— The record shows that the tax-deed, under which the defendant claims to have been in adverse possession, was executed, delivered, and recorded in March, 1877, or more than five years before the commencement of this suit. It may, therefore, be conceded that a prima facie case for recovery has been made out in favor of the defendant, admitting, as the evidence tends to prove, that he has continued in open and adverse possession of the land during the entire period. — Hughes v. Anderson, 79 Ala. 209, and cases there cited.
But it is contended that, when the defendant acquired the certificate of purchase by assignment from the purchaser at the tax-sale — upon which his tax-deed was based — he occupied a relation towards the owner of the land which disqualified him from acquiring such an interest. One Roddy was then owner, and the defendant was his tenant. This was in the year 1874. The tax-sale had taken place April 13, 1874; and the tax-deed was delivered in March, 1877, after Roddy had made an arrangement with Bailey (from whom he had originally bought' the land), by which he sought to cancel the trade by delivering the deed back to his vendor, and ' taking up his notes for the purchase-money, without a reconveyance of the title. The legal effect of this attempted cancellation, and of defendant’s continuing to hold the premises, we shall consider further on in this opinion.
The contention of the plaintiff, as we have said, is, that the relation of the defendant towards the then owner of the land, Roddy — as tenant and landlord — was such as to disqualify the defendant from taking an assignment of the tax-certificate, and that such assignment was, therefore, in the eye of the law, a payment, and not a purchase. There are several relations of this kind, operating to produce such effect, among which are included principal and agent, trustee and cestui que trust, tenants for life, tenants in common, mortgagors and mortgagees in possession, landlord and tenant, and some others. The reason of the rule has sometimes been said to be, that the relation of the parties imposes on them the duty of. paying -taxes assessed against the property in which each has an interest. In whosesoever name the assessment may be, the tax is assessed and levied on the land itself,, including the interest of all claimants, and the purchaser at a valid tax-sale acquires the fee. Jones v. Randle, 68 Ala. 258. "A purchase by one whose *346duty it was to pay the taxes, operates as payment only; he can derive no benefit as against a third party, by the neglect of the duty he owed such party.” — Blake v. Howe, 15 Amer. Dec., note, p. 684, and cases cited; Johnson v. Smith, 70 Ala. 108; Cooley on Tax. 346. “The principle running through all the cases,” says Mr. Burroughs, “is, that when it is the duty of the party to pay the taxes, he can not acquire a title founded on his own default.” — Burroughs on Tax. 353, 354. Some of the adjudged cases hold, that a tenant in possession may purchase the landlord’s reversionary interest at tax-sale, as he may at execution sale, unless he is under contract to pay the taxes, thus creating the duty. The current of authority seems, however, to be the other way. This will appear from the cases cited by Mr. Ereeman in his note to Blake v. Howe, 15 Amer. Dec. 684-690, supra, where, on page 690, he observes: “The relation of landlord and tenant is of such a nature as to disqualify either from acquiring title under a tax-deed. Although it is the duty of the landlord to pay the taxes, in the absence of any agreement to the contrary between the parties; yet the tenant will not be permitted to take advantage of the omission of his landlord to pay the taxes, to terminate the relation between them and obtain title to the land.— Curtis v. Smith, 42 Iowa, 665. The remedy of the tenant,” he concludes, “is rather to discharge the assessment, and deduct the amount from the rent.” Perhaps, the sounder reason, after all, is, that the presumption of law would be that a tenant, who takes an assignment of a certificate of purchase, or even buys at a tax-sale, does so for the protection of his own interest, which, as we have shown, would be equally affected with the reversionary interest of the landlord, just as in the analogous case of mortgagor and mortgagee,- where the tax-sale overrides the interest of the one as well as that of the other. — Cooley on Tax.-347, 348. The result would be, that every attempted purchase made by a tenant of rented premises at a tax-sale would operate merely as a payment of the tax, and not as a valid purchase. And the payment of the tax due on lands, prior to. their sale for delinquent taxes, even though made under a judgment of the Probate Court, is a good defense to an action of ejectment brought for the lands. No sale can be supported, where it is made to appear that no taxes were due at the time of such sale.— Watson v. Kent, 78 Ala. 602. Under these views, if the evidence was believed, the defendant could base no valid defense .upon his tax-deed. That would be eliminated from the case, he being estopped *347to claim title under it. The fifth charge requested by the plaintiff should have been given.
The record tends to show, however, that the legal title of the land sued for was in Boddy, not in the plaintiff’s intestate, James Bailey. A conveyance having originally been made to Boddy, if its execution be satisfactorily proved on another trial, the subsequent cancellation of the deed by him, without a re-conveyance of the degal title, would not divest such title. — Smith v. Cockrell, 66 Ala. 64. Hence, the plaintiff will not be entitled to recover in this action, unless the defendant occupied towards the decedent the attitude of a tenant. This relation is founded on contract, express, or implied from the conduct of the parties. It will not, ordinarily, be inferred from the mere fact of occupation, if this status can be explained so as to be referable to any other distinct cause or relation. — Hardin v. Pulley, 79 Ala. 381; Taylor on Land. & Tenant, § 44. In the absence of a deed, or other conveyance from Boddy to James Bailey, section 2177 of the Code of 1876 has no application to the case. That section operates only to make every conveyance of real estate “good and effectual without attornment of the tenant.” Whether such relation can be implied from the conduct of the parties in the present case, is a matter of inference for the determination of the jury, which must be left to them upon another trial.
These conclusions render the consideration of other questions unnecessary, in view of the new phase which the case may assume upon another trial. The rulings of the court were opposed to the principles above announced, and the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.