delivered the opinion of the court:
In order to recover in the trial below, the plaintiff there, who is the appellant here, relied upon title, claimed to have been acquired under section 6 of the Limitation act by possession and payment of taxes for seven successive years under claim and color of title made in good faith. The decree in the partition suit, setting off the land here involved to John B. Stice, is relied upon as claim and color of title made in good faith. The court below refused a proposition submitted by the appellant, stating that “the decree in the partition suit in evidence in this case is color of title in John B. Stice.” This refusal on the part of the court was erroneous,.as the proposition announced a correct principle of law. We have held, that the judgment or decree of a proper court, making partition, purports on its face to convey title, and constitutes good color of title, even though a part of the tenants in common are not made parties to the s.uit, in which such judgment or decree is entered. (Hassett v. Ridgely,
In order to establish possession and payment of taxes for seven successive years under the decree of partition as color of title, the appellant relies upon the possession of the appellee, James L. Stice, and upon his payment of taxes, while he was guardian of his minor son, John B. Stice. It is said, that the possession and payment of taxes by James L. Stice were not his own possession and payment of taxes, but that he was so in possession and so made payment of taxes as the guardian of the minor, and, therefore, that his acts in this regard inured to the benefit of the minor, and created a bar in the latter’s behalf under section 6 of the Limitation act. If this be so, then, inasmuch as James L. Stice had a life estate in the premises, his possession and payment of taxes as guardian, if they were his acts as guardian, only operated, in conjunction with the claim and color of title, as a bar against himself, and cut off his own interest in the land as life tenant.
That James L. Stice had a life estate is not denied, nor can it be. His wife inherited an undivided one-third part of the lands from her father, John Brown, subject to the dower interest of her mother, the appellant. While she owned this undivided interest, she had a child, John B. Stice, born to her and her husband, James L. Stice, and thereafter, to-wit, on November 20,1873, she died, leaving John B. Stice her only child and heir-at-law. It thus appears, that she died before the act of 1874, abolishing the estate of curtesy, was passed. Hence, under the decisions of this court, James L. Stice, upon the death of his wife leaving issue, was a tenant by the curtesy consummate in the land inherited by her from her father. His interest was more than mere dower in his wife’s land; it was a life estate in'the whole of it. (McNeer v. McNeer,
It is true, that James L. Stice was not made a party defendant to the partition proceeding. He was a necessary party, and, if he had been made defendant, his estate as life tenant would unquestionably have been decreed to attach to the part set off in partition to John B. Stice. (Spencer v. Wiley,
It appears, however, that in his accounts as guardian, presented to the county court, the appellee charged himself with certain rents, collected from the property, and credited himself with amounts paid out for taxes and improvements. It also appears, that, from 1884 when the appellee was appointed guardian of his son down to November, 1892, when he filed a petition for dower in said lands, he was laboring under a mistake, not knowing that he had a life estate in the whole of the premises, but supposing that he only had a dower interest therein. His error in this regard was not discovered until the introduction of evidence upon the hearing of his petition for dower. It is claimed oh the part of appellant, that appellee is estopped from denying full ownership of the property in John B. Stice by the statements, contained in the inventory and reports filed by him as guardian in the county court. The inventory speaks of the property here in question as a part of the estate of John B. Stice. This was literally true, because John B. Stice had a vested interest in the property as remainder-man, but there was nothing in the inventory inconsistent with the idea, that the ownership of the property by John B. Stice was subject to a life estate. So far as the reports as guardian are concerned, the appellee does not therein treat himself as the tenant of the land under his son, as landlord, but merely charges himself with certain quantities of corn and wheat and other products raised upon the land. Even if he is «thereby estopped from claiming, that he is entitled to recover back the amounts, with which he charged himself for such products, no estoppel arises as against his claim to the life interest which he owned in the property. If, however, the appellee can be held to have occupied the possession, as lessee of the premises under his son, by virtue of charging himself with the products raised from the land, his act in this regard would merely suspend his right, as life tenant, during the time of his occupation as such lessee. If one, having a life estate in lands, accepts a lease of the same premises for a term of years, it will have the effect of suspending his life estate for the term. (Heisen v. Heisen,
We are, however, of the opinion,- that there was no such estoppel here, as cuts off the appellee from claiming his interest in the property as tenant for life. If any estoppel exists, it is an estoppel in pais, or an equitable estoppel, but an estoppel of this kind is not available in an action of ejectment. (Wales v. Bogue,
The possession, contemplated by section 6 of the Limitation act, is an open, notorious, adverse, actual, visible and exclusive possession. (McMahill v. Torrence,
The action of the court below in the giving and refusal of propositions of law, except as already indicated, was in harmony with the views herein expressed. We, therefore, see no reason for reversing this judgment. Accordingly, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice Boggs took no part in the decision of this case.
