-This is an action of ejectment by tbe appellants against tbe appellee. Tbe general affirmative *164charge was requested by both parties in tbe court below, refused to tbe plaintiffs, and given for defendant. Tbe facts, as tbey appear from a deed put in evidence on tbe trial, and from an agreed statement, wbicb, in connection witb said deed, constituted tbe whole evidence adduced, may be summarized, as follows : On July 17, 1845, John Nickel conveyed tbe land in controversy, together witb several other lots, to John H. Gindrat, “to have and to bold unto himself, bis heirs and assigns forever, in special trust and confidence nevertheless” — the deed_proce.e¿s — “for tbe sole and separate use, benefit and behoof of'Sarah E. Gindrat, during tbe term of her natural life, and at her death, said premises shall still be held in trust for her three children, to-wit: Abraham Gindrat, Mary Elizabeth Winter, and |¡ William B. Gindrat, for and during the term of their [/ natural lives, and at their death the same shall vest in ,7 the heirs at law, or children, of them, the said Abraham, Mary Elizabeth' and William B., that may be living.-at-the time of their deaths; provided always, and it Ts expressly provided “and agreed by and between the parties, that the said trustee may, at any time, with the advice and consent of John Gindrat, the father of the said Abraham, Mary Elizabeth and William B., sell and dispose of any or all of said lots for cash, or upon credit, as they may think proper; and it is further agreed and stipulated by and between the parties, that should John Gindrat die leaving any of such trust property undisposed of in the hands of said trustee, then it shall be necessary for said trustee, before disposing of any portion of said trust property, to obtain the assent in writing of said cestui que trust to that effect.”
Of the grantees and beneficiaries mentioned in said deed, Sarah L. was the wife of John Gindrat; John H. Gindrat, the trustee, was their son, as were also Abraham, and William B., and Mary E. was their daughter. John died in 1851; Sarah L. in 1854; William B. in 1852, leaving no children; Abraham in 1884, leaving children' who are the plaintiffs in this action; and John H. Gindrat, the trustee, died in 1874.
In July, 1845, after the execution and record of said deed, the Montgomery & West Point Railroad Conqiany, entered upon said property, “and inclosed and occupied the same, claiming it as its own, and was in the open, notorious and exclusive possession of the same as its own, until it sold and conveyed it to certain trustees some time in 1856, by whom it was sold and conveyed to the defendant;” and *165tbe land bas all tbe time, since tbe entry of tbe M. & W. P. B. B. Oo. upon it in 1845, and down to tbe commencement of tbis suit, been in tbe open, notorious and exclusive possession, under claim of ownership, of said company, and its assigns, including tbe defendant company, now in possession; and “was at tbe time of said entry uninclosed, and not in tbe visible possession of any one.”
Tbe deed of trust involved bere was considered by tbis court in tbe case of Gindrat v. Montgomery Gas Light Co. 82 Ala. 596; and it was there determined that, after tbe death of John Gindrat, tbe power of sale lodged in tbe trustee, John H. Gindrat, could be executed only with tbe assent in writing of Sarah L. Gindrat, who alone was considered to be tbe cestui que trust., within tbe last clause of tbe deed. It results from tbis construction, that after tbe death of Sarah L. Gindrat, which, as we have seen, occurred in 1854, tbe trustee bad no power to sell tbe property at all. There is no evidence of the execution of tbe power of sale in tbe life-time of John Gindrat, who died in 1851, nor of its execution after bis death during tbe life-time of Sarah L. Gind-rat, nor in fact of any conveyance of title at any time into tbe defendant, or those under whom it now claims by succession to such rights as tbe adverse possession of its predecessors conferred upon them. It is not pretended, of course, that tbis adverse possession, beginning, as it did, in tbe latter part of July, 1845, was of sufficient duration prior to tbe death of Sarah L. to have ripened- into title upon which tbis action could be defended. Tbe title, so far as appears in tbis record, was in tbe trustee up to tbe death of Sarah L. Gindrat. Whether it continued in him thereafter, depends upon tbe character of the remainder over in fee, supported by tbe second estate or estates for life in Abraham, Wm. B. and Mary Elizabeth. If tbe remainder to such of their children as should be living at tbe time of their death, was a vested remainder, tbe trustee bad no further duties to perform under tbe instrument. He bad no power of sale after tbe death of Sarah L., as we have said. He bad nothing to do with respect to tbe life-estates based on tbe falling in of her estate. He was charged with no duties with respect to tbe remainders over in fee, since . they, on tbe assumption upon which we are now proceeding, were vested estates, which could not be destroyed, and which therefore did not require or admit of bis protection. Under tbe statute of uses, which is a part of the common law of this State, and re-affirmed by our own statutory provisions — ■ Code, §§ 1831-2 — tbe trust estate determined, under this as*166sumption and these facts, at the death of Sarah L. Gindrat, and both the legal and beneficial title and estate then vested in the second life-tenants and the tenants in final remainder, free from all interference and representation by the trustee. Horton v. Slede, 29 Ala. 478; Schaffer v. Lavretta, 57 Ala. 14; Bercy v. Lavretta, 63 Ala. 374; You v. Flinn, 34 Ala. 409; Tindal v. Drake, 51 Ala. 574; McBrayer v. Cariker, 64 Ala. 50; Gosson v. Ladd, 77 Ala. 223; Webb v. Crawford, 77 Ala. 440.
Here, then, would be simply a life-estate in Abraham Gin-drat, say, with remainder over in fee vested in the present plaintiffs. There is no privity between the tenant for life and the remaindermen. He does not, and did not, represent them in any wise, or to any extent. No affirmative act of his could cut off their rights, or divest their estates. A fortiori, no omission of action on his part, no laches of which he may have been guilty as to defendant’s possession of the land, no acquiescence in such possession, could at all affect the estate which they were entitled to come into enjoyment of at his death. The- possession of the defendant during his life, however long, notorious, open, adverse, and under claim of right against all the world, could not ripen into title, or afford a predicate for the presumption of a grant under the doctrine of prescription, as against these plaintiffs. At no time during the life-estate could they, or any one of them, have questioned this possession, and no laches'f.n submitting to what they were without remedy to resist, can be imputed to them. It is not shown that defendant, or its predecessors, ever had a deed or color of title, and the predicate for the application of the doctrine laid down in Woodstock Iron Co. v. Fullenwider, 87 Ala. 584, is, therefore, wholly lacking. The case is, in other words, the familiar one of a possession, adverse and of long continuance pending a life-estate, being relied on to defeat ejectment by the remainderman brought within ten years after he became entitled to the possession; and the authorities are uniform to the point, that such possession is no bar to theaction. — Tiedeman on Eeal Property, § 175; 1 Amer. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, 327; Fleming v. Burnham, 100 N. Y. 1; Jones v. Freed, 42 Ark. 351; McCarry v. King's Heirs, 39 Amer. Dec. 165: Pickett v. Pope, 74 Ala. 122; Bass v. Bass, 88 Ala. 408; Allen v. DeGrooett, 98 Mo. 159; s. c., 14 Amer. St. Rep. 626, notes 632-5.
If, however, the remainder over in fee was contingent, the doctrine stated above would have no application, at least so | long as the contingency continued. In such case, the trus-5 tee would have active duties to perform in the protection of ; the contingent remainder, and would hold the legal title in *167trust for tbe remaindermen, and to become vested in tbem as tbey come into being. Tbe trustee is tbus tbe representative of tbe tenants in remainder. There is a privity between them and him. In tbe protection of their contingent interest be may interpose during tbe life-estate, if need be, and to any extent necessary to that end. He has a right of entry in case of any wrongful alienation by tbe tenant for life, or whenever bis estate for life determines in bis lifetime by any other means than alienation. And being tbus in privity with tbe remaindermen, and representing tbem for tbe preservation of tbe remainder, until tbe happening of tbe condition upon which it is to vest, bis laches is tbe laches of tbe tenants in remainder; acquiescence by him binds tbem, and adverse possession against him bars their right of entry. In tbe case at bar, tbe possession of tbe defendant, and those under whom it claimed, was such a destruction of tbe life-estate while tbe tenant of that estate was still alive, as entitled tbe trustee to enter for tbe preservation of the contingent remainders, which otherwise would be also destroyed by reason of tbe intervening estates not continuing up to tbe time tbey were to vest; and be, having a right of action, is barred of its assertion after the lapse of, ten years from the inception of defendant’s possession in tbe latter part of July, 1845. Moreover, since tbe trustee for tbe preservation of contingent remainders has large powers to be exercised, ordinarily, subject to tbe control of tbe Chancery Court, and may even join, or be compelled in equity to join, in a sale to destroy tbe contingent remainder, if it should appear that such course would best answer tbe trusts declared; the presumption of such sale will, after tbe lapse of twenty years beneficial possession in another, be indulged, not only against tbe trustee, but also against tbe cestui que trust. In tbe language of Chancellor Kent: “Tbe legal estate limited to trustees during tbe tenant’s life, is a vested remainder in trust existing between tbe beneficial freehold and tbe contingent remainder, and tbe limitation in trust is not executed by tbe statute of uses [as we have seen is the case with remainders which are vested not in trust, but in tbe tenants in remainder ], and tbe legal estate in such cases remains in tbe trustees. The tenant for life has a legal estate, and tbe remainder, of tbe same character, and for tbe same period, is vested in the trustees ; and if tbe particular estate determines otherwise than by tbe death of tbe tenant, tbe estate of tbe trustees eo instanti takes effect, and,— as a particular estate in possession, it supports tbe remainder, dependent on tbe contingency.” — 4 Kent. Com. 253,
*168The statute now of force in tbis State abolishes contingent remainders, and provides that all estates which would be such at common law shall have the same properties and effect as executory devises. — Code, § 1826. Had this been the law, when the conveyance here involved was executed, its effect would have been to determine the trusteeship on the death of Sarah L. Gindrat, since the trustee could nave had no duties to perform with respect to an executory devise; but the provision in question is new to the Code of 1852, and has no operation upon contingent remainders theretofore created.
'Whether the remainder to the children of Abraham Gin-drat was vested or contingent when created, and if a contingent, how long it continued to be so, are questions which this record affords no data for determining. If it was a vested remainder, as we have seen, the defense of adverse possession will not avail, and the general charge for the defendant, given by the trial court, was erroneous. If, on the other hand, it was contingent, and so continued for ten years after the inception of the adverse possession upon which defendant relies, the rights of these plaintiffs were destroyed by the laches of their trustee, whose duty it was to preserve the estate limited over to them; and they would fail in this action on the well established doctrine of Molton v. Henderson, 72 Ala. 426. But the plaintiffs having made a prima facie case for recovery by proof of their successorship to the legal title as evidenced by muniments, the onus was cast upon the defendant, relying, as it did, solely on adverse possession, to show such possession against these plaintiffs; and this could only be done by proof that the remainder over was a contingent -one in its inception, and so continued for at least ten years, pending the possession of defendant, or those under whom it now claims. This burden it has failed to discharge. The defense relied on is, therefore, unsupported by proof, and in any aspect of the case as it was presented in the court below, the general charge requested for defendant, should have been refused.
Whether the general charge requested for the plaintiffs should have been given, depends on the construction of the deed of trust as to the character and quantum of the life interests of the second life-tenants, and of the tenants in final remainder; and as to when, or upon what event, the remainder-men in fee became entitled to their estates in possession.
The deed involved here is not very clear in all of its terms. It is entirely safe to say, however, that Abraham Gindrat, *169William B. Gindrat and Mary Elizabeth Winter took vested remainders for life, subject to devestiture by the execution of the power of sale by the trustee prior to the death of Mrs. Gindrat. It is equally clear, we think, that by the force of our statute against survivorship among joint tenants, if not otherwise, they took as tenants in common for all practical purposes ; and each became entitled to an one-third ¶ undivided interest in remainder in severalty. The terms • of the instrument as to the remainder over in fee are. “And at their [Abraham, Mary Elizabeth and William B.J death, the same shall vest in the heirs at law, or children, of them, the said Abraham, Mary Elizabeth and William B., that may be living at the time of their death.” The words “heirs at law, or children,” as here employed, manifestly mean children only. — Flint v. Steadman, 86 Yt. 210. It may not be very clear upon the fa.ce of the paper, looking alone to the words of limitation over, whether the purpose to have the hV remainder take effect in possession only, after the death of C all the second life-tenants, or to have the children of eachjo take a vested estate in possession in an one-third undivided interest, upon the death of their ancestor. It would seem, however, to follow from the several character of the precedent life-tenants, that the latter is the more reasonable, if not a necessary conclusion; and it is reinforced by the con- . sideration, that the manifest purpose of the deed was to provide for the support of Mrs. Sarah L. Gindrat, then of three of her children for life, and finally of her grand-children, a purpose which could best be subserved, — if indeed it could be subserved at all otherwise — by vesting the estate in the grand-children immediately upon the death of their respective parents, who, it is to be supposed, would be theretofor supported by the ancestor out of the usufruct of one-third of the property for life. It may readily be conceived that the children of Abraham, for instance, who died in 1884, would not enjoy the benefits intended to be conferred upon them by the conveyance — that the intention of the grantor as to them would not be effectuated — if it should be held that they are denied all participation in the property from the death of their father till the death of Mrs. Winter, who still survives; and we, therefore, feel that we are conserving the real intent and purposes of the grantor, as well as effectuating the necessary results of the several character of the ownership of the second life-tenants, in holding that, upon the death of each one of the life-tenants, their children respectively became entitled to the absolute fee, and with the fee, of course, the possession, of an one-third undivided *170interest in the property. Were the contrary construction adopted, and it were held that the remainder in fee took effect in possession only after the deaths of all the second life-tenants this action could not be maintained at all, of course, until the death of Mrs. Winter. The |)osition 0f counsel, that an action under that interpretation would not lie, because the remainder is a vested estate, is quite untenable.
A further result of these considerations is, that William B. Gindrat having died before the falling in of the first life-estate, and having no children,-never having married, his vested remainder for life lapsed before it took effect in possession; the remainder over in fee failed, because there were no children of his to take; and the whole title to the one-third interest limited to him and his children, reverted, upon the subsequent death of Sarah L. Gindrat, to the grantor in the deed of trust.
The present plaintiffs can, therefore, in no event, recover more than the one-third undivided interest in the lands in which their father," Abraham Gindrat, had an estate for life. Whether they may recover even to this extent, depends, as we have seen, upon the character of the remainder over to them. If Abraham Gindrat had a child in esse on July 17th, 1845, the remainder to his children at once vested in such child, and thereafter opened and let in after-born children, as they came into being. This, on the familiar principle, that the uncertainty which prevents the vesting of a remainder must have reference to the present right of future enjoyment, and not to the enjoyment itself; or, in other words, if, when the final remainder was created, there was a person in esse 'entitled to take in possession immediately, upon the termination of the precedent life-estate, the remainder became at once a vested estate in him, however great should be the uncertainty as to whether he would in fact ever come into the possession and enjoyment of the estate; for, as declared by Chancellor Kent, “It is the present capacity of taking effect in possession, if the possession were to become vacant, and not the certainty that the possession will become vacant before the estate limited in remainder determines, that distinguishes a. vested from a contingent remainder.” — 4 Kent’s Com. *203; Stonebraker v. Tallickoffer, 52 Md. 154; In re Lechmore, 18 Ch. D. 524; Kumpe v. Coons, 63 Ala. 448; Howard v. Peavy, 128 Ill. 430; s. c., 15 Amer. St. Rep. 121, note 528; Bufford v. Holliman, 10 Texas, 560; s. c., 60 Amer. Dec. 223; Manderson v. Lukens, 23 Penn. St. 31; s. c., 62 Amer. Dec. 312; Cathey v. Cathey, 470; s. c., 49 Amer. Dec. 715; Bruce v. Bissell, 119 Ind. 525; *171s. c., 14 Amer. St. Rep. 436, note. 442. So tliat it is not important that a child, of Abraham, in life at the time of the execution of this deed, might not be living at the death of the life-tenant, and hence might never take in possession. Whether such child survives or not, it then had the right to possession, had the possession become vacant, and the element of uncertainty involved in the probability of death before the possession does become vacant, goes to the future enjoyment, and not the present right of future enjoyment.
But, if no child of Abraham was in being when the deed was executed, the remainder over in fee was a contingent remainder of the fourth class under the classification adopted by Mr. Fearne, which embraces all cases where the person to whom the remainder is limited is not ascertained, or not in being. — 4 Kent’s Com. *208. And if this be the fact here, the trusteeship continued so long as the contigent character of the remainder was maintained; and so long as the trust continued, the possession of the defendant was adverse to both the trustee and the cestui que trusts. If this possession continued for ten years under the statute, or twenty years under the rule of prescription, while the unborn children of Abraham Gindrat were represented by John H. Gindrat, the trustee, their rights were forever cut off. But the policy of the law is favorable to the vesting of estates. Bema'inders are held to be vested, rather than contingent ; and though originally confessedly contingent, are held to vest as soon as any person having the capacity to take possession immediately upon a vacancy in precedent possession, is ascertained, or comes into being. Conceding that this remainder was contingent in its inception, requiring a trustee to its preservation, it ceased to be contingent, and became a-vested estate, not requiring the protection of a trustee, immediately upon the birth of a child to Abraham Gindrat.- — 4 Kent’s Com. *205; Mercantile Bank v. Ballard, 83 Ky. 481; s. c., 4 Amer. St. Rep. 160.
And it follows that the defendant’s adverse possession against the trustee, and through him against the cestui que trust, would not avail in defense of this action, if the remainder became a vested one by the destruction of the contingency, resulting from the fact that no person with capacity in possession was in being, before the lapse of sufficient time to raise up the bar of the statute, or put in operation the doctrine of prescription. The birth of a person in whom the estate could vest terminates the trusteeship, and if the title has not then been vested by the lapse of time in the adverse holder, it can not afterwards become so, pending the life-*172estate, since tbe tenant in remainder lias no right of entry, no standing in court, to question the possession, and his submission thereto is not laches, which work a devestiture of his estate.
These considerations lead to the conclusion, that the plaintiffs will be entitled to recover an one-third undivided interest in the land described in the complaint, and no more, unless the defendant shows possession for ten years or more (that is, if it again relies solely on possession) while the remainder to the children of Abraham Gindratwas contingent; and that the general charge requested by the plaintiffs, which would have authorized a recovery of the whole land, was properly refused.
Eor the error involved in giving the general charge for the defendant, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
The foregoing opinion was delivered January 14, 1891. The appellee apj)lied for a rehearing. This application was overruled July 27, 1892. ThoeingtoN, J., not sitting.