The decisive question, as argued by the respective counsel on this appeal, is whether the plaintiffs (appellants) may maintain ejectment for timber under circumstances to be stated.
During more than 20 years neither the grantor nor his successors in title to the (at this time assumed) reserved estate in the lands’ sought to exercise, in any degree, the rights of their proprietorship in the timber. The grantee and those succeeding to his title to the soil of the lands described in the pleadings were all this time in possession thereof.
Upon the assumption indicated, there can be no doubt, under our decisions, that Ward and these plaintiffs, as his successors in right, were and are the repositories of the legal title to any timber within the terms of the reservation in the deed.—Goodson v. Stewart, 154 Ala. 660, 46 South. 239, and cases therein cited, among others. Where, as here, there is no stipulation with respect to time within which entry shall be made and the timber removed, the law implies a reasonable time during which such entry and removal shall be effected; else it is lost, forfeited.—Goodson v. Stewart, supra; Magnetic Ore Co. v. Marbury Lumber Co., 104 Ala. 465, 16 South. 632, 27 L. R. A. 434 Am. St. Rep. 73, among others. We have held that 51 years is not a reasonable time within which entry and removal, in such case, could be effected. Taking the prescriptive period of 20 years as a maximum measure in such cases, but not affirming at this time that a less period of entire in
Ejectment is a possessory action. To allow its maintenance by those who have lost the right to enter and remove their timber would be, obviously, to revive in a legal forum that which has become extinct, to lend the law’s forms and powers in one case to a process that would defeat and annul its mandates and legal consequences in another. Under such circumstances of entire prolonged inaction of these plaintiffs and of their ancestor, the original grantor, in entering and removing the timber so- (assumed to have been) reserved, ejectment cannot be maintained. Had the grantor or his heirs at law entered to remove their timber after the elapsing of an unreasonable period from February 17, 1882, a trespass upon the soil owner’s lands -would have been committed. — Author, supra. Ejectment will not, of course, lie to effect a wrong of that nature. The plaintiffs could not recover in ejectment; and defendant was entitled to the affirmative charge on that account.
Other questions argued in brief for appellants must be, in consequence, -without effect upon the result of the appeal to which we must conclude.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.