Suit under section 2535-, Revised Statutes 1909, to determine and quiet title. The controversy arises in this way: In 1885 W. L. Barbee purchased the eighty acres of land in controversy, tak*302ing the title in his own name. This land was adjoining a farm owned by him. His only son, W. O. Barbee, hereinafter called Bnd Barbee who had • lately married, was placed in possession of this eighty, where he continued to reside until 1906. In 1889 the assessment was changed at the request of the father into the name of the son, who thereafter paid the taxes until 1897, at which latter date the assessment was again changed to W. L. and M. J. Barbee. In 1896, W. L. Barbee conveyed this land to his wife, Martha J. Before this last conveyance was made Bud Barbee had been arrested for obtaining money under false pretenses, was heavily in debt, and pressed by his creditors. On February 8, 1900, the defendant bank obtained a judgment against Bud Barbee in the circuit court of Ray county for something over $1,000. On July 18, 1901, Martha J. Barbee conveyed this land to the minor children of Bud Barbee, who are plaintiffs in this case and who claim title through this conveyance. In June, 1902, an execution was levied upon the judgment obtained' by the Bank of Polo upon all the right, title and interest of Bud Barbee in and to this land. At the sheriff’s sale the property was purchased by the defendant bank, and a deed made and delivered by the sheriff to the purchaser. Shortly thereafter the defendant bank instituted suit in ejectment against W. L. Barbee, Martha J. Barbee and Bud Barbee, and obtained a judgment which was affirmed in this court (Bank v. Barbee, 198 Mo. 465), and the bank was put in possession.
This suit was filed by the minor children of Bud Barbee, who claim title, as stated above, through the deed from their grandmother. Pending the suit one of the plaintiffs, George, died and W. O. and Lydia Barbee became parties as his representatives. •
The bank defends upon the ground that Bud Bar-bee was the owner of this land when it was sold by the sheriff under execution, and that the bank is now the *303owner thereof. It is claimed that this land was given to Bnd Barbee by his father, and also that he acquired ownership by adverse possession. It is charged in the answer of the bank that the transfers from W. L. Barbee, in 1896-, to his wife, Martha, and from her to her grandchildren, were without consideration, and were made to defraud the creditors of Bud Barbee, and the court is asked to set aside said conveyances and confirm the title in the defendant bank.
Judgment below was rendered for the plaintiffs.
A vast number of witnesses appeared on both sides. The following facts appear without controversy :
Bud Barbee was placed in possession of this land shortly after his marriage for the purpose of affording him a home. His parents both say that he was “on their hands, ’ ’ and they desired to get rid of him. The' property was assessed in his name at the request of his father, and Bud paid the taxes. In 1894, W. L. Barbee and his wife requested Squire Moffit to prepare a warranty deed conveying this land to Bud. The deed was written, and it was signed by the two grantors and acknowledged by them before Squire Moffitt. Whether it was ever actually delivered to Bud is the' main matter in controversy, concerning which facts will more fully appear in the opinion. The parties admit the making of the deed, but say that it was made in 1892. Subsequent to the making of the deed, Bud Barbee made permanent and substantial improvements on the place, remodeled the house, built corn' cribs, and otherwise improved it as a home. Whether his father reimbursed Bud the cost of improvements and taxes paid is in controversy.
I. We cannot undertake to set out in detail the. voluminous testimony in this case. Upon a careful consideration of all the evidence, we' are constrained, to disagree with the learned chancellor as to the weight *304of the evidence. W. L. Barbee bought this land about the time Bud married, and put Bud in possession of same as his home. Subsequently the parents signed and acknowledged a warranty deed conveying this land to Bud. Squire Moffit, who wrote the deed and took their acknowledgments, testified that they told him at the time that they were giving the land to Bud and that they intended to deliver the deed to him that day on their way home. Both grantors deny that they made this statement to the justice. He is, however, a disinterested witness, and his affirmative evidence on this point should outweigh the denial of the parties, in view of their obvious interest in the case, as will appear later on. Several witnesses, apparently disinterested, testify to statements made subsequently by both the elder parties and Bud to the effect that the deed had been delivered.. All three parties deny ever having made, such statements, and one or two witnesses testify that Bud claimed that the land belonged to the old man. There is also testimony, not of great weight, that the deed was seen by two persons in Bud’s possession. Substantial improvements were made, by Bud under his direction by men employed apd paid by him. There is some .testimony to the effect that his father reimbursed Bud the cost of the. improvements and his outlay for taxes. We are satisfied, however, from, all the evidence that to a substantial degree Bud paid the cost of the improvements. Both the elder parties and Bud testify that he occupied' the place as a tenant and paid rent by a division of the crops. Their evidence is vague and unsatisfactory on this point, and is but slightly corroborated. Several farm hands testify to facts indicating a division of the corn crops. It appears, however, that Bud worked the adjoining eighty acres also, and that the crops from both tracts were gathered together at his place, the corn in cribs and the hay in stacks. He worked the old man’s farm on shares. The testimony *305of these farm hands does not undertake to go further than to show that crops were divided, and their testimony could well he taken to refer to crops from land other than the eighty acres in controversy. Against the inferences to be drawn from the execution of the deed, the affirmative testimony of the justice as to the declared intention to immediately deliver the deed to Bud, the testimony of subsequent statements of both parties to the deed that it had been delivered, the acts of ownership by the grantee, the positive testimony that the deed was seen in Bud’s possession, and the fact that the property was assessed to Bud at his father’s request, the Barbees oppose flat denials but slightly corroborated. .
The evidence to rebut the case made by the defendant bank — that is, the inference arising from the execution of the deed that it was delivered, the possession by Bud, and the concurrent acts of the parties indicating his ownership', — should be clear and decisive.
In Grould v. Day, 94 U. S. 405, it is said: “Delivery will be presumed, in the absence of direct evidence, from the concurrent acts of the parties recog- ' nizing a transfer of title.”
In Massachusetts this is the rule: Evidence of the execution of a deed in the presence of an attesting witness is evidence from which to infer delivery. [Howe v. Howe, 99 Mass. 88; Moore v. Hazelton, 9 Allen, 102.]
In New York, this: “In cases of voluntary settlements the courts have gone great lengths in sustaining the validity of deeds', without affirmative proof of any delivery, and the earlier cases hold that a voluntary settlement fairly made is binding in equity, unless there is clear and decisive proof that the grantor never parted or intended to part with possession of the deed, and if he retains it there must be other facts *306to show that it was not intended to be absolute.” [Wallace v. Burdell, 97 N. Y. 22.]
Section 2818', Revised Statutes 1909, provides: “Every instrument in writing, conveying or affecting real estate, which shall be acknowledged, or proved, and certified as herein prescribed, may, together with the certificates of acknowledgment or proof, and relinquishment, be read in evidence without further proof.”
We have construed this section to mean that the certificate of acknowledgment takes the place of proof that the deed was signed and delivered; that it is “prima facie evidence that the deed was duly executed, that is, that it was signed and delivered.” [Burke v. Pence, 206 Mo. l. c. 339.] This evidence is not conclusive. It may be rebutted by proof to the contrary.
It must be conceded that the testimony of the three parties, father, mother and son, if given full credence, clearly negatives the delivery of the deed and the ownership in Bud Barbee. Both W. L. and Martha Barbee say that they kept this deed in their possession about a month, and then burned it. Mrs. Barbee says that at the time the deed was written they expected to deliver it, but were not certain about it; that they thought they “would have it ready.” W. L. Barbee, when asked why he had the deed made, replied, “Well, that was our business.” In view, however, of the acts of these witnesses, about to be detailed, and their obvious interest in the case, we must accept their testimony with great doubt as to its reliability. W. L. Barbee retained the title to this land on the records in his own name until 1896, and until his son,-Bud, had got into serious trouble in both the criminal and civil courts, and was being hard pressed by creditors, all of which was known to his parents. Then W. L. Barbee conveyed this property to his wife. The stipulation in the record states that this conveyance recites a consideration of $3,500. Mrs. Barbee testi*307fies that she took this land knowing her son’s troubles, and took it in payment of a note sbe field against her husband. She cannot tell how long she had held the note, nor does °she state its amount nor what it represented. She says the payment for the land took the note and a little more. After the defendant bank had obtained judgment against Bud, Martha J. conveys this land to Bud’s minor children in consideration of love and affection. Taking the testimony of all the • parties together, we cannot resist the conclusion that these conveyances were made for the purpose of placing the land beyond the reach of Bud’s creditors, and to confirm the original purpose of the elder Barbees to keep the property in Bud’s family. Such in fact was the result of these conveyances. These facts account for the anomalous position of Bud Barbee as a witness. In order to secure this property to his children he must disclaim ownership in himself. His counsel admitted in open court that his reputation for truth was bad. He himself admitted that his record was bad. Two witnesses testified that the reputation of W. L. Barbee for truth was bad, and one (a director in the defendant bank), that the reputation of Mrs. Barbee was bad. There was no counter evidence on the question of the reputation of the Barbees. Their testimony does not ring true, and we deem it insufficient to meet the case made by the defendant bank; There is evidence pro and con as to the reputation for truth of witnesses on both sides, also evidence tending to impeach some of the testimony for the defendant. Taking the record as a whole, and making due allowance for the unsatisfactory character of some of the testimony, we must hold that the deed was delivered to Bud Barbee, and that he was owner when the defendant bought at sheriff’s sale, and that the land is now the property of the defendant bank.
Our attention is called to the oft-repeated declaration of this court that in cases where the evidence is *308contradictory deference should he paid to the finding of the chancellor, because he can see and hear the witnesses. We adhere to this doctrine, but find small room for its application here. The ejectment suit, referred to above, brought by the defendant bank against the Barbees involved the precise issue presented in this ease. The testimony in that case was introduced in this case upon the contention of res adjudicates. Upon comparison, we find the substantial testimony was the same in both cases. Each side produced some additional testimony at the last trial, but the main facts appear alike in both cases. The former case was tried by the court, and a finding of facts made. That finding was in favor of the bank, and was to the effect that W. L. and Martha Barbee executed and delivered the deed to Bud Barbee to the land in question in 1894. The first trial was before a different judge. It was a straight ejectment suit to which these plaintiffs were not parties. The judgment there-, in is not res adjudicata. The fact remains, however, that there were two different conclusions upon substantially the same evidence. Both judges heard and saw the witnesses. We can perceive no reason why we should defer to the finding of one more than to that of the other, so far as the question of superior opportunity to judge of the credibility of witnesses is concerned. These observations are fully sustained by what is said by Lamm, J., in Mann v. Doerr, 222 Mo. l. c. 20.
II. What we have said disposes of this case on the merits, and it is therefore unnecessary to discuss the other propositions urged by appellant. One matter, however, should receive attention. It is suggested by respondents that the record before us does not show all the evidence given at the trial, and our attention is called to some former decisions of this court where we held that in equity cases we would not undertake to review the evidence unless the entire testimony was *309preserved in the record, on the theory that the omitted testimony might he controlling and would probably sustain the judgment. The first three pages of respondents’ brief contain what purports to be an additional abstract of the record, and calls attention to the fact that the bill of exceptions contains the following: “Defendants now offer in evidence the deposition of Martha J. Colton;” also, “Defendants now offer in evidence the deposition of George W. Colton;” but that said depositions are not contained in the abstract. The respondents, however, do not tell us what testimony was contained in these depositions. They were offered by the defendant bank, and, presumably, were beneficial to the defendant, if they had probative value at all. As our judgment is in favor of the defendant, we cannot see that the respondents could be in any way prejudiced by the failure to set out these depositions in the record. Respondents do not complain that these depositions, if preserved, would have any effect upon the result. Upon the facts in this case we are of the opinion that the rule contended for by respondents does not apply. We must assume that the appellant acted in good faith, and that it regarded the omitted testimony as unimportant. If .respondents deemed the abstract insufficient they could file an additional abstract under Rule 11. They undertake to do this, but their said additional abstract does nothing more than call our attention to the fact that certain depositions were omitted. No motion was made to dismiss the case for want of a full abstract.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to the circuit court to enter judgment for the appellant bank in accordance with the views herein expressed, and to further order and adjudge the cancellation of the deeds from W. L. Barbee to Martha J. Barbee and .the deed from, said Martha J. to the children of W. O. Barbee.
Kennish and Brown, JJ., concur.