly executed and acknowledged by himself and wife on the 17th day of July, 1889, and he then and there made an arrangement with King, who was an old acquaintance, to see that they were delivered to the grantees immediately before his death, or as soon thereafter as possible.
And it further appears that, on the same day, he and King, who was present at his request, went together to Minneapolis with the deeds, and deposited them, inclosed in a separate envelope, in a box in the safety vault of the Minnesota Loan & Trust Company, rented by deceased, and that King then and there agreed to deliver the deeds as requested by the deceased; and subsequently, while on his deathbed, the latter again urged him not to forget the obligation. *38Soon after the decease of the grantor, King went, in company with the plaintiff widow, to the vault of the Minnesota Loan & Trust Company, and took out the deeds, and proceeded to deliver them, as previously agreed, to the grantees, including this defendant. It is very clear that the arrangement was understood beforehand by all the parties, and that the box in which the deeds were deposited for safekeeping was to be accessible to King to enable him to carry out his agreement with the deceased, and make final delivery to the grantees. For the purpose of his trust the deeds must, under the findings of the court, be regarded as placed in his custody, and the record is sufficient to support the finding of a delivery for such purpose. It shows very clearly that such was the intention of the grantors in the deeds, and it would be a very narrow and technical construction to adopt, in order to defeat these deeds, to hold that, because the deeds were deposited in the manner stated in the safety vault, the final delivery was void for want of a previous delivery to King; and, as said by the court in Foster v. Mansfield, supra, it is not necessary to consider what would have been the effect if the grantor had recovered from his sickness, and finally taken back his deed.
He did not change his mind, and his conduct shows that his purpose and intention were unalterably and finally fixed and settled when he executed the deed and made the final arrangement with King.
In respect to the claim made, that the deeds were executed by the wife of the deceased under a mistake of her legal rights or the nature of the transaction, it is enough to say that the evidence abundantly sustains the finding of the trial court that she was fully informed of the grantor’s purpose in making the deeds, and knew' what property was included therein, and that she executed the same freely and voluntarily, and was present and assisted in the delivery to the grantees, and fully acquiesced in the mode adopted by her husband for the division of his estate.
The decision of the trial court is in accordance with the justice and equity of the case, and must stand. As these findings are controlling, we deem it unnecessary to notice other points made in the case.
Order affirmed.
(Opinion published 55 N. W. Rep. 1114.)