The petition is by Mrs. Melvina McElroy as executrix of Peter E. McElroy, deceased, and as an individual, and Smith McElroy, Marie McElroy Temple, and P. E. McElroy; and the defendant is P. D. McElroy. The suit is to recover a described tract of land alleged to have been devised by Peter E. McElroy to Melvina McElroy for life, and at her death to the other petitioners, and for an accounting for rents, issues, and profits due to Melvina McElroy as executrix during the time the defendant was managing the estate of Peter E. McElroy, as agent of the executrix. The defendant claims that the premises in dispute are included in 'a deed executed to him by his father, Peter E. McElroy. The trial resulted in a verdict for the defendant; and the plaintiffs sued out a bill of exceptions, assigning error on the court’s refusal to sustain their motion for a new trial.
1. The pleadings narrowed the issue of title to one point, viz.,
2. The defendant pleaded prescription, based on seven years adverse possession under the deed from his father. . The court instructed the jury respecting such title by prescription. Complaint is made of alleged inaccuracies in this charge. These inaccuracies, even if erroneous as alleged, would not require a new trial, for the reason that the issue of title turned on the single point of the inclusion of the land sued for in the deed from the plaintiffs’ testator to the defendant. In that deed the boundaries were given, and the tract was estimated to contain fifty acres, more or less. The title to all the land embraced within the calls of the deed passed from the grantor to the defendant. If that deed covered the locus as against’ the plaintiffs, the defendant’s title would be good, although his possession may not have been of the character requisite to complete a title by adverse possession for seven years under color of title.
3. The court charged the jury that “the executrix could sue for the recovery of the land in dispute. The executrix and legatees can not in conjunction sue for the land, and the executrix in conjunction with the legatees can not recover the land in this case.” The court
4. Peter E. McElroy conveyed to the defendant, P. D. McElroy, fifty acres, more or less, of land having certain boundaries. Testimony was taken that these boundaries were pointed out and located by the grantor at the time of the sale and conveyance of the land to the grantee. It was not erroneous to instruct the jury that the deed would embrace all the land within its calls, and as located by the grantor, although the area might exceed fifty acres.
5. The executrix of the grantor was a party plaintiff. It was erroneous to permit the defendant to testify that the plaintiffs’ testator, a few weeks before conveying the land to him, pointed out the' boundaries, and that the defendant upon receiving his deed entered into possession of the land, and since that time continuously has been in possession. The evidence act (Civil Code (1910), §,5858, par. 1) prevents a party from testifying about a transaction or communication with a deceased person, where the opposite party is a personal representative of such deceased person.
6. The defendant was allowed to testify that he pointed out the line of the land to a witness for the plaintiffs, who had testified that he was the tenant of one of the plaintiffs. That witness did not testify on that point, and therefore this testimony was not admissible for the purpose of impeachment. The defendant’s conversation and acts with a third person, not in the presence of plaintiffs, could not bind them.
Judgment reversed.