This is an action of assumpsit for the use and occupation of a farm which is described as the “land and appurtenances of the plaintiffs, held by the defendant at the special instance and request, and by the sufferance and permission, of the plaintiffs.” In none of the several counts is there disclosed any contract or agreement with Jefferson and Rufus Stone, or either of them. There is no breach that the rent was not paid to them in their life-time; but the breach is that no payment of rents was made to the plaintiffs;, no profert of letters of administration was made ; in truth, nothing whatever to show that there was a cause of action accruing to them in their representative capacity. When such is the case the action must be considered as brought in the individual right of the plaintiffs, as held by this court in Hemphill v. Hamilton, 11 Ark., 425; McDonald v. Williams, 16 Ark., 36.
Pleas of non-assumpsit and limitation wfere filed, to which there was neither joinder nor replication. The case was thus submitted to a jury, when it appeared in evidence that the defendant rented the land of Rufus Stone, evidenced by a written contract entered into between Rufus Stone and the defendant alone. It appeared in evidence, further, that Jefferson Stone died before Rufus did, but whether before the contract for rent with defendant, is not shown. The land rented was known as the farm of Jefferson and Rufus Stone.
This brief statement of the facts we think fully sufficient to-a proper understanding of the- questions of law material to be considered.
Under instructions from the court the jury found a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiffs moved the court for a new trial, which was overruled, and final judgment rendered for defendant, from which the plaintiffs appealed.
There are several grounds, either of which would, in our opinion, be fatal to the plaintiffs’ recovery.
It was error to have proceeded to judgment without an issue upon the plea of limitation. That plea was a bar to the action, unless upon issue it should appear not to he true. This case is clearly distinguishable from that of Dorris v. Grace, 24 Ark., 326, in the facts and the finding of .the jury.
There was no evidence whatever conducing to show that the defendant was indebted to the plaintiffs, or either of them, in the right and capacity in which they sued. The written contract for the rent of the farm was made between Rufus Stone and the defendant, Brock. It was a chose in action which passed at the death of Rufus Stone to his administrator, and which, in order to-a recovery against the defendant, should have been declared upon as a contract made with Stone in his life-time. Jefferson Stone’s representative had no legal interest whatever in the contract, and should not have been joined in the action. Even if there had been no written contract for rent, and the land had been rented by both Jefferson and Rufus Stone, as joint tenants, still, as-Jefferson died first, the right of action would have survived to Rufus Stone alone,1 and not jointly with the administrator of Jefferson Stone. Ghitty says, that “where one or more of several obligees, covenantees, parties or others, having a joint legal interest in the contract, dies, the action must be brought in the name of the survivor, though the deceased alone might be entitled to the beneficial interest in the contract.” 1 Chitty Pl., 19.
But even if the suit had been brought in the representative capacity of the plaintiffs, as the contract to rent was with Rufus Stone only, the plaintiffs- could not recover, because the proof in this respect must correspond with the count or the plaintiff' will be non-suited. Burr v. Rose, 17 Ark., 250.
From this view of the ease it is evident that the plaintiffs .were not entitled to recover.
Judgment affirmed.