Phases of this litigation, which involves an action for the partition of a tractor originally purchased in 1941 and which counsel on oral argument admitted has now very little value by reason of the ravages of time, have been twice previously before this court on appeal.
(Palpar, Inc.
v.
Thayer,
This appeal by Palpar, Inc. and Morton is from portions of an interlocutory decree of partition in which the court has decreed that Palpar, Inc. and Miller each owns an undivided one-half of the tractor. ' The appeal is on the judgment roll alone.
The interlocutory decree determined that appellant Palpar, Inc. is entitled to an accounting from Thayer of one-half of any profits made by Thayer while he had exclusive possession of the tractor. The court determined that appellant Palpar, Inc. did not have a lien on Miller’s interest in the tractor to secure the amount which may be found due from Thayer on this accounting. This- is the main target of appellants’ attack.
Preliminarily we may dispose summarily of appellants’ contention that Miller was not an innocent purchaser of Thayer’s interest in the tractor. The court found to be true an allega *335 tion in Miller’s cross-complaint that at the time that he received the bill of sale from Thayer Miller “had no knowledge of any claim or interest in and to said equipment by anyone whomsoever other than said defendant, W. A. Thayer, Jr., and said bank. ’ ’ This appeal being on the judgment roll alone this finding is conclusive that Miller acquired title to Thayer’s interest in the tractor without knowledge of any equities existing in favor of Palpar, Inc., or its predecessor Morton.
Appellants’ main contention is that cotenant A has an equitable lien upon the share of his cotenant B to secure the payment by B to A of any rents or profits which B may be found to owe to A upon an accounting of B’s use of the common property; and that this lien may be enforced against B’s share even though B may have transferred his interest to an innocent purchaser for value. It is conceded that this is a question of first impression in this state.
There appear to be three rules on the subject in the various jurisdictions of this country: 1. That one cotenant has no lien on the share of his eotenant for rents and profits, although in a partition action a court of equity having the parties and the property before it may impose such a lien by its decree on the debtor cotenant’s interest;
2.
That one co-tenant has an equitable lien on the interest of his cotenant for rents and profits, but that this lien will not be enforced where that interest has passed, to an innocent purchaser; and 3. That such a lien exists and may be enforced even where the interest has been acquired by an innocent purchaser. (See the note in
The California courts have never been compelled to face up to the question whether a lien in favor of one eotenant upon the interest of the other eotenant exists independently of decree or whether it is only imposed by the court in its decree as a remedy. In
Willmon
v.
Koyer,
“On the claim that the court should not have charged the portion of the property assigned to defendant on partition with the lien for the payment of the amount found to be due plaintiff from defendant. There is no merit in this claim.
“It was an appropriate judgment to enter under the pleadings. In fact it is always appropriate to do so in partition as the only effectual way to secure a cotenant making advances and obtaining judgment therefor.”
*336 This seems to be the language of a court approving the creation of a lien by the decree to make the award effective rather than language holding that there was a preexisting lien which the court by its decree enforced.
The same may be said of
Garcia
v.
Venegas,
“It is meet, in equity, when declaring the interest and quieting the title of one cotenant against another, to declare a lien against the interest so declared, for a due proportion of proper expenditures made by the other cotenant in preserving and protecting the common property.” (Emphasis ours.)
Cases such as
Middlecoff
v.
Cronise,
The rule contended for by appellants, that such lien may be enforced against the interest of an innocent purchaser is in force in very few jurisdictions in this country. Appellants cite the following cases as being in point:
Beck
v.
Kallmeyer,
The subsequent fate of
Beck
v.
Kallmeyer, supra,
upon which appellants most strongly rely, as traced through Shepard’s Missouri Citations, has not been particularly happy. On the point in question it has been cited four times by other courts, and never in its home state of Missouri. By two courts it was expressly disapproved.
(Vaughn
v.
Lanford,
It is clear that the cases cited by appellants represent a minority view and that in the preponderance of jurisdictions which have considered the question the courts have held that no lien of this character will be impressed upon the interest of a former cotenant which has been transferred to an innocent purchaser. (14 Am.Jur., Cotenancy, § 40, pp. 107-108; 27 A.L.R.,
supra,
and cases cited on p. 237; 4 Thompson on Real Property, perm, ed., § 1910, p. 434;
Aylward
v.
Lally, supra,
The reason given by the court for this rule in
Vaughn
v.
Lanford, supra,
‘ ‘ Such liens would be indefinite in amount, and undisclosed by public records, upon which third parties, in dealing with the owners of property, ordinarily have a right to rely. They would greatly injure tenants in common by impairing the market value of their shares and interests, because of the apprehension, on the part of those contemplating purchasing such interests or otherwise dealing with them, that claims for rents might be established as superior liens.”
Similar language is quoted from 7 Ruling Case Law 836 in
Aylward v. Lolly, supra,
*338
Appellants point to an allegation in Miller’s cross-complaint that Thayer gave him a bill of sale of the tractor in question and a “Cletrac Tractor Bulldozer, Model 35” and argue that under Code of Civil Procedure, section 758, Miller was required to allege the “nature and extent” of this additional security. We need not decide, as appellants claim, whether the word “extent” in this section means “value.” The case has been twice tried on this complaint in intervention, on the first appeal this technical objection to the pleading was not raised, and this court sent the case back for a retrial on the pleadings as framed.
(Palpar, Inc.
v.
Thayer, supra,
In our opinion in
Palpar, Inc.
v.
Thayer,
The interlocutory decree is affirmed with directions to the trial court to hear the motion for restitution and decide it as a part of or contemporaneously with the final judgment. Respondents to have costs on appeal.
Goodell, Acting P. J., and J ones, J. pro tem., concurred.
