The third section of the act “for the relief of tenants in possession against dormant titles” provides, “ that in any suit for the recovery of lands and tenements, which shall be commenced against any tenant for years, at will, or sufferance, it shall be lawful for his or her landlord to enter him or herself a defendant to such suit, and such landlord shall be solely entitled to all the benefits and provisions of this act:” Clay’s Digest, 321. In Doe, ex dem. Davis v. McKinney and another, 5 Ala. Rep. 719, we said, “the terms *82of this enactment are certainly broad enough, if literally interpreted, to extend to all cases, and it would really seem that no inconvenience would result from allowing it thus to operate. By making himself a defendant, the landlord cannot urge as a defence any 'matter, which the law did not previously recognize as available, to defeat a recovery by the plaintiff. The provision of the act cited does not affect the parties rights, it relates only to the remedy. As then it was not allowable for the defendant in an execution to defeat the purchaser by showing he held under another, so, neither can the landlord when let in to defend, set up a title consistent with the possession sought to be recovered. It is immaterial to Mm whether the plaintiff recovers the possession or not, for as soon as he comes in, he will be liable to all the burthens and incur all the responsibilities which rested upon the defendant as a tenant. In fact, the recovery of the purchaser, so far as the landlord is concerned, effects nothing more than the substitution of one tenant for another.” It was also added, that if it was an error to' permit the landlord to defend, it was one that could work harm to no one, and consequently was not fatal to the judgment. This argument was reiterated in Thompson v. Ives, 11 Ala. Rep. 237, where we said, by way of admonition, that a landlord should be cautious in making himself a defendant in conjunction with, or instead of his tenant, where the latter holds under a lease for an unexpired term, lest upon a general verdict against him, he might be estopped from asserting his title at. the expiration of the lease. In Falkner v. Jones and another, 12 Ala. Rep. 165, it was .held, under the statute cited, that it was. not necessary the technical relation of landlord and tenant should exist, but the act extends to all persons claiming title, consistently with the possession of the occupier. See also Elmore & Willis v. Harris, 13 Ala. Rep. 360.
In all the cases cited, the plaintiff claimed as a purchaser at a sale under execution, seeking to recover the possession of the defendant in execution, and thus far they are precisely analogous with that now before us. The fact that the plaintiffs in the present case purchased tire premises in question one month before the defendant, Gunter, purchased at the sale under his mortgage, and that therefore they were entitled to rent for the intervening time, even conceding such to be the law, we think *83altogether immaterial, and cannot exempt the case from the influence of the statute. The primary object of the suit is the recovery of the possession, the damages are but secondary and consequential, and if the plaintiff in such action fails to make-out a title, which entitles him to the land, he cannot have a verdict for damages, whatever his rights may be in respect to the rent. This is a proposition which is sufficiently illustrated by its statement. But it may be asked, although a mortgagor, remaining in possession by the permission of the mort-gee, is not bound to account for rents and profits, unless they are'specially pledged, does it follow if he leases or relinquishes to ánother, that the person thus substituted, can hold the premises free of rent ? See Chamber’s et al. v. Mauldin, et al. 4 Ala. Rep. 477. The case does not require an answer to this question, and we merely propose- it, to exclude a conclusion. It results from what has been said that the Circuit Court did not err in permitting Gunter to become a defendant.
2. It cannot admit of serious question, that the charge in respect to the retention of the possession of the personal estate by Coleman was expressed in terms quite as strong and favorable for the plaintiffs as the law, under the facts disclosed, justifies. Hobbs v. Bibb, 2 Stew. Rep. 54; Ayres v. Moore, Id. 336; Mauldin & Terrell v. Mitchell, 14 Ala. Rep. 814. We do not understand this to be controverted; but it is insisted that the rule is not less rigid when applied to land, and to sustain this argument we have been referred to Peck v. Land, 2 Kelley’s Rep. 1. In that case, the judge of. the primary court charged the jury, that “ possession of land remaining with the vendor, after absolute deed, is not under the statute of 13 Elizabeth, c. 5, an evidence of fraud.” In reviewing this charge, the Supreme Court said: “ It is true that the ownership to lands is usually evidenced by deed and other written muniments of title. Still in real, as in personal property, we hold, that if the vendee take an absolute conveyance, and nevertheless leave the property in the possession of the vendor, it is prima fade evidence of fraud. - If a man convey his land absolutely, and yet is allowed to continue in possession as its absolute unqualified owner, this will be a proof that the conveyance is fraudulent.” We cannot stop critically to examine this proposition, but we would remark, that we have looked *84into the citations of the court from Atkins and Johnson, and with all deference, we cannot think that they maintain, that the retention of the possession of real estate, as an isolated fact, is presumptive evidence of fraud, which would constrain a jury to find against the conveyance. If the vendor was permitted to exercise such a dominion over the land, as indicated that he was the “ absolute and unqualified owner,” then, perhaps, in the absence of countervailing evidence, fraud would be a legitimate deduction. In Smith v. Lowell, 6 N. Hamp. Rep. 67, a debtor in embarrassed circumstances made an absolute conveyance and continued in possession fourteen years afterwards: Held, that the possession of the vendor for so long a time unexplained was prima fade evidence, that tire conveyance was -made to defraud creditors ; that it was not enough to show, that it was intended to secure “ some debt,” or that it was made in payment of a debt, “it should have been shown that the debt amounted to the fair value of the land.” In Every v. Edgerton, 7 Wend. Rep. 259, it was decided, that the “ simple circumstance that the grantor remained in possession,” after he had parted with his title by giving a deed, did not make the deed void ; “ in relation to real estate, that is not even a badge of fraud.”
The eases, in which so much potency is accorded to the fact of possession remaining with the vendor, relate to'personal property. True, the possession of land by the vendor, for an unreasonable time, or under circumstances indicative of mala Jides, or inconsistent with the idea of a sale, would furnish a strong reason for pronouncing against the validity of the sale. But the mere failure to relinquish the immediate possession to the vendee, cannot per se, in the absence of an explanation accounting for the delay of the vendor to yield it to the ven-dee, be regarded as such strong evidence as will necessarily malm the transfer fraudulent. Paulling v. Sturgis, et al. 3 Stewart Rep. 95.
Roberts in his treatise on fraudulent conveyances (p. 548, et seq.) in commenting upon the fact of possession by the vendor as inconsistent with an absolute conveyance, says: “ the natural consequences of this contradictory possession involve a two-fold injury. The beneficial interest in the goods so circumstanced belongs either to the assignor or assignee: if *85they belong to the assignor, he might be enabled by his mock transfer, if it could prevail, to continue to himself the enjoyment of that, which in conscience belongs to his creditors; if they really belong to the donee or assignee, the possessor might be enabled to attract to himself an illusory credit, against which ordinary prudence is an insufficient guard. But the degree of inconvenience produced by this separation of the property from the possession depends greatly upon the nature of the thing, the property in which is transferred. The property in some things is not wholly ascertained by the possession, and the nature and condition of other things may preclude the possibility of a specific transfer at the moment of the sale. Thus where land is conveyed, the want of possession casts a less degree of suspicion upon the transaction, than where goods are the subject of the conveyance, for with respect to land, the property is evidenced by possession of the title deeds, and manual occupation is no criterion of ownership. But in looking for the real owner of moveable chattels, we regard the possession as indicating the proprietor, since they are not only capable of specific delivery, but are ordinarily used and enjoyed by being possessed. Land is enjoyed and possessed by the title, and fraud in the transfer of it is mainly to be inferred from the inconsistency of the title with the possession of the title deeds.” Again, (p. 554, et seq.) it is said, the leading object of the statute of 13 Elizabeth, ch. 5, was to prevent those collusive transfers of the legal ownership, which place the property of a man indebted out of the reach of his bona fide creditors, and leave him to the beneficial enjoyment of that which ought in conscience to be open to their legal remedies. Possession therefore of land, after an absolute conveyance, is evidence of a fraudulent design within the statute; and if this possession be accompanied with acts of ownership, the evidence of fraud becomes very hard to be resisted. But such possession is only evidence of fraud, by being a strong indication of a secret trust and reservation. In Hildreth v. Sands, 2 Johns. Ch. Rep. 35, it was said, possession of land, and taking the profits after an absolute conveyance, is an evidence of fraud, within the statute of frauds, unless such possession be consistent with the terms and object of the deed, or the character of it be openly and explicitly understood. See also *86Codwise, et al. v. Sands, 4 Johns. Rep. 586; 2 Ves. jr. Rep. 292; Fitler v. Maitland, 5 Serg. & W. Rep. 307.
If the conveyance was recorded, there would be no ground for holding that the sale was prima facie fraudulent, merely because the possession of the vendor was not promptly yielded, but then it would be incumbent on the creditor who assailed it to rest the imputation of fraud upon some other hypothesis. So, although there may bo no registration of the deed, yet if it was executed bona fide and for a valuable consideration, the want of a change of the possession would be a circumstance more or less indicative of fraud, according to others which accompanied or surrounded it; but the court could not assume that it was evidence so strong (unless explained) as should ■control the verdict of a jury. This was' the view which was taken by the Circuit Judge.
It may, however, be remarked, that the possession of Coleman was perfectly consistent with the mortgage, at least up to the maturity of the mortgage debt, and the mortgagee instead of then attempting to oust him, might, as he did, have advertised and sold the premises. Fraud then cannot be predicated of the mortgagor’s possession previous to the sale, and the only inquiry upon this point which could have arisen, is whether the continuance of the mortgagor’s possession after Gunter’s purchase affords evidence that the mortgage debt was simulated, or had been paid otherwise than by a devotion of the property to its satisfaction. It must be observed that Gunter does not claim under an absolute conveyance from Coleman, whether we regard the mortgage or consequent sale, so that it is difficult to perceive how the rule invoked by the counsel for the plaintiffs, even if applicable to real estate, can be applied, the more especially, as the action was instituted before the sale by the mortgagee. The questions considered are all that arise upon the record. • If the plaintiffs had desired to present others, they should have prayed further instructions appropriate to the evidence — such as the effect of Coleman’s possession of the slaves upon the bona fides of the transaction in respect to the premises in controversy, and upon the other points that have been discussed at the bar.
We have but to add, that the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.