A. H. Laird died in 1876, seised and possessed of the land here in controversy. His widow remained on this land after his death, and shortly thereafter dower in it was assigned to her. Then she intermarried with one Tully, and is still living. Defendants are lineal descendants of Laird and his heirs at law. Laird had purchased the land from one May, and at the time of his death May held a vendor's lien as security for the purchase price. The record of a decree in chancery in a cause entitled "M. A. May v. M. M. Guin et al.," dated November 12, 1879, and purporting to declare a vendor's lien on the property in favor of May and ordering a sale, was introduced in evidence. By this decree the register was directed to sell first the reversionary interest in the land, and, in the event a satisfactory sum to satisfy the lien of complainant in that cause was not so realized, then the dower interest. Tully became the purchaser, and the sale to him was confirmed by the court. Complainants in this cause trace their title through mesne conveyances back to Tully. They have improved their several parcels, and they, or their predecessors in claim and title, have been in possession for more than 20 years. Unless barred by the proceeding in the chancery court, appellants are still the owners of an estate in reversion in the land in question. This bill was filed by appellees, in 1918, under the statute, to settle the title and clear up all doubts or disputes concerning the same.
M. M. Guin was administrator of Laird's estate. The complete record in the cause of May v. Guin was not offered in evidence; for what reason we do not know, but no question as to that is raised. We will assume that defendants in this cause were not parties to that. However, it does not necessarily follow that defendants have not been barred of their reversion by their failure for more than 40 years to assert their rights. It is true that in general the prescriptive period of 20 years does not begin to run against a remainderman or reversioner until he has a right to sue for the possession; that is, until the determination of the estate for life. We may cite to this proposition Bass v. Bass, 88 Ala. 408, 7 So. 243; Hall v. Condon, 164 Ala. 393, 51 So. 20; Blakeney v. Du Bose,167 Ala. 627, 52 So. 746; Kidd v. Borum, 181 Ala. 144, 61 So. 100, Ann. Cas. 1915C, 1226; Dallas Compress Co. v. Smith,190 Ala. 423, 67 So. 289. And while a remainderman or reversioner may maintain a bill in equity to remove a cloud from his title or reversion pending the particular estate, he is under no duty to do so. Authorities supra.
But in this case, as in Woodstock Iron Co. v. Fullenwider,87 Ala. 584, 6 So. 197, 13 Am. St. Rep. 73, complainants' predecessor in title acquired a special equity by his purchase under the decree against Laird's administrator. The purchase money paid by him went to relieve the title of an incumbrance subject to which defendants took their title in reversion. In these circumstances, it was necessary that a bill be filed to prevent the destruction of the title in reversion by the lapse of more than 20 years during which defendants may have sued — this, though some of them were infants of tender years at the date of the death of their ancestor. Such is the doctrine of Woodstock Iron Co. v. Fullenwider, supra, and the decision in that case, as subsequently interpreted, has become the settled law of this state. The law of that case is founded upon the doctrine of estoppel, which, as applied here, means that, while the proceeding in equity under which complainants claim may have been void as to defendants, it was sufficient to vest an equitable title in the purchaser, and put upon defendants the necessity of doing equity as a condition precedent to an exercise of the powers of equity for their relief — specifically, it was necessary that defendants tender the amount paid for the title under which complainants claim, that amount having gone to relieve the land in question of the burden of the vendor's lien. The decisions of this court hold to the doctrine that, in cases like this, a failure, within the prescriptive period, to do equity, is such laches as authorizes and requires an inference that the right to do so has been barred in any one of the modes by which such result may be affected. Winters v. Powell, 180 Ala. 425, 61 So. 96; Robinson v. Pierce, 118 Ala. 273, 24 So. 984, 45 L.R.A. 66, 72 Am. St. Rep. 160; Bolen v. Hoven, 143 Ala. 652,39 So. 379; Id., 150 Ala. 448, 43 So. 736.
It follows from the principle thus established that there was no error in the decree rendered in the trial court.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.
On Rehearing.