delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff acquired her title to the premises in controversy in April, 1854, (she being then a femme solé), and on the third of November, 1854, after her marriage, jointly with her husband, signed and delivered to Howard and Perley, an agreement in writing, by the terms of which Howard and Perley agreed to prosecute the claim of plaintiff for a tract of land, including the demanded premises, before the United States Land Commission. In consideration of such services plaintiff was to pay Howard and Perley one tenth of said tract of land, or if it should be advisable to sell any portion of the land, then Howard and Perley were to have one tenth of the proceeds. As soon as the claim was decided by the Commission (if confirmed) the portion *557of Howard and Perley was to be immediately set off to them, tbeir beirs or assigns, and possession given. This contract, although signed and delivered, was not acknowledged by the plaintiff in the manner required by the Statute, so as to be binding upon her, until the fifth day of January, 1861, when it was duly acknowledged and recorded. Before that time all the services mentioned in the agreement had been performed by Howard and Perley, and the claim had been confirmed by the Commission, and this was known to the plaintiff and her husband at the time.
In January, 1855, defendant entered upon the premises without color of right and against the will of the plaintiff, and has since remained in possession of the portion sued for, being about twelve and one half acres. On the seventeenth of February, 1863, he acquired the interest of Howard in the contract and in the land, acquired by virtue of the contract, and has since remained in possession, claiming the right of possession under the contract, and has made improvements thereon.
The plaintiff sued the defendant in ejectment on the thirteenth day of December, 1865, the claim having been duly confirmed within a period of less than five years before the suit was instituted. The answer of the defendant, setting up the facts above stated as an equitable defense, and claiming a specific performance of the contract, was filed January 3d, 1866. Judgment below was for the- plaintiff, and apparently was principally based upon the proposition that a right of action upon the contract to convey (if such a contract is valid) accrued on the fifth day of January, 1861, and was, therefore, barred by the Statute of Limitations before the commencement of this action.. The defendant’s equity, therefore, was not a live equity, and not available in his defense. But it is claimed here, not only that the rights of the defendant under the contract (if any such rights ever existed) are barred by limitation} but that the contract itself is invalid because a married woman has no power to make an executory contract. It is not contended that the contract was valid prior to the time it was properly *558acknowledged in 1861. At tbat time Howard and Perley bad fully performed the contract on tbeir part, and by its terms were entitled to an immediate partition and to possession of tbeir share of tbe land.
Tested by tbe principles of tbe common law tbe plaintiff’s contract would undoubtedly be beld invalid, and tbe only question is, wbetber tbe Constitution and tbe Laws of tbis State bave conferred upon married women tbe power to bind themselves by such contracts. In tbe case of Maclay v. Love (25 Cal. 367), tbe power of a married woman to execute a contract which imposes a general liability, not expressly made an incumbrance upon her separate estate, was fully discussed, and to tbe conclusions there arrived at we still adhere. Tbe precise question involved here did not arise, and was not discussed in tbat case.
It is first objected to tbe power of a married woman to bind herself by an executory contract to convey, tbat a Court of Equity has no power to compel a specific performance of her contract; tbat tbe acknowledgement is an essential part of tbe conveyance of tbe separate property of a married woman ; tbat her consent must be perfectly free, and tbat up to tbe last moment until these facts are duly certified by a proper officer, and tbe deed delivered, she may retract tbe execution of tbe same. Of course tbis state of facts cannot exist when a deed is obtained by compulsion of a court.
Tbis argument is equally conclusive against tbe power of tbe courts to compel tbe specific performance of a contract made by a married woman, dum sola. If, therefore, while a femme sole, she enters into a contract to convey, and receives tbe full consideration for tbe land sold, she cannot be compelled to perform tbe contract, though in law it is perfectly valid, if, before conveyance is made she becomes a femme covert. I cannot think tbe Statute was intended to work any such result, or tbat by any fair construction it has tbat effect.
Tbe provisions of tbe Act concerning conveyances were not intended to interfere with or abridge tbe *559powers of Courts of Equity, to compel tbe performance of contracts which are binding upon married women. They apply to those cases where the deed or other instrument in writing, is the evidence of the sale or contract a married woman has made, and for her protection require her contract to be executed and proven in a certain way. Where, therefore, a married woman has, prior to her marriage, entered into a contract which is binding upon her, a specific performance may be decreed notwithstanding her subsequent marriage; and if she refuse to execute the deed, a commissioner may be appointed to execute it for her.
So, too, if the statutes, aside from the Act concerning conveyances, authorize her to bind herself by such a contract, that Act creates no difficulty in compelling a specific performance. The only question is, whether the executory contract is binding upon her. If it is valid, the usual consequences must follow, and in case of her refusal to perform it, the other party has the. same remedy as in any other case.
The practice of Courts of Equity in regard to equitable estates of married women, throw no light upon this question except by analogy. Here the estate is a legal estate, and the contract, if valid at all, such as will be recognized, and enforced by courts of law.
Sec. 14, Art. XI., of the Constitution of this State, defines what shall constitute the separate property of a married woman, and, as was said in Selover v. American Russian Commercial Co. (7 Cal. 266), conferred upon her the power to retain it, with such incidents as necessarily attach to such ownership. In that case it is also said that her capacity to hold her property is equal to that of any other individual, and that the same incidents attach to her ownership, and that the Legislature could not impair her rights any more than the rights of her husband. Now, in equity- a married woman has generally been treated as discovert, so far as effects her power to dispose of or charge her equitable estate. The object of creating the trust for her benefit was that she might have sole control over the trust pro*560perty, and in equity this right was recognized. In Maclay v. Love, (supra), the Court says that the Statute endows the wife with a capacity to bold the separate property, as fully at least as sbe could under principles recognized by Courts of Equity; that sbe has the same power to dispose of or to incumber it, being only restrained as to the manner of effecting the disposition or incumbrance. In other words, the Statute as to the manner in which the-contracts-are executed do not restrict her power, but only direct the mode of its exercise.
Now, the statute having conferred upon a married woman the capacity to hold property as her separate property, and to exercise proprietary rights in regard to the same as fully as any other individual might do, it would naturally follow that she could do any act essential to its beneficial enjoyment or contributing materially and obviously to its profitable use. The sixth section of the Statute concerning husband and wife, as it stood at the time this contract was entered into, provides, in effect, that she may sell or alienate any portion of her property by an instrument in writing, signed by her husband and acknowledged as therein provided. By strict technical definition this would probably not include an executory contract; a sale being a contract by which one party acquires a property in the thing sold and the other parts with it for a valuable consideration— that is, it is a transfer of property for an agreed price. But in ordinary speech, a valid agreement to sell is considered a sale, and this meaning comports with the Statute, where the language is found which seems to provide for the manner in which the property is to be managed, controlled and used, and not for its conveyance. This construction harmonizes also with the statute concerning conveyances. The object of requiring the contracts of married women to be executed with certain formalities has been often held to be for hér protection, and not to deprive her of any power over her estate. The Statute concerning conveyances requires her to execute her conveyance in a certain mode when the conveyance constitutes the evidence of the sale she has *561made, and tbe Act concerning husband and wife requires the same formalities in any other contract affecting it. The object is to secure to her perfect freedom of action, and to preserve the evidence of that fact, and it matters not in principle whether this free volition is ascertained at the time she makes a valid contract to sell, or actually conveys. In either case her freedom of action is secured at the time when she concludes to part with her property.
The case of Baker v. Hathway, (5 Allen Mass. 103), is a case similar to this. The Statute there is somewhat more broad than ours. It provides that “a married woman may bargain, sell or convey her separate, real or personal property and enter into any contract in reference to the same.” An executory contract to convey was upheld and a specific performance decreed. The reasons given for sustaining the power, apply with equal force to our statute. Judge Dewey says: “This real estate was her sole and separate property, and she was under the Statute authorized to sell and convey the same, having the assent of her husband in writing, or he joining with her in the conveyance. The husband, joining with her in the contract to convey the land, has thereby signified his consent to the same, and this obviates the objection that the wife could not be bound by a contract to sell, because she could not make a written conveyance without the assent of her husband. It is urged on the part of the defendant that the authority given by the Statute to a married woman to ‘bargain, sell and convey,’ imports nothing more than the right to give a deed of bargain and sale, technically so called. But we think that the whole section taken together, implies more than this, and confers upon the wife the power to make an executory contract for the sale of her lands, in case she has the written assent of her husband, as provided in the Statute. This would seem to be a necessary and useful power to be exercised in many cases as preliminary to an actual conveyance, and, under the same restrictions as to the concurrence of her husband as exist in relation to an-actual conveyance, we are of opinion that such contract is a valid one.”
*562In Bodley v. Ferguson (30 Cal. 511), a similar view is expressed. Tbe Court says: “The Act of April 16, 1850, cencerning conveyances, prescribes a method by which married women can convey their separate property, but it points out none in which their contracts to convey must be made or evidenced. Nor can it be claimed that the method of conveying and that of contracting to convey were intended by the Legislature to be identical; for the thirty-sixth section expressly withdraws executory contracts to convey from its operation.”
And again, “That Act (the Act concerning husband and wife), not only prescribes how a married woman shall convey, but dictates a special process, in conformity to which alone she can contract to convey.”
This is substantially held, also, as I understand the opinion in Racouillat v. Sansevain, (32 Cal. 376). There it was held that the executory contract to convey, when so executed by a married woman as to be binding upon her, may be enforced by a decree of specific performance. Nor do I think the case of Barrett v. Tewksberry (9 Cal. 13), conflicts with these views. There the wife had not made a valid contract to convey, and had never exercised in the mode prescribed her discretion. This act on her part must be attested in the prescribed mode and performed with the necessary formality at the time she becomes bound. The contract, not having been executed in that mode, was not binding, and she still retained the right to exercise her free volition in regard to the sale. Of course she could not be compelled to complete the sale by a decree of the Court.
The contract in this case having been executed in the mode provided by the Statute defining the rights of husband and wife, was valid and binding upon Mrs. Love,
As to the construction of the contract, it seems to me to be reasonably free from doubt. Plaintiff agrees to pay Howard and Perley, as their fee, one tenth of the land. This is precisely equivalent to an agreement to convey to them one tenth of the land as a consideration for their services. The only other plausible construction would be that *563it is a present conveyance in payment. Tbe agreement to pay Howard and Perley one tenth of tbe proceeds of any sales wbicb may bave been made is a recognition of a present interest in them, and refutes any presumption that tbe land was referred to simply as a basis for fixing tbe fee to be paid.
Tbe next and tbe most important question in tbis case is whether tbe rights of defendant bave been lost by lapse of time. Preliminary to tbis, ■ however, a question has been raised as to whether tbe defendant is in possession under, or claiming under tbe contract. It is claimed that as be went into possession as an. intruder, and held as a mere trespasser until be purchased tbe interest of Howard, in 1862, be has acquired no equities as a vendee in possession. Cpnsidered in some respects it does not matter in tbis case whether tbe defendant was in possession under tbe contract or not. If tbe defendant was in tbe actual possession, of course tbe plaintiff acquired no rights against him by adverse possession. If, therefore, she was tbe. trustee of tbe defendant, she has acquired no rights in tbe trust estate by virtue of a possession adverse to her cestui que trust. So, too, if tbe defendant bad been sued for tbe possession during tbe admitted lifetime of bis equity, there is no doubt, I think, that be could bave set up bis equity as a defense, and could bave compelled a conveyance to him of tbe legal title. So far, therefore, as bis rights are to be considered as an estate in land, wbicb can only be barred by an adverse possession, tbe character of tbe possession as being under tbe contract or not is immaterial.
But I think it clear that for all tbe purposes of tbis action tbe defendant must be considered as in possession under tbe agreement. Tbe cases discussed in tbe briefs upon tbis point, are, where possession is claimed as an act of part performance, available to take tbe case out of tbe Statute of Frauds. Obviously there is a clear distinction between tbe cases. If possession has been taken prior to tbe contract, of course it is not an act in performance of tbe contract, and may not furnish a reason why it would be con*564sidered inequitable to refuse to enforce it. Here the defendant had an immediate right to a partition and to possession. He was permitted to remain in possession until it was supposed his equity was extinguished, and I think a court of equity will have no difficulty in concluding that he was permitted to remain in possession solely because of his rights under the. contract. The plaintiff did not attempt to put him out of possession, for the obvious reason that she was unable to succeed in doing so while his rights were subsisting.
The plain question is then presented for our consideration, whether a vendee in possession under an executory contract, who has fully performed the agreement on his part, but has not obtained a deed, can compel a specific performance after the lapse of four years from the time he might ha^e demanded a deed; and whether, after that time, he can rely upon his equity, under the contract, to defeat an action for the possession on the part of the vendor. If these propositions are answered in the negative, these curious results must follow, that the equitable owner of land is barred of his right, while holding possession according to his right, and without an adverse claim or possession; and a person out of possession acquires title to real estate by the Statute of Limitations against a person in possession holding adversely. .
This result is worked out, as I understand it, in this way. It has been held that the vendee in an executory contract to convey may maintain an action for a specific performance without having demanded a deed, and that the Statute of Limitations applies vigore suo to equitable as well- as to legal causes of action. A cause of action to compel the execution of a deed accrued to Howard and Perley as soon as the contract was executed, so as to be binding, in 1861. The right to enforce this contract then was barred four years from that date, and the defendant’s equity was not a live equity at the time this action was commenced. The owner of the equitable.title, it is supposed, cannot avail himself of *565it as a defense to tbe legal title unless he is in a position to demand a conveyance of the legal title to him.
I do not question the correctness of these propositions, so far as they affect the rights of the parties arising from the contract relation merely, without reference to the fact of possession. I deny the proposition, however, that a cause of action has accrued within the meaning of the Statute of Limitations, whenever an action may be brought in equity, it law a cause of action accrues whenever there is an injury for which the law has provided a.remedy. This is true, also, of a large class of cases arising in equity, principally consisting of those cases where there is concurrent jurisdiction in law and equity. But in many cases in equity this is not true, as, for instance, between tenants in common. They may at any time bring an action for partition; but the fact that five years have elapsed without their having done so would be no bar to their right of action. The same is true, I apprehend, in regard to a right of action to quiet title to real estate, as in Arrington v. Liscom (34 Cal. 365), the action was sustained because the Statute had run against defendant’s title, and of course against the plaintiff’s right to maintain the action, if the Statute were applicable to it. Here the party is already in possession of his property, and the action is not to recover it or to obtain redress for an injury.
Upon the execution of a contract to convey, the vendee becomes in equity, the owner of the land. His estate, however, is subject to be defeated if he fails to comply with his agreement. After he has fully performed, he is, in equity, regarded as the -absolute owner of an indefeasible estate, and the vendor is a naked trustee, having no interest, but charged with the simple duty to convey to the vendee upon demand. Equity regards the vendee as the owner, upon the principle that it considers that as done which ought to be done. Now, it seems to me that while counsel recognize the fact that he is, in equity, regarded as the owner, they must suppose it to be in some different sense from which he is regarded as owner at law, when he has *566the legal title. But this is not so. He is supposed, for the purposes of Courts of Equity, to have acquired, and to hold the title. They will compel the conveyance of the legal title to him, because, at law, his equitable title is not recognized. But wherever it is recognized it constitutes ownership. Now I cannot understand how this estate can be lost by the bar of the statute while the owner is in the actual possession and enjoyment of his estate, according to his right.
In Bodley v. Ferguson (supra), the owner of the equitable estate in possession obtained a decree quieting his title against the holder of the legal title. This was the case of an executory contract to convey, where, as in this case, the vendee in possession had paid the full purchase money. This Court says, there was no doubt that the findings supported the equitable defense and entitled the defendant to the relief prayed for. The facts are stated in the opinion as follows: ‘ ‘ The findings show a contract to convey on the part of Mrs. Gilroy, to which contract her husband assented; full payment of the purchase money; possession taken by the vendees, and extensive improvements by them.”
Morrison v. Wilson (13 Cal. 498), was a case where a purchase was made by one Ford in his own name for Mrs. Wilson, a married woman. Ford mortgaged the property at her request, after having given her an agreement to convey. This mortgage was held invalid. The Court say: “If the purchase were made by Ford in his own name for the benefit of Mrs. Wilson, Ford would be morally, if not legally, her trustee; and if Ford at or shortly after this time, gave her a writing to convey to her on payment of $300, the two papers may be construed together, if they are shown to be parts of one general transaction. On payment of the purchase money Mrs. Wilson had a perfect equity, which, united with the possession, was equivalent, in our system, for all purposes of this defense to a legal estate.”
And again: “She entered, if at all, as purchaser being in possession; this was a notice of the equity. The payment of the purchase money perfected this equity, leaving *567nothing but tbe naked legal title outstanding in Ford, with a right to call it in at any time by Mrs. Wilson.”
See, also, the case of Willis v. Wozencraft (22 Cal. 607), where this question is fully discussed, and numerous authorities cited, holding that the vendor cannot turn the ven-dee out of possession, if the latter has performed or offers to perform his contract, quoting Martin v. Willink, (7 S. & E. 297); and Richardson v. Kuhn, (6 Watts. 299.)
Considering the defendant as the owner of an equitable estate in the land, and the plaintiff as trustee of the naked legal title for him, it is still insisted that defendant’s claim is barred by the Statute. That while the Statute of Limitations does not apply to technical, direct and continuing trusts, it does not apply to implied and constructive trusts, and the trust raised in this case is of the last description.
In the case of Kane v. Bloodgood, (7 Johns. Ch. 91), Chancellor Kent discusses with clearness and perspicuity, remarkable even for that great jurist, the application of the Statute of Limitations to trust estates, and demonstrates both from reason and authority, “that the trusts intended by Courts of Equity not to be reached by the Statute of Limitations, are those technical and continuing trusts which áre not at all cognizable at law, but fall within the proper, peculiar and exclusive jurisdiction of this Court.” Now, I am not aware of any case in which a Court of Law would enforce a trust — that is, require a specific execution of the trust; but there are very many cases where money or property is received in a fiduciary capacity, and where a remedy for a misapplication of it is afforded either at law or in equity. As in case of money received to be paid to another, or to be applied to a particular purpose, on failure to so apply it the trustee may be sued at law for money had and received, or in equity as a trustee for breach of the trust. (Scott v. Surnam, Willis R. 404.) So, if a bailiff or guardian receive rents or other moneys belonging to his ward, and the ward neglects to bring either his action of account at law or in equity, he is barred. (Lockey v. Lockey, Ch. 518; quoted in Kane v. Bloodgood.) The other cases cited by Chancellor *568Kent are of tbe same character, and merely establish the doctrine that where “a party has a legal right of action, and instead of proceeding at law, resorts to equity, instead of bringing his action of account or detinue, or case for money had and received, files his bill for an account, the same period of time that would bar him at law will bar him in equity.”
The trust which arises upon the sale of land, where the purchase money has been paid, is undoubtedly a resulting trust. It is a trust resulting from the nature of the transaction and from the intention of the parties. It is excepted out of the Statute of Frauds, and in cases which admit of doubt, parol evidence is admissible to rebut the presumption that a trust was intended, as in the case where lands are purchased in the name of one, and the purchase money paid by another. Although from the circumstances a trust would be implied, it may be shown that it was intended as a loan or an advance. Like express trust, these trusts arise from a confidence reposed in the trustee, and are in accordance with the intention of the parties. In this respect they differ widely from those constructive trusts, which are established by evidence and forced upon the conscience of the trustee against his will, and generally to prevent the consummation of a fraud. In the latter case the relation of the parties is hostile from the beginning, and the possession of the trustee adverse; and there being no actual confidence reposed in the trustee there can be no pretense, that, according to the intent and contract of the parties, the relation was to be a continuous one. As to the former, the relation being friendly, and a’ real confidence reposed in the trustee, which may be intended as a continuous one, so long as the relation is recognized and acted upon by the parties, the same reason that induced courts of equity to recognize the trust at all, would compel them to recognize its continued existence. The purpose of the trust may have been that the trustee should continue to hold the title, and the same confidence that led to the trust in the beginning would prevent the beneficiary from compelling a *569conveyance of tbe legal estate to bim. Tbe only respect in wbicb tbis trust differs from an express trust is as to tbe mode in wbicb it is established or proven. That is to say, there is no declaration or agreement by wbicb tbe terms are stated upon wbicb tbe trustee is to bold tbe trust property. When established, however, they are recognized and enforced precisely as express trusts are enforced — tbe only difference being, that perhaps a different presumption might arise from tbe possession of tbe trustee.
Tbis principle is clearly stated in Tiffany and Bullard upon Trust and Trustees (page 19), where it is said: “Tbe trust, though implied from tbe evidence, is in reality an express trust, and will be treated as such by tbe Court. That is, implied trusts are considered as really tbe expression of tbe donor or grantor as those wbicb are denominated express trusts; tbe difference is only in tbe form of language by wbicb tbe trust is expressed. They derive their authority from tbe will of tbe donor, grantor, etc., as gathered from bis actions or expressions,
Tbe able attorneys who have filed briefs in tbis case, and in two other cases in wbicb tbe same questions have been discussed, have, I think, been somewhat misled by tbe question propounded by tbis Court. They have really discussed tbe question, under what circumstances the possession of tbe trustee will bar tbe cestui que trust. Evidently no such question is involved here. And I have never yet met with a case, whatever tbe character of tbe trust, where tbe statute has been held to bar tbe rights of tbe beneficiary in favor of tbe trustee, when tbe beneficiary has continued in possession according to bis right and no adverse claim made by tbe trustee. Such a case would be at variance with tbe fundamental idea of statutes of limitation that possession draws to it, or rather extinguishes all adverse claims and titles. And tbe same is true where tbe trustee is in possession, if tbe relation is acknowledged. Thus in Hovenden v. Lord Annesley, (2 Sch. & Lef. 607), Lord Bedesdale said: “Tbe possession of tbe trustee is that of tbe cestid que trust, and if tbe only circumstance is that be does not perform *570bis trust, bis possession-operates nothing as a bar, because bis possession is according to bis title.”
And again: “But tbe question of fraud is of a different description; that is, a case where a person who is in possession by virtue of that fraud is not, in tbe ordinary sense of tbe word, trustee, but is to be constituted a trustee by a decree of a Court of equity, founded upon fraud, and bis possession in tbe meantime is adverse to tbe person who impeaches tbe transaction on tbe ground of fraud, and tbe decisions seem to be in conformity to that idea.”
This case shows also tbe application of tbe statute as to all trusts which exist according to tbe intention of tbe parties, and that question always is, whether tbe trustee bolds adversely. This is taken for granted also by Chancellor Kent in Kane v. Bloodgood; for many of tbe cases commented upon by him are explained upon tbe ground that tbe trust was recognized or acted upon by tbe parties, and so tbe statute prevented from running. So, too, in tbe case of Bartlett v. Judd (23 Barb. 263), which was an action to reform a deed — tbe vendee having been in possession, and more than ten years having elapsed; tbe Court held that be was not barred, notwithstanding tbe provision of tbe statute that “bills for relief shall be filed within ten years after tbe cause of action accured, and not after.” It was held that when tbe equitable owner of land is in possession, and is afterwards evicted by tbe owner of tbe legal title, bis cause of action to establish bis equitable right does not arise until after eviction. Such was also tbe opinion of tbe Chancellor in Varick v. Edwards (11 Paig. 290). In Harris v. King (16 Ark. 122), tbe Court went much further, and held that if tbe vendor, having recoived tbe full purchase money, executes a bond to convey, and then remains in possession, be will be presumed to bold as trustee or agent, and tbe statute does not run in bis favor against tbe vendee. This is held upon tbe doctrine of trusts, it being held that an-equitable title to real estate can be lost only in tbe same manner as a legal title — by adverse possession. Tbe same doctrine is held in Scarlett v. Hunter (3 Jones’ Eq. [N. C.] 84); see *571also, Boone v. Chiles, 10 Peters, 177; Ahl v. Johnson, 20 Howard [U. S.], 511; Barlow v. Whitelock, 4 Munroe, 180; Grafton v. Ormsby, 2 Sch. & Lef. 603; Burke v. Length, 3 Jon. & L. 193; Longworth v. Taylor, 1 McLean, 395; Miller v. Bear, 3 Paige, 466; Waters v. Travers, 9 Johns. 450; The New Barbadoes Toll Bridge Co. v. Vreeland, 3 Green. Ch. [N. J.,] 157. In Coulson v. Walton (9 Peters, 62), a special performance was decreed forty-four years after an action might have been brought for that purpose by the Yendee. It was held that the statute would be good in all cases in equity by analogy, when at law it would have been held good under similar circumstances; that a legal title could only be barred by adverse possession, and therefore an equitable title could only be barred in the same way.
The conveyance from the trustee to the cestuÁ que trust in such cases is but the execution of the trust; the right to obtain the legal title is but an incident to the estate of the cestui que trust. So long, therefore, as the estate exists, so long will the right to acquire the legal title subsist. It is like the right of a tenant in common to compel a partition, and is not a cause of action which accrues in the sense of the Statute of Limitations, and which may be lost by the lapse of time. The trustee and cestui que trust have the same title, and do not hold adversely so long as the rights of neither are denied. If A purchase land with his own money, but for proper reasons the deed is taken in the name of B, with his consent, and A goes into possession and continues to use the property as his own, this would be an implied trust; but no one would think the Statute of Limitations would deprive A of his estate for a failure to obtain the legal title within four years. He is guilty of no laches in asserting his rights. His possession is the most effective assertion of them.
In Texas this question has been considerably discussed, and the decisions are in accordance with this opinion. The trust created is held to be a continuing trust; that the ven-dee is clothed with the equitable title, and that the statute does not run against his right to enforce a specific perform-*572anee so long as be remains in possession with tbe acquiescence of tbe vendor. (Hemming v. Zimmerschitte, 4 Tex. 159; Mitchells v. Shepperd, 13 Id. 484; Holman v. Criswell, 15 Id. 394; Vardeman v. Lawson, 17 Id. 10; Neuson v. Davis, 20 Id. 419).
My conclusion is-that tbe defendant established a valid defence to tbe action and was entitled to tbe judgment for specific performance of tbe contract set out and proven.
Tbe judgment must, therefore, be reversed and judgment entered for tbe defendant upon tbe findings in accordance with this opinion.
Ordered that tbe judgment be entered as of tbe 5th of January, 1868.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with directions to enter judgment for defendant in accordance with this opinion.