The two causes have been submitted to us upon the same abstracts and arguments, and both will be disposed of in one opinion. The actions, being in equity, are triable anew in this court, and are to be determined upon the preponderance of -the evidence, and the equitable rights of the parties, arising therein.
B. Wilhelm died intestate on the nineteenth day •of May, 1888. His estate was insolvent. The valid claims against the estate amounted to about two thousand dollars. The greater part of this sum will be lost *512to the creditors if the land in controversy should be held to be the property of the widow and son, who are defendants in these actions. There is no dispute-that B. Wilhelm was the owner of the land until about July 27, 1887. The defendants claim that on that day B. Wilhelm executed two deeds of the land, which conveyed to them each an undivided half of the same, and that said deeds were made for a valuable and full consideration. It is claimed in behalf of the creditors that these deeds were never delivered to the defendants by B. Wilhelm, nor by anyone for him. The undisputed fact is that when he died the deeds were found in his dwelling-house in a box where his private papers had been kept for many years. The box belonged to-the deceased, and he had control of it. There was no lock and key to it, and the defendants had access to it, and it was also used by O. O. Wilhelm as a place of deposit for his private papers. Some three days after the death of B. Wilhelm the defendant, O. O. Wilhelm, took these deeds from the box, and' filed them for record in the county recorder’s office. The defendants both testify to certain facts which transpired at about the time of the date of the deeds, which tend in some degree to show an actual delivery. They state, or perhaps it is more accurate to say, that O. O. Wilhelm testified that the deeds were delivered. But the whole record is barren of any evidence of a delivery other than the placing of the deeds in the box. It is true that both of the defendants had access to the box, but in view of the fact that the deeds were not recorded, and the further fact of the relation of the parties, and the other evidence in the case, our conclusion is that it ought to be held as established by the evidence that there was no delivery of the deeds. We need not recite the other evidence in the case. It consists of acts of ownership exercised over the land by B. Wilhelm up to within a very short timebefore his death; *513the admissions of both of the defendants touching such ownership; the practical absorption of the whole of the personal estate by O. O. Wilhelm, to the exclusion of the creditors, upon what appears to be a very doubtful right; the recital in the deed to Mary J. Wilhelm is that it was in consideration of “love and affection and other values and one dollar,” and other facts appearing of record.
Having found that there was iio delivery of the deeds, the title to the land did not pass thereby; and a deed of the undivided half of the land, made by O. O. Wilhelm to Mary J. Wilhelm, after the death of B. Wilhelm, was void as to the creditors, because he had no title to convey. In our opinion the decree is fully supported by' the evidence. Aeeikmed.