Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
On February 15th, 1911, John Boyd executed and delivered to his brother, James Boyd, a deed, by which he conveyed to him the fee simple title to about nine-tenths of an acre of land, in Lyon county, near Eddy-•ville. Elizabeth, the wife of John Boyd, did not join in the deed, and thus did not part with her potential right of dower in the land embraced by the deed. After the execution and delivery of the deed, John Boyd died, testate. His last will and testament was probated in May, 1911. By the provisions of the will, the testator devised all of his property to his surviving- widow, Elizabeth OBoyd, the sole devisee in the will, who died in 1915, and
The small portion of land, which John Boyd conveyed to James Boyd, was unimproved woodland, and was situated alongside of a roadway and just within the boundary line of a farm which he owned and which was bounded at that point by the roadway. The entire farm, including the portion sold and conveyed to James Boyd, was enclosed, at the time of the sale by a fence; which extended around the entire farm. There were dwelling houses upon the farm, which were occupied by tenants. The farm was divided by cross-fences into fields, and the 'one, in which the land conveyed to James Boyd, by the deed, was situated, was covered with trees and bushes and was used for pasture land. There were other fields suitable for and used for cultivation. The deed to James Boyd described the small piece of land conveyed by. it, by metes and bounds, and as being a part of a tract of land, which had been conveyed to John Boyd by John • Stacker. There were no ■ improvements upon the land which was conveyed by the deed, except an open pen, which had been used for slaughtering animals, presumably hogs.
John Boyd died a short time after the execution and; delivery of the deed to James Boyd, but, during his life, nor that of Elizabeth Boyd, the record does not indicate that James Boyd performed any act, which indicated ownership or dominion over the small piece of land, which had been conveyed to him by John Boyd. Neither, does the record disclose that John Boyd, after executing the deed; or Elizabeth Boyd, the devisee under his will;, or the appellants, as her heirs, ever asserted any title to the land embraced by the deed, or exercised any dominion over it, or used or appropriated it in any way. It seems to have remained enclosed in the woodland pasture with the other lands, which John Boyd did not sell, and which passed to his widow under his will and to appellants by inheritance from their mother, and as it was, when it was sold and conveyed to James Boyd, and until after the death of Elizabeth Boyd, but it is not clear, whether or not, it was so enclosed, at the time, it was-conveyed to appellee, .T. A. Bruce, by James Boyd, as Marie Boyd, one of the appellants, testifies to having re
On the 18th day of-March, 1915, James Boyd sold and .conveyed the small piece of land, for the alleged consideration of one hundred dollars, to appellee, who went upon the land and cut down some small bushes and one larger tree, which were growing upon it, and removed a portion of the tree. The appellants then instituted this action, and in their petition claimed that they were the- owners and in the actual possession of the land, ■ and that appellee had without right entered upon the-land and committed the alleged trespasses above mentioned, and was threatening to continue to trespass, thereon, and asked that he be enjoined from so doing or from any further interference with their possession.
The appellee, by answer, denied the ownership or possession of the land by appellants, and alleged ownership in himself, through the deeds, from James Boyd to him, and from John Boyd to James Boyd. His claim to ownership of the land was controverted by a reply. The trial court adjudged that the appellee had manifested his right to do the acts complained of and that the petition be dismissed. The appellants excepted to the judgment and have appealed.
James Boyd was not made a party to the suit and hence the validity of the deed from John Boyd to him, under which he held the land, was not assailed, and the •record. does not contain any intimation that the deed was other than a valid deed and conveyed the title of the land from John Boyd to him. If the title of James Boyd to the land in controversy was valid, the deed by which, he conveyed it to appellee, vests in him a good title to the land, unless the .conveyance was contrary to law, and one of which the appellants have a right to com
It is, however, earnestly insisted, that appellee having no title to the land in controversy, because of the champertous nature of the deed, under which he claims,that he has no right to disturb the possession of appellants to the land. They claim to have been, at the time of the sale and conveyance from James Boyd to appellee, in the adverse possession of the land, and that
“It may be said as true, that the possession, which is necessary to make a deed of conveyance to a tract of land void under the statutes against champerty, has the same elements as an adverse possession, which is necessary to create title under the statute of limitations, but a possession sufficient under the statute of limitations is in many instances not a sufficient adverse possession to make void a conveyance of land under the statute against champerty. If a party is in possession of land, although his holding may be adverse, but if he is estopped to deny the title of the actual owner, it is not such an adverse holding as will affect the conveyance made by the real owner of the land. Bailey v. Deakins, 5 B. M. 161; Castleman v. Combs, etc., 7 Mon. 273; Griffith v. Dicken, 4 Dana 561; Barrett v. Coburn, 3 Met. 510.”
In Griffith v. Dicken, supra, it was said, that a vendor of land, who, after a conveyance, remains in possession, holds under and not against-his vendee, whose title he is estopped to deny. The same principle is held in Snowden v. McKinney, 7 B. M. 258. Where a vendor remains in possession of the land after he has made a sale of it, it is presumed that his possession is consistent with the deed made by him, and not adverse to the vendee. Behrens v. Crawford, 32 R. 1281; Rudd v. Monarch, 17 R. 893, 32 S. W. 1083; Carpenter v. Carpenter, 8 Bush 283. John Boyd was estopped to deny the title of his vendee. The appellants are the privies of John Boyd and succeeded to only such possession of the lands as he had, and before they could be heard to assert an adverse holding to the land in controversy, it was necessary for them to have made an open demonstration of actual, adverse occupancy of the land, of such a character as would have amounted to a notice to James Boyd of the adverse character of their holding, and such as would have reasonably put a purchaser upon notice of the fact of their hostile claim. Mayes v. Kenton, 23 R. 1052; Shaw v. Revel, 21 R. 348; Ross v. Veech, 22 R. 578. Hence the appellants
It is insisted for appellants that appellee had notice that they were claiming and holding the land hostile to the title of James Boyd before his purchase, but this is denied by appellee, and the evidence, in our opinion, does not fairly sustain the contention.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.