This controversy was determined on an agreed case submitted to the judge of the lower court. In October, 1902, Perry N. Powell filed a desert entry on 320 acres of land in Canyon county, and after making one year’s improvements and one annual proof on the land, and on or about the 26th of October, 1904, he died intestate, leaving as his heirs at law Clara Powell, his wife, who is one of the plaintiffs in this action, and eight minor children. His wife was thereupon appointed administratrix of the estate and used sufficient of the money and property of the estate to reclaim'the land and meet the necessary expenses incident thereto, and thereafter, and on June 14, 1907, received a patent running “to the heirs of Perry N. Powell, deceased.”
Two questions were submitted to the court as follows: “First, has the administratrix of the estate of Perry N. Powell, deceased, or the probate court of Canyon county, Idaho, any jurisdiction over the above-described lands so far as pertains to the estate of Perry N. Powell, deceased? Second, is Clara Powell, widow of Perry N. Powell, who is still living, entitled to the whole of said property, or are the heirs at law of Perry N. Powell, deceased, each entitled to one-ninth interest in the property, or is the widow, the said Clara Powell, entitled to a one-half interest in the property and the children each entitled to an undivided one-sixteenth interest in and to said property?” The trial court decided that the administratrix of the estate and the probate court of Canyon county had jurisdiction of the lands so patented, and that the widow was entitled to a one-half interest in the property, and the children each to a one-sixteenth interest. This appeal has been prosecuted by one of the children.
It is well settled that where one entryman on public lands dies before the performance of all the acts required to per-*534feet his title, any title subsequently acquired by his heirs or legal representatives does not pass to the estate of the entry-man, but passes directly to the heirs. (Council Improvement Co. v. Draper, 16 Ida. 541, 102 Pac. 7, and eases there cited; also Gould v. Tucker, 20 S. D. 226, 105 N. W. 624; Wittenbrock v. Wheadon, 128 Cal. 150, 79 Am. St. 32, 60 Pac. 664; and Braun v. Mathieson, 139 Iowa, 409, 116 N. W. 789.)
Sec. 2448 of the Revised Statutes of the United States (6 Fed. Statutes, Ann., p. 514) directs and authorizes that in ease of the death of the entryman prior to the issuance of patent, patent may thereafter issue, vesting title in his heirs, devisees ox assignees. While no case has been brought to our attention involving the right and title to a desert entry where the title has been perfected and patent has issued subsequent to the death of the entryman, our attention has been called to cases involving homestead, pre-emption and timber-culture entries (Council Improvement Co. v. Draper, supra; Gould v. Tucker, supra; Wittenbrock v. Wheadon, supra; Braun v. Mathieson, supra; Hutchinson Inv. Co. v. Caldwell, 152 U. S. 65, 14 Sup. Ct. 504, 38 L. ed. 356; Caldwell v. Miller, 44 Kan. 12, 23 Pac. 946), and it has been uniformly held, so far as we are advised, that in all such cases the heirs take title — not by succession or inheritance, but as purchasers from the United States. This being true, the property so acquired never becomes a part of the estate of the deceased entryman, and the probate court never acquires any jurisdiction to administer upon such property. (Council Improvement Co. v. Draper, supra.)
In this case it is clear that the probate court of Canyon county was without jurisdiction to administer upon this property as a part of the estate of Perry N. Powell, deceased.
The grantees in the patent were named as a class and not as individuals. It is necessary, therefore, to determine who are the heirs of the deceased entryman. There is no statute of the United States providing who are heirs, and so it is necessary to turn to the law of the state where the land is located to determine who constitute the heirs of the deceased entryman. (Hutchinson Inv. Co. v. Caldwell, supra; Caldwell *535v. Miller, supra; Wittenbrock v. Wheadon, 128 Cal. 150, 79 Am. St. 32, 60 Pac. 664; Hochstein v. Berghauser, 123 Cal. 681, 56 Pac. 547.)
Turning, then, to tbe statutes of this state to determine who are the heirs of Perry N. Powell, deceased, we find that the matter is not even here free from difficulty and doubt, for the reason that we have no specific statute giving a general definition of the word “heirs.” Turning, however, to chap. 14 of the probate laws of this state on the subject of “succession,” we find that those who constitute a man’s heirs and are entitled to succeed to his estate differ according to the class of property to be inherited. If the property be a man’s separate estate, then by see. 5702, Rev. Codes, his wife and children are named as his heirs and inherit the estate; but, if the property be community property, then by sec. 5713, Rev. Codes, as amended by chap. 13 of the 1911 Session Laws (1911 Sess. Laws, p. 29), his wife is his sole and only heir;but since the property here granted by conveyance from the United States never passed to the estate of Perry N. Powell, but passed directly to his heirs, it was never either his separate property or community property. Neither does it appear in this case whether the money used by him in initiating this right and making the first year’s improvements was his separate property or community property, nor does it appear whether the money used by the administratrix out of the estate in completing the improvement and perfecting the title was from the separate estate of the husband or his community estate. The estate which the administratrix was administering may have been either the husband’s share of the community estate or it may have been his separate estate, or it may have been composed of property coming from both of such estates. We are of the opinion, however, that it is the safest and most reasonable conclusion to draw from both our statute and the acts of Congress under which this grant was made that the heirs designated in the patent are such heirs as are entitled to inherit the separate and individual estate of the entryman. That being true, his heirs would *536be his wife and children, as designated by sec. 5702, Rev. Codes.
The next and final question to be determined in this case is whether those heirs would tahe an equal share, or whether they would take in the proportion in which they would have inherited this property had it belonged to the estate of the deceased entryman.
In Cooper v. Wilder, 111 Cal. 191, 52 Am. St. 163, 43 Pac. 591, the supreme court of the state of California, in considering a similar question with reference to the passing of title to a timber-culture claim, held that the state law was only resorted to for the purpose of ascertaining the names of the heirs-, that the heirs would not take the respective interests which they would have been entitled to inherit, but that they would rather take equal shares. The same conclusion was reached by the California court in Wittenbrock v. Wheadon. The rule announced by the foregoing authorities was approved in Braun v. Mathieson, supra. It is held by the authorities generally, both state and federal, that the Congress, by authorizing and directing that final proof may be made and patents issue to the heirs of a deceased entry-man, intended that the land should eventually go to the persons to whom the entryman Avould most likely have left the property had he perfected his title. (Hutchinson Investment Co. v. Caldwell, supra.) And it has likewise been held that if he left no one who was entitled to inherit from him under the laws of the state where he lived, that then the land would revert to the government. (Gould v. Tucker, supra.)
In view of these considerations, and the evident purpose of Congress in authorizing the heirs to perfect the title and of the character of our statute designating those who are entitled to inherit, we think that the title should and does pass to the heirs in the same proportion and in like shares as they would have taken the same had they inherited it from the entryman. Sec. 2443, Rev. Statutes of the United States, so provides with reference to bounty land grants to soldiers. We conclude that the wife acquired under this patent a one-*537third interest in the property and the children each a one-twelfth interest. (Sec. 5702, Rev. Codes.)
The statute of this state has abrogated the common-law rule of joint tenancy, and now, under secs. 3059 and 3104 of the Rev. Codes, “every interest in real estate granted or devised to two or more persons, other than executors or trustees, as such constitutes a tenancy in common, unless expressly declared in the grant or devise to be otherwise.” Under this statute, these heirs did not take title as joint tenants, but rather as tenants in common.
We conclude, therefore, that the judgment in this case must be modified. The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded, with direction to the district court to enter a decree in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion. The costs of this appeal will be equally divided between Clara Powell, appellant, and the respondent.
Stewart, C. J., and Sullivan, J., concur.