The first assignment of error is not well taken. The recitals in the deed of the eleventh of October, 1856, purporting to be the deed of others and one signing as the guardian of plaintiffs, in the absence of any evidence of the authority under which the guardian acted, would not be binding upon the plaintiff. The deed was not signed by them or by any one shown to be in privity with them or by any one whose acts •could in any way affect them. If it was signed by one who had the right to bind them, the deed itself would convey their estate in which case the recitals would be taken as true, but of no other value than to acknowledge the consideration for the conveyance. There was no other evidence offered to show a contract with T. B. Grace by DeCordova to locate the land, or that T. B. Grace was the father and heir of J. C. Grace. It is true the evidence shows that DeCordova located the lands and had the patents issued to the heirs of J. C. Grace, but that fact of itself does not tend to prove he had any contract with T. B. Grace for that purpose. That he did locate the lands would not authorize the conclusion that he had any contract with any person for that purpose. Ho such contract can arise by implication from the fact that the services were performed. The most that can be said in such a case is that the law would imply a contract for pecuniary compensation for the services and expenditures. (Ross v. Mitchell, 28 Texas, 152; Sypert v. McCowen, 28 Texas, 635.)
The second assignment of error can not be sustained. The minor heirs of Maria Brent were not parties to the deed of partition, and as to them there was no partition unless the deed *30itself bound them. It is not shown that they participated in the partition-, or in any manner assented to it. Because other persons competent to contract executed the instrument and conveyed their interests in the one thousand three hundred and forty-five acres would furnish no reason for holding that the minors were bound by the instrument.
To the third assignment we need only say that J. E. Gorman, at the death of his wife without issue, was entitled to one half of her one-third undivided interest in all the land, and that was the part adjudged to him by the judgment of the court in the one thousand three hundred and forty-five acres in controversy.
The fourth assignment, if we rightly appreciate it, has already been considered in part at least, in the foregoing. It might however, be added, that the purpose of the contracting parties in executing the deed could not be imputed to strangers to the contract. It is impossible to conceive how the deed in question could affect the rights of the minors, or how the motives and purposes of the persons executing it could be attributed to them, unless it be shown that they authorized it, or have ratified or adopted it, by accepting the portion allotted to them.
The fifth and sixth assignments will be eonsidered together.
The deed of the eleventh of October, 1856, was not admissible against the plaintiffs recovering, without proof of the appointment of Garnett as their guardian by a court of competent jurisdiction, and authority from the court to make the partition. An instrument conveying land of minors signed by one representing himself to be their guardian is wholly inoperative without the production of the precedent orders of a court of competent jurisdiction in the premises, and therefore inadmissible as evidence against them. Courts will not presume the existence of the authority to act in such cases in the absence of all proof of the existence of the power and its loss, or destruction, even after the lapse of thirty years. (Terrell v. Martin, 64 Texas, 121; Tucker v. Murphy, 66 Texas, 355; White v. Jones, 67 Texas, 640.) It can not be doubted then that the court was correct in holding the deed inadmissible and void as to the defendants in error.
The title of plaintiffs was a legal title acquired by. inheritance, and it is not perceived how one having no equities against them, and no possession that would bar their recovery under the statute of limitations, could plead their laches in failing to assert their title for a number of years. DeCordova was at no time in *31possession, and it was not shown that plaintiff in error was in possession, except by tenant, at the time the suit was brought.
In the case of Williams v. Conger, 49 Texas, 602, Associate Justice Moore says: “We know of no authority to warrant the court in holding that a mere failure to pay taxes, or laches, or delay of the owner in bringing suit for the recovery of the land to which he has a legal title, will defeat his action, where there has not been actual adverse possession for a suffi-' cient length of time to support the plea of limitation.”
There is no proof of any acquiescence in the DeCordova title by plaintiffs, none that they recognize it, and none that they had accepted the part of the other surveys allotted to them in the deed. The record is silent upon this subject; if it were true that they had accepted under the deed of the eleventh of October, 1856, the fact was susceptible of proof, and ought to have been established "by the defendant. The defendant held no title against them that they were required to notice or disprove; noi did the DeCordova deed, not executed by them, by their consent or authority, or by the orders of any court of competent jurisdiation, devolve upon them the necessity of showing that they had not accepted under the deed. They were in the same condition, and had the same rights they would have had if the.deed had never been made. If it had been shown that they claimed the land set apart to them under the deed, or had sold it, the question of acquiescence and ratification insisted upon by plaintiffs in error would have been made. There was no recognition or adoption of the partition that was attempted to be made for the defendant in error; nor is there anything disclosed in the record that would invoke the doctrine of the lapse of time in favor of the DeCordova claim to the land against them, and we are of the opinion the judgment of the district court ought to be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Opinion adopted November 1, 1887.