The questions raised by counsel for plaintiff in error on the record are such as do not require any general statement of facts, and can be conveniently disposed of by stating them in the form of interrogatories embracing the essential facts of the record upon which they are based.
1. In a suit to quiet title to-patented mining claims brought under chapter 1, title 71, Civil Code of 1901, is a- cross-complaint, setting up title by adverse possession for the statutory period and praying for the quieting of such title as against plaintiff, a proper pleading under our statutes?
It is contended by counsel for plaintiff in error that adverse possession for the statutory period does not confer title so as to permit one to maintain an action to quiet title based upon such adverse possession. The argument is that under paragraph 2942, Civil Code of 1901, title by adverse possession is only available in suits which have for their direct and immediate object the recovery of the possession of real property, and that, an action to quiet title under our statutes not being one brought directly and immediately for the recovery of the possession of real property, title by adverse possession may be neither pleaded as a defense to such action, nor can it form a basis for affirmative relief by way of cross-complaint. Said paragraph reads as follows: “Whenever in any case the action of a person for the recovery of real property is *343barred by any of the provisions of this title the person who pleads and is entitled to the bar shall be held to have full title precluding all claims.” The construction of this statute in its effect upon actions to quiet title is not now in this territory an open question. The above paragraph, together with the body of our statutes of limitations, was adopted from the statutes of the state of Texas. The supreme court of that state, in Moody v. Holcomb, 26 Tex. 714, held that adverse possession of lands for the statutory period confers title thereto which may be quieted in an action brought for that purpose by the party asserting such title. This decision was rendered prior to the adoption of the statute by this territory and after its enactment by the legislature of the state of Texas. This court, in the case of Pacheco v. Wilson, 2 Ariz. 411, 18 Pac. 597, has held that title by adverse possession is sufficient title to maintain a complaint to quiet title. This decision was rendered in June, 1888, nearly a year after the statutes of 1887, including the paragraph in question, took effect. The supreme court of the United States, in a number of decisions, beginning with Jackson ex dem. Bradstreet v. Huntington, 5 Pet. 402, 8 L. Ed. 170, has held that adverse possession for the statutory period confers title which may be asserted either in law or in equity and in any form of action. Sharon v. Tucker, 144 U. S. 533, 12 Sup. Ct. 720, 36 L. Ed. 532; Campbell v. Holt, 115 U. S. 620, 6 Sup. Ct. 209, 29 L. Ed. 483.
2. May a foreign corporation, which has complied with all the requirements of our statutes governing such corporations doing business in the Territory, and which has its principal place of business within the Territory, acquire title to realty by adverse possession for the statutory period?
There is some conflict of authority upon this point. The supreme courts of the states of New York and Nevada have held, under statutes somewhat akin to ours, though not so full and explicit in granting privileges of citizenship to such corporations, that it may not. Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa, and Minnesota hold to the contrary under similar statutes and for reasons which seem especially applicable to foreign corporations doing business within the territory under the permission granted by the statute. These reasons are that the purpose of statutes of limitations, in allowing specified times for com*344mencing actions and in making exceptions to the running of such times, is a practical one, and that is to give to any plaintiff a reasonable opportunity to seek his remedy; and that a mere theoretical absence from the state, as in the case of a foreign corporation having a duly appointed agent upon whom service may be had within the jurisdiction, not preventing the bringing of suit and the obtaining of service against the absentee, does not prevent in any way the bringing of the action, and should not therefore come within the exception common to statute of limitations that, where the defendant be out of the state when the cause of action accrues, the limitation does not begin to run until his return, or if, after the cause of action accrues, he departs from and resides out of the state, the time of his absence is not to be included within the time limited for the commencement of the action. St. Paul v. Chicago etc. R. Co., 45 Minn. 387, 48 N. W. 17; Sidway v. Missouri L. L. Stock Co., 187 Mo. 649, 86 S. W. 156; O’Connor v. Aetna Life Insurance Co., 67 Neb. 122, 93 N. W. 137, 99 N. W. 845; Wall v. Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co., 69 Iowa, 498, 29 N. W. 427. The existing statute upon the rights of foreign corporations who may have complied with the law relating thereto is so comprehensive as to leave no doubt as to the legislative intent to give such corporations all the rights of property possessed by domestic corporations, except where specifically limited in the amount of land which they may hold. Paragraph 913, Civil Code of 1901, reads: “Upon complying with the provisions of this chapter any association, company or corporation organized or incorporated under the laws of any other state or territory, or any foreign country, shall be qualified and competent to take, receive and acquire, either by purchase or by operation of law, and possess, own, hold and dispose of any and all kinds of real or personal property within this Territory, and to prosecute and defend, and to appear, especially and generally, in any action in any court of or within this Territory, and shall have, hold and enjoy, except as hereinafter provided, the same rights and privileges as are now held and enjoyed, or that may be hereafter held and enjoyed by any association, company or corporation organized or incorporated under the laws of the Territory.” Under this statute we have no hesitation in holding that a foreign corporation, complying with the require*345ments of tbe statutes governing sucb corporations doing business witbin tbis Territory, may acquire title to realty by adverse possession for tbe statutory period.
3. Do our statutes of limitations run against a nonresident ?
Tbe plaintiff, Work, is, and bas been during tbe time covered by tbe defendant’s possession of tbe mining claims in controversy, a resident of tbe state of New York. It is contended by bis counsel that tbe statutes of limitations pleaded by tbe defendant in error in its cross-complaint did not run against bim. Tbis contention obviously is made under a misapprehension of our statutes. It is nowhere provided that tbe absence from tbe Territory of any person of sound mind, over tbe age of twenty-one years, and not imprisoned, prevents any statute of limitations from running against bim while so absent. On tbe contrary, by paragraph 2964, absence from tbe Territory is made to toll tbe statute only as to any cause of action which any person is entitled to bring against him. In other words, mere absence, under tbe statute, does not operate to tbe advantage of tbe absentee, but to bis disadvantage,' and not to the disadvantage of persons who may have causes of action enforceable against bim. We therefore answer tbis interrogatory in tbe affirmative.
4. Is it essential to good pleading in a cross-complaint setting up title by adverse possession, under paragraph 2937, Civil Code of 1901, that a specific averment be made that tbe deed, under which tbe claim be made, was not a forged instrument ?
We answer tbis interrogatory in tbe negative, assuming, as was tbe case in tbe cross-complaint filed by defendant in error in this case, that it be alleged that tbe cross-complainant held under a recorded deed from certain grantors named “conveying said premises,” etc. Sucb an allegation is equivalent to an averment that tbe deed bas been executed by tbe grantors named, else it could not possibly have conveyed tbe premises named.
5. Does tbe ten year statute of limitations found in paragraph 2938, Civil Code of 1901, apply to tbe case of tbe defendant in error who sets up sucb statute in bis cross-complaint to show title by adverse possession under it, tbe statute having been adopted for tbe first time in tbe Territory by tbe Revision of 19012 In other words, is tbe ten year *346statute to be allowed to have a retrospective operation, or is it to be construed as having a prospective effect merely?
In the case of Curtis v. Boquillas Land & Cattle Co., 9 Ariz. 62, 76 Pac. 612, we bad occasion to consider tbis question, and we there stated, as the general rule applicable to new statutes of limitations, that they will not be held to be retroactive in effect unless it clearly appears that the legislature so intended. In the ease of Crowell v. Davenport, 11 Ariz. 323, 94 Pac. 1114, we expressed our approval of what was said in Curtis v. Boquillas Land & Cattle Co. on tbis subject, and reaffirmed our adherence to the rule of construction that, unless the contrary intent be expressed, a new statute of limitation will be given a wholly prospective effect. In the case of Cummings v. Rosenberg et al., ante, p. 327, 100 Pac. 810, we have held that the legislative intent to give a retrospective effect to the statute appears not only from the language of the statute, but also from a consideration of the fact that its operation was postponed from the date of its passage to September 1, 1901, a period exceeding five months, which postponement, if the statute was intended to have a prospective effect merely, would seem to have been without reason or purpose. Following our decision in the Cummings case, we hold that the ten year statute is to be given a retrospective operation.
6. If a deed relied upon under the five years’ statute refers to a recorded tax deed for a fuller description of the property conveyed, and as having been conveyed1 by the board of supervisors of the county to the grantors named in the deed, and an inspection of such recorded deed so referred to shows the latter to be void upon its face, does such reference to the invalid deed prevent the acquisition of title by adverse possession under said paragraph 2937 ?
It is a controverted question whether, under statutes similar to the one in question, a deed which is void on its face will give such color of title as will set the statute in motion. The weight of authority is perhaps in favor of the contention that it does not, and this is the rule as laid down by the supreme court of Texas. Schleicher v. Gatlin, 85 Tex. 270, 20 S. W. 120; Green v. Hugo, 81 Tex. 452, 26 Am. St. Rep. 824, 17 S. W. 79. But it has likewise been held by the supreme court of Texas, in Fry v. Baker, 59 Tex. 404, that a deed void for *347matters dehors the instrument itself will constitute color of title under the statute, provided it purports to convey the land in controversy; and this is the general rule. Wright v. Mattison, 18 How. 50, 15 L. Ed. 280. As the deed relied upon by the defendant in error was not void upon its face, although it referred, as a part of its description, to another deed which was void upon its face, it was nevertheless, under all the decisions which have come under our observation, sufficient upon which to base title by adverse possession under the five years’ statute.
7. Where a case was submitted, prior to the amendment of our statute relating to findings of fact, upon an agreed statement of facts, were findings of fact by the court required and necessary to sustain a judgment where no request for findings appears to have been made ?
Obviously, where the facts were all agreed to, there was no necessity for findings by the court, and where the conclusion of law, arising from the facts under the issue made by the pleadings, is readily ascertainable from the judgment, the latter itself is a sufficient decision under paragraph 1406, Civil Code of 1901. Where, as in this case, but one conclusion of law may properly be made from the facts found, the judgment itself is a sufficient decision, and no separate statement of such conclusion of law could add anything in the way of definiteness and certainty to the record.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.
KENT, C. J., and DOAN and CAMPBELL, JJ., concur.