The bill in this case, which is one for the enforcement of a vendor’s lien, brought by the heirs of one S. L. Solomon, deceased, was filed August 25th, 1885, or more than twenty-two years after the last installment 'of the purchase-money on the land became due.
On the last appeal, when the case was before this court, we held that the complainants’ claim was a stale demand, by reason of the presumption of payment arising from the lapse of twenty years. — Solomon v. Solomon, 81 Ala. 505.
Upon remandment of the cause, the bill was amended, and a demurrer to it was again sustained by the chancellor, on the ground that nothing contained in the amendments obviated the objection of staleness, which was held fatal to the original bill. In this conclusion reached by him we concur. The amendments allege that, before the lapse of twenty years from the time the purchase-money became due, the defendant, who was administrator of Solomon’s estate, “advanced or paid to the complainants different amounts of money on their respective interests in the said estate, taking their receipts for the same,” and that “he [the administrator] now claims that such payments were payments on the purchase-money of the land.” It is not stated that these payments were not sufficiently large to have satisfied the entire demand for the purchase-money. This averment, therefore, so far from being an admission on the part of the defendant that the purchase-money is unpaid, is rather a denial of such fact.
The amended bill then “claims and charges” that these payments were made generally on the distributive interests *396of the complainants in Solomon’s estate, and that they “should be credited proportionally on their interest in the land and in the personalty,” for which the administrator owed the estate. This is no averment of any recognition by the defendant of the land debt, as a continuing and subsisting claim, such as would keep the vendor’s lien alive and in force. — Cook v. Parham, 63 Ala. 456; Royston v. May, 71 Ala. 398; Code, 1886, § 2628. The concluding averment, that the defendant, with the exception above stated, “has never denied, but always admitted that the purchase-money of said land is due and unpaid,” is too indefinite to overcome the presumption of staleness arising from the lapse of twenty years. “When, where, to whom, and how often admitted, the bill fails to show.” — Goodwin v. Baldwin, 59 Ala. 127; Relfe v. Relfe, 34 Ala. 500; Flinn v. Barber, 61 Ala. 530; Smith v. Gillam, 80 Ala. 296; Long v. Palmer, 81 Ala. 384; Coyle v. Wilkins, 57 Ala. 108; Thomas on Mortgages (2d Ed.), § 53.
The action of the chancellor sustaining the demurrer is free from error, and his decree is affirmed.