The defendants below, appellants here,’offered to prove that Mrs. Hancock did not file her claim for unpaid purchase-money of her dower interest against the insolvent estate of W. M. Gooch. This was ruled out. Certainly this failure is by no means conclusive evidence that she had no such claim. Many reasons may be snpposed why she did not then prefer a claim, and it may be that a satisfactory reason can be shown why it was not done. But whether or not there was such valid, subsisting, unpaid claim, was one of the disputed questions on the trial. We think this testimony ought to have been received, to be weighed with the other testimony, in determining whether there was such unpaid balance. If the purchase-money was paid in full, then the holding became adverse, and would perfect a bar in ten years from that time. The war intervening, the actual time necessary to perfect a bar would be extended to fourteen years, eight months and ten days, of independent, or adverse holding. The circuit court erred in ruling this testimony out.
We do not say such testimony would, per se, bar a recovery. Such failure to file is only a surrender of all right to go against the insolvent estate. It is no abandonment of the right to recover the land, nor of the right to enforce a vendor’s lien upon it, if such right be asserted in time. It is, as we have said, only a circumstance to be weighed by the jury in deter*233mining whether, in fact, there remains unpaid purchase-money. And to that extent, it is only important, as bearing on the . question of time necessary to perfect a bar.—Walker v. Crawford, 70 Ala. 567.
The circuit court did not err in rejecting the trust-deed made by Mrs. Hancock to indemnify Scruggs, her acceptor. On its face it does not tend to prove any thing material to the issue being tried, and nothing was offered in connection with it, tending to show its materiality. ¥e can not perceive how proof that a debt contracted • by Mrs. Hancock to Scruggs, Donegan & Co., even though never paid by her, can tend to prove that Gooch, a stranger to the transaction, had either paid the bill, or paid a debt he owed to Mrs. Hancock.—Seals v. Edmondson, 71 Ala. 509.
It is among the undisputed facts in this record, that dower in the lands sued for was allotted to Mrs. Hancock, before the larger tract out of which it was carved was sold under decree of the probate court, as of the estate of her deceased husband, Bobert Hancock; that at such sale Gooch became the purchaser of the entire tract, but only purchased the reversion in that part which had been assigned as dower; and that the interest he acquired in the dower estate, was by virtue of an independent purchase from Mrs. Hancock, through her agent. The purchase-money to be paid for the estate’s interest in the lands, was payable to Seay, the administrator. By an independent contract, Gooch purchased the dower interest of Mrs. Hancock, and by that contract bound himself to pay the purchase-price to her. He obtained title from neither vendor. He took possession under his several purchases, and retained possession until his death, a few years afterwards. He did not pay the purchase-money promised to the adminiatrator, Seay. He paid one-half the purchase-price promised to Mrs. Hancock for her dower interest. Whether he paid the other, deferred installment, was one of the controverted questions in this trial. Mrs. Hancock left the premises as early as 1858, and did not institute this suit until 1881, about twenty-three years after surrendering the possession to Gooch.
A bill was filed against the heirs of Gooch to enforce a vendor’s lien for the payment of the notes given to the administrator, in the purchase of the lands under the probate sale. Mrs. Hancock was made a defendant to that bill, and neither answered, nor made other defense. The bill set forth the extent of Gooch’s purchase, and that it embraced only the reversion in that part of the land which had been allotted to Mrs. Hancock as dower. It also averred the allotment of dower to Mrs. Hancock, describing it by numbers, metes and bounds. The chancellor decreed a sale of the entire tract, without men*234tioning the dower claim, or any particular estate in any of the land. The sale and conveyance under the chancellor’s decree were made in the same way. John W. Hancock, son of Robert, Hancock and of Mrs. Hancock, the dowress, became the purchaser, and received a conveyance from the register. This was in 1867, and John W., the purchaser, immediately took possession, his mother occupying with him. He and his mother continued to live together on the premises until 1880, when John W., the son, died. The lands were soon afterwards sold under mortgages executed by John W., and the brothers Kelly became the purchasers, and went into possession. The present action, as we have said, was brought in 1881, to recover the dower interest.
We have said above that Mrs. Hancock has never conveyed away her dower interest. On a material question in this cause, the testimony is in positive conflict. Some of the testimony tends to show, that from the time the Hancocks regained possession in 1867 until John W.’s death in 1880, he exercised exclusive ownership and dominion over the land, his mother claiming no interest, but simply enjoying a home and snpport at the hands of her son. Other testimony tends to show that during all that time Mrs. Hancock, being on the premises, asserted her claim to the dower estate, and that her son, John W., was cognizant of her claim, recognized it, and supported her in agreed consideration of its use. This is the pivotal point in this cause. The Kelly brothers have no chain of title to the dower interest, which dates behind the mortgages under which they purchased. If John W. held in recognition of his mother’s ownership, then the present defendants acquired no title. The mother had, and still has the legal title, unless entry is tolled by lapse of time. The present occupants have acquired no title by virtue of their unaided possession. On the other hand, if Mrs. Hancock was in possession in right of her. son, asserting no claim herself, but simply as a guest, or member. of his household, then more than twenty years have run against her since she surrendered possession to Gooch, and the law will presume against her payment, conveyance, or any thing else, to quiet a possession which has remained so long undisturbed.-McArthur v. Carrie, 32 Ala. 75.
And payment of the purchase-money promised by Gooch is only material, in so far as it affects the time necessary to complete a bar. Ten years independent holding, after full payment of purchase-money, bars a recovery even against a title otherwise valid.—Tillman v. Spann, 68 Ala. 102; Barclay v. Smith, 66 Ala. 230; Clark v. Snodgrass, Ib. 233; Ryan v. Kilpatrick, Ib. 332.
The charge numbered 3, given at the instance of the plain*235tiff, should not, in the state of the proof found in this record, have been given. That charge affirms that if no title was made, then the possession would not become adverse, until the whole purchase-money was paid. That is not reconcilable with what we have said above, and is not true, if, as part of the testimony tends to show, John W. Hancock took, claimed and held possession in his individual right. In' that event, twenty years would perfect a bar.
The charge asked, to the effect that if Gooch paid part of the purchase-money and received possession, then the contract was as binding on Mrs. Hancock as if such contract had been in writing and signed by her, was rightly refused for several reasons. In the first instance, it raised an inquiry that was immaterial in this cause. If the plaintiff meant by contract in writing an executory agreement to convey, then each phase of the hypothesis would only confer an equitable right, which can neither be enforced nor considered in a court of law. In the second place, it mentions contract in writing, without discriminating between executory and executed contracts. This -would be misleading and erroneous, in this: While such oral contract of sale, accompanied with possession and part payment of the purchase-money, is the equivalent of a written obligation to convey (Code of 1876, § 2121), yet it is not the equivalent of a conveyance, which is only a contract in writing.
It is contended for appellant that, inasmuch as Mrs. Flan-cock was made a defendant to the bill, under which the vendor’s lien was enforced against Gooch’s heirs, and acquiesced in the decree therein rendered, this amounts to res adjudícala against her, and estops her from maintaining her present claim. We can not assent to this. The bill itself shows that the dower interest was no part of the property purchased at the administrator’s sale, and furnished no part of the consideration for the bonds or sealed notes the bill sought to collect. No lien existed against the dower estate, and none was asserted. There was no claim set up in the bill, which affected Mrs. Flancock’s interest, and well might she abstain from offering any defense. We can not suppose the chancellor attempted to declare alien, which the bill itself shows did not exist. The decree must be referred to the claim set up in the bill. See authorities on brief of counsel.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded.