POEFENBARGER, JUDGE :
A bill for partition, filed in the circuit court of Lewis county, by Celia T. Pickens and others, heirs of Mary Martha Jarvis, deceased, to which Albert B. Bond and others, heirs of Chas. B. Bond, deceased, were defendants, likewise claiming right to partition, by proper pleadings, was dismissed, on final hearing, in so far as it seeks partition, and the heirs aforesaid have appealed.
The. land involved had originally belonged to James M. Stout, the father of Mrs. Jarvis and Mrs. Bond, and consisted of about 400 acres. James M.' Stout died in 1879, seized and possessed of other lands situated in Harrison county. His wife and seven children, Benjamin B. Stout, Elmer H. Stout, Mary Martha Jarvis, Sue J. Bond, Elizabeth C. Ward and James E. Stout survived him. The widow has since died. Soon after the death of James M. Stout, a suit in equity was instituted in Harrison county for the partition of his lands, the bill setting forth, as belonging to the estate, the lands in Lewis county as well as those in Harrison. No decree of partition was made in that suit. The estate was liable to some indebtedness which the personal property was insufficient to pay, and, in 1883, the Harrison county lands were partitioned by agreement, which agreement was executed by conveyances. The cause was, however, referred to a commissioner who reported an indebtedness to the administrator, B. B. Stout, one of-the heirs, and this [425]*425indebtedness was apportioned among and assumed by the heirs in the partition, each portion being charged upon the lands conveyed. In that suit, Elmer H. Stout filed a paper in which he represented that he had-received from his father, by way of advancement, his full share of the estate, and did not claim any interest therein. Accordingly, he took no part in the partition. The agreement was made among the other six heirs. This did not include the lands in Lewis county: Over these, B. B. Stout exercised control and oversight, with the consent of the other heirs, receiving the rents, issues and profits and paying the taxes, in so far as they were paid, until 1886. In that year, he sold one portion of the land, containing 245.5 acres, to Joseph Krenn and the residue thereof, containing 150 acres, to John Krenn, executing to each of them a title bond, which, though not acknowledged for record, was recorded in the clerk’s office of the county court, April 19, 1896, the date on which they were executed. These lands were returned delinquent -for non-payment of the taxes thereon for the year 1884 and sold in the year 1885 for such delinquency, B. B. Stout becoming the purchaser, but he took no deed under this purchase until 1893.
Soon after their purchase, the Krenns took possession of the land. On the 25th day of May, 1893, Stout obtained a tax deed under his purchase. On the 3rd day of May, 1894, he executed deeds to the Krenns. In 1898, the Krenns leased the land for oil and gas purposes to the South Penn Oil Company. That company has developed the property and found it to be productive of both oil and gas in large quantities. This bill was filed at January Pules, 1901, and all interested persons were made parties.
B. B. Stout defends under his purchase at the sale for non-pay■ment of taxes. He has also procured deeds for all of the interests except that of the Jarvis heirs and a one-half interest, which was conveyed by Benton Stout, one of the heirs, to Chas. B. Bond and Taylor Ward. Ward conveyed his half of the Benton Stout interest to B. B. Stout. Said B. B. Stout claims also to have purchased from Mrs. Jarvis, in her life time, and C. B. Bond, in his life time, all of their interest, by verbal contracts. The Krenns and the South Penn Oil Co. predicate their defense upon the theory of ’adverse possession, as well as title acquired from Stout.
[426]*426Demurrers to the bill were properly overruled. Whatever the title of James M. Stout may -have been, B. B. Stout claimed under him and along with his co-heirs and could not allow the land to become delinquent and purchase it to their prejudice. He was under a duty to pay the taxes. This being true, it is immaterial whether the long delay in obtaining a deed under his purchase rendered it invalid or not. As all the parties must necessarily claim under the same title, all questions of title are cognizable in a suit for partition. There is no strange, adverse title involved, as color or otherwise, unless it be the deeds made in 1893 and 1894, and the period of limitation since their date has not elapsed. As to whether the title bonds, made in 1886 are color of title, or there has been sufficient possession under them, will be deferred for the present.
The decree does not expressly state the ground upon which relief was denied. It dismisses the bill, declaring the Krenns have perfect and indefeasible right and title to the land, setting forth the facts relating to the execution and recordation of said title bonds, but admitting that they were not entitled to be recorded. On the failure of' the court to say in its decree, whether or not the claims of purchase of the Jarvis and Bond interests, set up by B. B. Stout in his answer, praying specific performance of the alleged contract, by way of affirmative relief, and to dismiss said answers, counsel for the appellees base the contention that the court did not find adversely on these claims of purchase but there is incorporated in one of the briefs for' the appellants what purports to be an opinion, delivered by the trial court, in which these claims are overthrown. The whole decree is here for review and, if it shall appear that the claim of title by adverse possession cannot be sustained, it will be necessary to inquire whether the decree can stand upon title by purchase. If title in the Krenns can be made out on either theory, the decree will be affirmed and it cannot be reversed unless both theories fail.
As there is no claim of purchase from Mrs. Jarvis otherwise than by a verbal contract, it is impossible that she could thus have parted with title to her land prior to the 15th day of September, 1887, for, until that time, she was a married woman, and therefore incapable of divesting herself of title to real estate otherwise than by a written instrument, acknowledged in [427]*427the manner prescribed by the statute. Simpson v. Belcher, 61 W. Va. 157; Amick v. Ellis, 53 W. Va. 421; Rosenour v. Rosenour, 47 W. Va. 554; Moore v. Ligon, 30 W. Va. 146; Moore v. Ligon, 22 W. Va. 292. On the 15th day of September, 1887, she procured an absolute divorce from her husband and two months later, lacking one day, Nov. 14, 1887, died of consumption, at her home in Harrison county, on the tract of land allotted to her in the partition of the Harrison county lands. There is much evidence tending to show that she was in a very feeble condition during the whole of this period and never away from her home, but once. Many witnesses say she made a trip on horseback to Kandolph county in 1887, for the purpose of visiting relatives' and returned in about two weeks. Shortly after her return, the disease of which she was suffering, had made such progress and she had become so feeble, that she was soon confined to her home. Mrs. McDonald says she went about the middle of August, was gone about two weeks, and, in about a week afterwards, was confined to_ her bed. Much of the evidence of purchase consists of oral admissions and declarations, said to have been made by Mrs. Jarvis. The greater number of the witnesses who testified to these admissions are members of B. B. Stout’s own family, his wife and children. Mrs. Stout and her children say Mrs. Jarvis came to their house after her return from the .visit to Bandolph county, and some of them say she came for money due her on account of her Fink Creek lands, and that, on this occasion, she said she had procured her divorce. 'Mrs. Stout says she got $30.00, for which she gave a receipt, signing her name, Mary M. Stout, which receipt has been lost and cannot be found. Some of these witnesses place this visit to B. B. Stout as late as three weeks before her death. Mrs. Stout also thinks Mrs. Jarvis returned from her visit to Bandolph county about the middle of October. Other witnesses whom she visited on that trip, as well as her daughters and neighbors, say it was made in August. W. F. Stout and Mrs. E. H. Stout not only say the visit was made in August, but that Mrs. Jarvis then said she had sold her Fink Creek land. That Mrs. Jarvis ever went to B. B. Stout’s after her return from Bandolph county is denied by her daughter, Mrs. Pickens, who says she never left her home but once after her return from Bandolph county [428]*428and, on that occasion, visited her sister, Mrs. Bond, and her uncle, Henry Bassel. This is confirmed by Mrs. Bond, who says Mrs. Jarvis was never away from home afterward, and she fixes the time as* the first or second week in September. Corroboration of the testimony of Mrs. Stout and her children is sought in the evidence of one George Murphy, who says Mrs. Jarvis owed him for work, and, after her return from Bandolph county, went to B. B. Stout to obtain the money with which to pay him. He is flatly contradicted by Mrs. Pickens and Mrs. Currence, who say he never did any work for their mother and was never on her place. He does not fix the exact date of this alleged transaction, and it may have occurred, if at all, before Mrs. Jarvis obtained her divorce. Confirmation of the claim of purchase and corroboration of the witnesses who testified to these admissions is sought in the will of Mrs. Jarvis, made just a few days before her death. By this instrument, she gave her farm in Harrison county to her daughters, Celia and Louise. It’ was then subject to the lien for the money, charged upon it in the partition. The will contained this provision, respecting the farm and her interest in other lands: “I direct that any money that may be payable to me from the sale of land belonging.to the estate of 'my father be applied in payment of the amount charged upon my land on Brushy Fork Creek whereon I now reside under the deed of partition between the heirs and my said father.” No other reference to the Fink Creek land is found in the will. There is no direction to sell the same. It is said this provision in the will impliedly admits a previous sale of it.- .We think this clause is susceptible of a different interpretation. It may as well be assumed that the testatrix referred to the future or contemplated sale as a past sale. The expression is, to say the least, equivocal and lacks clearness and positiveness. It does not necessarily say the lands had been sold. It may well be assumed that if the sale had been made to B. B. Stout, the reference would not have been made to the land, but to money due her from Stout. There is no better foundation in the clause for the view that a sale had been made than for the opposite view that the land still belonged to her father’s estate. We do not think this provision in the will is an admission of the sale of the land. If it be admitted that Mrs. Jarvis made demands upon [429]*429her brother for money before her death, there are circumstances in evidence, affording a basis for the view that he was indebted to her. Some years before her death, .he had verbally purcnased her Harrison county land, and, under that contract, had possession of it for more than a year. On account of the refusal of Mrs. Jarvis’s husband to join in a deed conveying the land to him Stout abandoned the purchase and yielded possession of the land. About this time, he received some cattle from her.
Taken all together, we think this evidence of purchase is too uncertain and indefinite -to sustain the claim. It is uncertain and contradictory as to time and is all together silent as to the price and terms. No doubt B. B'. Stout expected to buy it and likely Mrs. Jarvis looked upon him as a prospective purchaser. There may have been some loose conversation on the subject, as there seems to have been between B. B.‘ Stout and some of the other heirs, but the evidence falls short of the establishment of a contract of sale, fixing the price and terms •and the execution of a written contract or memorandum, and there was no change of possession within the life time of Mrs. Jarvis, of which she had any notice, disclosed by the evidence. To sustain a bill for specific performance of an oral contract of purchase, the evidence must be clear, full and free from suspicion. Harris v. Elliott, 45 W. Va. 245; Gillispie v. Jones, 48 W. Va. 284; Ensminger v. Peterson, 53 W. Va. 324; Westfall v. Cottrill, 24 W. Va. 763; Matthews v. Jarrett, 20 W. Va. 415; Blankenship v. Spencer, 31 W. Va. 510. It must also disclose the price to be paid, this being an essential element of the contract.
The evidence of the purchase of the Bond interest consists, for the most part, of a memorandum, made on a note for $140.00, executed by Bond to Stout, which memorandum A. J. Sullivan says accords with an agreement made in his presence, and the testimony of James F. Stout to the effect that a deed had been sent to him for joint execution by himself and Bond, bearing the signature of Bond, which transaction he thinks occurred about • 1882 or 1884. The memorandum on the note . reads as follows: “It is agreed the above note shall be payment on the Lewis county land on Fink’s Creek. September 1885.” This is not signed by Bond, and the note, with the memorandum on it, remains in the hands of B. B. Stout. Some other witnesses [430]*430say Bond admitted to them his sale of the land to Stout. On the contrary, there is testimony to admissions on the part of B. B. Stout that he had not purchased of Bond, and James F. Stout is flatly contradicted in words and by evidence of' inconsistent circumstances. That the'note was never surrendered is another contradictory fact. Here again, there is no evidence, showing what price was to be paid. We do not think the evidence measures up to the requirement of the rule governing the proof of a parol contract for the sale of land.
A great deal of space in the briefs is devoted to discussion of the question whether the title bonds executed by B. B. Stout constitute color of title. On the one hand, they are regarded as' having the same effect as deeds. On the other hand, they are denied such effect and the Krenns in possession under them are treated as tenants in common with the heirs of Mrs. Jarvis and the heirs of C. B. Bond. If they could be treated as-deeds, void as to the interests of the Jarvis and Bond heirs and constituting only color of title as to these interests, the mere execution and delivery thereof would not constitute an ouster and put the statute of limitations into operation. The statute does not begin to run until after possession has been taken under such a deed. Parker v. Grass, 45 W. Va. 399; McNeely v. Oil Co., 52 W. Va. 616, 636; Hannon v. Hannah, 9 Grat. 146; Freeman on Coten., section 226.
Another important principle, the application of which must be tested by the evidence in the case, is, that the statute of limitations did not run against the heirs of Mrs. Jarvis and C. B-. Bond, unless there was, an ouster before the respective deaths of these ancestors. In other words, if there was, an ouster of C. B. Bond, in his life time, the statute began to run against him and continued to do so against the heirs after his death; and, if it was put into operation against Mrs. Jarvis, before she died, her death did not interrupt or stop it. On the contrary, if the act of ouster occurred after these parties died, the statute did not begin to run against such of their heirs as were infants, or, if it did, their right of action was not taken away or barred, until the lapse of five years after the attainment of their majorities. Their rights of action were saved by section 3 of chapter 104 of the Code. Rowan v. Chenowith, 49 W. Va. 287; Mynes v. Mynes, 47 W. Va. 681; Jones v. [431]*431Lemon, 26 W. Va. 629, 635; Talbott v. Woodford, 48 W. Va. 449.
B. B. Stout never actually resided on the Lewis county land. Before the death of James M. Stout, it was occupied by M. C. Gum, his tenant, but he had left it before said Stout died. Afterwards, about the year 1883, as nearly as he can recollect, he went back on the land at the instance of one Shackleford who claimed to act for B. B. Stout-. Whether Shackleford had any authority or not is immaterial, since B. B-. Stout afterward recognized Gum as his tenant, by accepting payment from him for the use of the land in labor, performed in cleaning up a portion of the land. Gum says: “I done the job of cleaning up for B-. B. Stout as I told you a while ago. * * * I cleaned up for what I took ¿if of it.” In response to a question as to whether B. B. Stout exercised authority over him while on the premises, he said: “Well, he claimed that he had right to but didn’t bother anything about it until the last spring I was there. That was when he sold to Joseph Krenn.” Gum staid on the land until February, 1888, some months after the death of Mrs. Jarvis. He says Krenn gave him charge of it under him after he purchased it in April, 1886.. Neither Joseph Krenn nor J ohn Krenn moved upon the land or put any other tenant upon it within the life time of Mrs. Jarvis, so far is the testimony shows. John Krenn says he put some cattle on the grass land and fixed up the fences within a few weeks after he bought, he thinks, but is unable to say just how long afterwards.- He says ■Charles Shaner put part of the land in corn, as his tenant, the second summer after he bought it, and that said Shaner and his mother lived on the land for nearly two years. In response to a question as to whether he had had possession from the date of his purchase, he said: “This family that was living on it held possession for the summer of the part they had in wheat and then after that no one had possession except when I let them under' lease for rent.” There may be doubt as to what family he refers to, but there can be none about the fact that the visible possession was not changed at the date of the purchase. If he refers to Shaner as the party living on it at the time, he still lived on it the second summer after the purchase, according to his own testimony, and no visible change is mentioned as having occurred, until after the death of Mrs. [432]*432Jarvis. Joseph Krenn admits that M. C. Gum was on the land at the time of his purchase, but says he entered into possession immediately after the date of the title bond. In response to this question: “State if you can the names of the tenants besides yourself who occupied this land at the time of your possession ?” he said: “M. C. Gum, John Leseburg, and I let one field to a man William Buckhannon and. another . field to Jacob Starcher.” Pie does not say in what year or years Leseburg, Buckhannon and Starcher were tenants, and Gum said Leseburg succeeded him. This evidence fails to show that any new tenant was put on the land prior to the death of Mrs. Jarvis, and Krenn does not show that he himself resided upon it. He testifies to no acts done upon the land by himself except fencing, clearing and putting in grass certain portions thereof and placing tenants on it.
Even if the title bonds could be regarded as color of title, the execution thereof would not, of itself, constitute an .ouster. As we have shown, the ouster is not effected until possession is taken under the deed, and such possession must be open, notorious, hostile and exclusive. It must have all the elements of adverse possession in any other case. The mere execution of the deed is not notice of an adverse claim. Something more must be done to apprise the co-tenant of intent to assert a hostile claim. He might never know of the execution of the deed, since that could be done in secret, and recordation thereof would not be notice to him. The recordation of a deed or other instrument is constructive notice only to such persons, and for such purposes as are specified in the statute,, subsequent purchasers and creditors. It was not the intent of the legislature, in ordaining it, to make it the duty of an owner of land to keep his eye upon the registry books to see whether some other person is selling his land. In order to effect an ouster, actual, express ■ notice of the hostile claim must be given to the co-tenant, or such acts must be done upon "the land as he is bound to take notice of as being hostile. Every owner is deemed to be cognizable of what is done upon his land and of who is in possession of it. The law exacts this measure of diligence from him. He must .know whether strangers are entering upon it, and, knowing that, must-inquire by what right they do so. In every instance, such inquiry will presumptively lead to discovery [433]*433of the hostile claim. Hence, the owner is bound to know, and estopped from denying, all- information to which such inquiry, prosecuted with reasonable diligence, would have led. By the great weight of authority, actual, open, notorious and exclusive possession under a deed from one co-tenant amounts to notice. The decisions and text writers may not all analyze the proposition and disclose all the reasons upon which it rests, but they do say the possession is referable to the title. This can mean nothing more than that the owner is under a duty to know who is in possession and then inquire by what right he claims to be entitled to it. Freeman on Cotenancy, at section 230, says: “The question manifestly is not to be determined solely by taking evidence to show that the cotenant against whom an adverse possession is claimed had actual notice thereof. As a property owner he ought to manifest some interest in, and regard for, his property. He cannot close his eyes and ears, nor by wilful inattention occupy an advantage over the defendant on his want of diligence. It is sufficient that the acts of adverse possession were such in their character and attendant circumstances that a man reasonably attentive to his own interest would have known that an adverse right was being asserted.” Our decisions enunciate the same general doctriné. Clark v. Beard, 59 W. Va. 669; Justice v. Lawson, 46 W. Va. 163; Cooey v. Porter, 22 W. Va. 123; Boggess v. Meredith, 16 W. Va. 1. It is also stated and fortified by a great volume of authority in 2 Ene. L. & P. 493, and 1 A. & E. Enc. Law 806.
In order to work an ouster, the facts- and circumstances must come up to these requirements. The possession must be unequivocal, else it is not sufficient to put the co-tenant upon inquiry. He must have notice in , some form. ' If not actual notice, he„must have the equivalent thereof. Newell on Eject, section 82. The doctrine of adverse possession is to be taken strictly in ordinary eases, and “The evidence to sustain an ouster by a cotenant must be still stronger, because of the peculiar relation of the parties.” Id. section 19.
In view of the evidence, relating to possession at the date of the death of Mrs. Jarvis, it is obvious that there was no visible change in it, nothing which could have apprised her of any possession hostile to her. If Gum, the tenant, had the right to attorn to Krenn, his agreement to hold under him was [434]*434not an open notorious act, evidenced by appearances upon tbe ground, and she could not be deemed to have had any knowledge of it, in the absence of proof thereof, and there is none. This view of that matter makes it unnecessary to inquire' whether Gum, with the consent of B. B'. Stout, who was possibly the only, landlord he knew, rightfully agreed to hold under the purchaser. The attornment of a tenant, without the consent of his landlord is void. Likely, Gum was as much the tenant of Mrs. Jarvis as of B. B. Stout, and his act was void as to her, but it is not necessary to decide this question.
We think it plain, therefore, that if the title bonds could be regarded as color of title under which an adverse possession could be held, as against a coparcener, there is no evidence of that open, notorious possession on the part of the vendee, necessary to the effectuation of an ouster and the starting of the statute of limitations in the life time of Mrs. Jarvis, and that her children, all of whom were then under age, were within the saving clause of said statute.
This does not dispose of the ease, however. Some of her children had attained their majority more than five years before the institution of this suit, and it does not appear just when C. B. Bond died. It may be that the change of possession in 1888, when Gum left the land, purchased by one of the Rrenns, and, the party occupying the other tract, at the time of the other Krenn purchase, left it, and these persons were succeeded by new tenants put on by the Krenns, their possession effected a change, sufficient to put the owners upon inquiry and this marked the point at which a right of action accrued, and started the statute of limitations against Bond, if he was then living, which seems probable, since his youngest child was only ten years old in 1903. This necessitates an inquiry as to the office and function of the title bond under the circumstance's of the case and in view of the relation of the parties to one another and to the land.
Whether a title bond or other executory contract for the sale of land is color of title, as against a stranger, was discussed, but not decided, in Lewis v. Yates, 62 W. Va. 575. Decisions of other jurisdictions are sometimes invoked in favor of the view that such a writing constitutes color of title, but these should be cautiously received. In some states, the English [435]*435statute of uses, executing all forms of trust, prevails. After payment of purchase money, a court of equity looks upon the vendor as holding the land in trust for the vendee unconditionally. That is a sort of trust which said statute may execute, but which ours does not execute. We have held uniformly and without exception that, as between vendor and vendee, the possession of the latter is subservient, subordinate and not adverse to the former, until'after a deed has been made. If the statute of uses executed such a trust in this state, these decisions would be erroneous and could not stand, for the legal title would pass by force of the. statute on payment of the purchase money. The scope, operation and effect of our statute of uses have been defined in Blake v. Oneal, 63 W. Va. 483.
Wé do not think it necessary ^ven here to hold that a title bond is color of title, and I am unable ta conceive a case in which it would be necessary to do so. Color of title is always an element of defense and not a weapon of offense. With out possession or right of possession, no person can ever invoke it, for, of itself, it confers no title. A person in possession under a title bond, may, so far as I can see at present, always avail himself of the title of his vendor, or his grantor, immediate or. remote, for whatever it is worth, be it good or bad. It is not necessary to say the Krenns by their acts alone, ousted the Jarvis heirs or Bond. Indeed, it cannot be said. B. B-. Stout was the real actor. He executed title bonds and delivered them to the Krenns and the Krenns entered under them. -If they had merely taken possession under the order and direction of B. B. Stout, without more, there, would have been no ouster. Having taken possession, not in that manner, but under a paper in which B. B. Stout declared the title to be in himself alone, and claiming right of possession under that paper, they are in a different situation. They are claiming the benefit of an act done by B. B. Stout, the co-tenant himself. He asserted a claim of title in himself, which, if brought home to his co-tenant, was enough to effect, an ouster. The entry of the Krenns was, therefore, mere execution of the adverse claim set up by B. B'. Stout against his co-tenants. Hence, the Krenns may stand and, in reason, do stand, not upon their own act, but upon the act of B. B. Stout, who alone had power to effect an ouster. If there is any color of title in the case, it is that which B. B. [436]*436Stout bolds, and which, together with his conduct in the assertion of an adverse claim, affords protection to his vendees.
Apparently in anticipation of this view, counsel; for the appellees advert to the fact that James M. Stout seems not to have had any deed for the land. The bill filed in the partition suit, instituted in Plarrison county, says he was the owner of a tract of land, lying on Fink Creek, containing about 300 acres, which he purchased at a judicial sale, made under a decree of the circuit court of Lewis county, by a special commissioner, but for which no deed was executed though the sale to him was confirmed. B. B. Stout says he has never been able to find a deed for the land and sets that fact up as a reason for his having suffered or procured a sale thereof for non-payment of taxes. I do# not think this constitutes any ground for an exception to the rule I would apply. For the purposes of this case, title in James M. Stout, at .the time of his death, ia necessarily admitted by all parties, for all trace their claims back to him. Whether he actually had a deed or not, all admit that he had good title, for they claim under him, and his title, whatever it was, constituted, in B. B. Stout, color of title to the whole of the land as against all of his co-tenants, on the assertion of his adverse claim. ” Let us suppose the Krenns had not projected themselves into this controversy, and it were one simply between B'. B. Stout and his co-tenants, he being in possession and claiming to have ousted them by actual notice of an adverse claim and subsequent dominion over, and exclusive control and enjoyment of, the property, for the statutory period, after such notice. Is it possible that his defense would fail because of his inability to produce a deed, as color of title, all of them, claiming title from a common source ? It seems to me that each and all of them would be estopped to deny title in their ancestor. It is well settled in the law of ejectment that parties claiming title from a common source, need never go beyond that. Title in that common source is conclusively presumed for the .purposes of the case and the same principle logically applies here.
In the cases of ouster between co-tenants, the making of a deed or establishment of independent color of title is not necessary, and, as a rule, does not exist. The color of title, if any, in such a desseizor, is the deed or title under which both held [437]*437prior to the act of ouster. We discussed this principle in Russell v. Tennant, 63 W. Va. 623, 631, saying: “Up to the time of the ouster, the extent of his interest was not defined upon the ground. He was seized of an interest in every acre, foot, particle and molecule of land within the limits of the ancestral deed. His right was co-extensive with the boundaries thereof, but not exclusive. His possession, until that time, extended to the whole of the land, but, like his right, it was not exclusive; When he had effected the ouster, his possession was still co^ extensive with the boundaries in the deed, but exclusive, and, after the expiration of twenty years following the ouster, his title became perfect, not only in respect to area, but also as to the. quantum of interest. By the act of ouster and subsequent possession, he changed not the limits of the territory in dispute, but the character of his possession and title. The ancestral deed conferred upon each heir the right of possession of all the land. Possession is evidence of title. Possession under such a deed is obviously possession under color of title, although the occupant is not the sole owner and his possession is that of his co-tenants; and, if being in possession, he exclude his co-tenant and make- his possession hostile to him, his possession thereafter would logically and necessarily be adverse under color, as well as claim, of title.”
On the question of adverse possession, the remaining inquiries are whether the execution of the title bonds and possession, taken under them, constitute a sufficient assertion of a hostile claim against the co-tenants out of possession and notice thereof to effect an ouster. All the principles and reasons, advanced to sustain an ouster by possession under the deed by one co-tenant apply here with equal force. A co-tenant is not confined to any particular mode of ouster. Any acts on his part, evincing an intent- to set up a hostile and exclusive claim, brought to the knowledge of the other party, is sufficient. The notice need not be in writing nor be in any sense formal. This is so well settled as to require no citation of authority. The execution of a title bond is an unequivocal assertion of 'title in the vendor. By that act the vendor impliedly says he owns the land and that is what he says in the same way by the execution of a deed. The paper itself is not of the dignity of a deed, but, as we have said, the form of the act done is im[438]*438material. All that is required is a plain- and unequivocal act of hostility and claim of exclusive ownership. If this be followed by exclusive possession and dominion, with knowledge, on the .part of the tenant out of possession, of the hostile claim and possession under it, the ouster is effected. For an ouster effected by means of the execution of a title bond and possession under it, we have been unable to find a precedent, but the reasons upon which the like conclusion rests when a deed has been executed and possession taken under it are, so far as we can see, the same as those adopted here.
We are also of the opinion that after the tenants who were on the land, at the time of the execution of the title bond, were replaced by new ones, put on by the Krenns, the possession was adverse and the statute began to run, subject to the rights of infants, under the saving clause found in section 3 of chapter 104 of the Code. These new tenants undoubtedly held under the Krenns. With them, neither B. B. Stout nor any of the other heirs of James M. Stout had any relation whatever. They were not their tenants. Seeing them upon the land, or being under a duty to know they were there, it was their duty to inquire and the inquiry, had it been made, would have led to full information. TJnder the principles above stated, this conclusion is inevitable.
As the statute has been put into operation, it remains to say who are barred by it. In the. case of John Krenn, purchaser of the 150 acre tract, the evidence seems to show that Shaner and his mother, tenants on it at the time he purchased it, left it within two years, after the purchase. He says they were living on the place for nearly two years, but he does not know just how long, and then a few years afterwards a Mr. Starcher was put on it. Just when this occurred does not appear, but Krenn’s evidence leaves no doubt that Shaner left in about two years, nor that after he left, some other person was in possession of it, for he says it has never been vacant. He pastured his cattle on it, and has cleared fifteen or eighteen acres. His own use of it in that way would suffice. In the case of Joseph Krenn, purchaser of the 245 acre tract, the tenant Gum left the place in February, 1888, and was soon succeeded by John Lese-burg. More than ten years adverse possession has been shown [439]*439by -each of them. This gives them title subject to the saving ' in favor of infants.
It was incumbent upon the heirs of C. B. Bond to bring themselves within this saving. A case of adverse possession having been shown, they could only avoid its effect by proving their disability. In this they have wholly failed. Nothing in the record discloses the date of the death of C. B. Bond, their ancestor. As we have said, the age of his youngest child indicates that he must have died long after 1888. This interest in the land is therefore completely barred.. Mrs. Jarvis died before the possession became adverse, wherefore her children were within the saving clause. They were born, respectively, ón the following dates: Mrs. Celia T. Pickens, Feb. 7, 1869; Mrs. Louise Jarvis Currenee, Apr. 10, 1871; Meigs J. Jarvis, Sep. o, 1874; Arnold B. Jarvis, Sep. 25, 1877; and Benjamin B. Jarvis, Feb. 17, ’ 1883. The bill in this cause was filed at January Buies, 1901. The process issued Dec. 22, 1900, and was served Dec. 28th. Tested by the date of the service of process, with an allowance of five years after attainment of majorities, Mrs. Pickens is barred by more than five years; Mrs. Currenee by more than three years; and Meigs J. Jarvis by more than three months. The other two Jarvis heirs are safely within the-limit of time. This state of the case makes it necessary to say whether the disability of some of these heirs saves the title of those as to whom the disability has ceased.
Our statute amplifying and defining the remedy by ejectment, chapter 90 Code of 1906, provides in section 4 that no person shall bring such action unless he has, at the time of commencing it, a subsisting interest in the premises claimed, and a right to recover the same, or to recover the possession thereof, or some share, interest or portion thereof. Section 9 requires the plaintiff to state whether he claims in fee or for his life, or for the life of another, or for years, specifying such lives or the duration of such term; and when he claims an undivided share or interest, he shall .state the same. Section 18 allows the plaintiff to recover any specific or any undivided part or share of the premises, though it be less than he claimed in his declaration. These statutory provisions enable any person "to sue for and recover any portion or undivided share of any .tract of land in which he has any interest. After the removal [440]*440of the disability of an infant by the attainment of his majority, there is no impediment to his suing and obtaining his share in a tract of land. His right of action is separate and not joint, or separate as well as joint. Therefore, no reason is perceived, nor any legal principle recalled, upon which it can be asserted that the disability of one or more tenants in common can constitute any excuse for the failure of others, not under any disability, to sue for their interests or shares. In Redford v. Clark, 100 Va. 115, it has been held that the statute of limitations is conclusive upon each tenant in common and joint tenant after the removal of his disability. To the same effect, see Kane County v. Herrington, 50 Ill. 232. In Shannon v. Dunn, 8 Blackf. (Ind.). 182, the court held as follows: “It is no answer to a plea of the statute of limitations to a writ of error, that, within five years next after one of the plaintiffs had arrived at full age, the writ was prosecuted.” This means that both were barred by the removal of the disability of one. In Marstellar v. McLean, 7 Cranch (U. S.) 156, it was held necessary to show that all the plaintiffs were under disability to sue, in order to avoid the plea of the statute of limitations. This was an action of trespass for mesne profits after a recovery in ejectment by the plaintiffs. In Wilkens v. Philips, 3 Ohio Rep. 49, it was held that the disability of one of the plaintiffs saved the remedy for all. These decisions are diametrically opposite. In those cases, however, the demands were probably joint and not separable. Here, we have separable demands. Each plaintiff could sue for his own interest on the removal of the disability. We are of the opinion, therefore, that in cases of this class, each infant is barred by the lapse of the period allowed to him within which to sue after the removal of the disability.
It results from these findings and conclusions, that all of the plaintiffs, except Arnold B. Jarvis' and Benjamin B. Jaryis, are precluded from right to share in the property by the statute of limitations. As these two are not barred, we must determine the shares to which they are entitled. Originally, there were seven shares. Elmer H. Stout, admitting advancements and refusing to bring them in, formally disclaimed in thejlarrison county partition suit, and the other heirs assumed and paid the indebtedness against the estate, .in consequence thereof. He [441]*441filed a formal disclaimer in this suit also, but subsequently executed and delivered to B. B. Stout a deed for any interest he may have in the land. The first of these papers was more than a disclaimer. It was an admission in writing of the receipt by E. H. Stout of his entire share in his father’s estate by way of advancements and a refusal to bring these advancements into hotchpot. That not only bars him, as a disclaimer, entered of record, would, but also passed his interest in the estate to his co-heirs. Its effect was to leave the whole estate for division among the other six heirs, not merely as the result of a disclaimer, but of his acknowledgment of the advancements to him as- and for his full share in the estate and his acceptance of the same as such. Squires v. Squires, 65 W. Va. 611; Coffman v. Coffman, 41 W. Va. 8; Roberts v. Coleman, 37 W. Va. 143.
Mrs. Jarvis was, therefore, entitled to one-sixth of the lands in question, which descended to/her fivq children, each of whom inherited one-thirtieth of the tract hence, Arnold B. Jarvis and Benjamin B. Jarvis are each entitled to an undivided one-thirtieth of each of said two tracts of land, aggregating one-fifteenth, and John Krenn to the remaining fourteen-fifteentlis of the 150 acre tract and Joseph ICrenn to the remaining fourteen-fifteenths of the 245.5 acre tract. .
In so far as the decree denies relief to said Arnold B. Jarvis and Benjamin B-. Jarvis, adjudicates title against them and dismisses the bill and/ amended bill as to them, and gives costs to certain defendants, it will be wholly reversed, with costs in this Court to Arnold B-. and-Benjamin B. Jarvis, but, in all other respects the same will be affirmed, and a decree entered here, adjudicating title as aforesaid and to the extent aforesaid in said Arnold B. and Benjamin, B. Jarvis, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in conformity with the principles and conclusions herein stated and the rules and principles governing courts of equity, including the adjustment of costs in the court below.
Affirmed in part. Reversed in part. Remanded.