This was a bill to remove a cloud upon Mrs. Winburn’s title to a lot in the town of Prescott and to quiet her possession. The tract of. forty acres, of which the lot once formed a part, originally belonged to John J. Thomas. He sold and conveyed it in May, 1876 to John H. Anderson upon a credit. Anderson caused it to be laid off into blocks and lots as an addition to the town. In December, 1876, Anderson sold off some of the lots-by public auction. The defendant, E. A. Warren, was Anderson’s agent m conducting the auction sale. The lot in controversy was bid off by one Bell and the purchase money paid to Warren, who by Anderson’s direction paid it to Thomas, the original vendor, or gave Thomas his note for the amount. Anderson made a deed to Bell’s wife, and in this deed Thomas appears either to have joined, or to have endorsed upon it a relinquishment of all right to go upon the lot" for the balance of purchase-money due him. This deed was never recorded and has since been lost. On the 9th of March, 1877, Bell and his wife conveyed to Mrs. Winburn. Mrs. Bell joius in the granting clause of the deed, which contained likewise a renunciation of dower on her part. And in the acknowledgement appended to the deed, the notary certifies only to the relinquishment of dower by Mrs. Bell.
This is the plaintiff’s title. The defendant’s claim arose thus: On the 27th of March, 1877, Anderson, being unable to pay for the forty acres of land, reconveyed it to Thomas without any reservation or exception of this lot. And on the same day Thomas sold and conveyed it to E. A. Warren and Mrs. Bryan ; the latter acting through her husband, who had actual notice of the plaintiff’s title. Warren, as we have seen, was fully acquainted with her rights in the premises ; and he, in fact, afterwards signed a memorandum that it was only by neglect this lot wS,s not excepted in the conveyance made by Thomas to himself and Mrs. Bryan.
The Circuit Court found the facts to be substantially as above stated and decreed for the plaintiffs,
u equity JURISDICto**Remove title? It is contended that the plaintiffs were not in possesx x sion.when the bill was filed. Unless the plaintiff’s title merely an equitable one, incapable of effectual assertion at law, possession is necessary to give a court of chancery jurisdiction in a suit of this character. Lawrence v. Zimpleton, 37 Ark., 643 and cases cited.
iomL*™i session.pos The evidence on this point is that, shortly after the deed made to them by the Bells, the plaintiffs took posof .the lot, built a house upon it and occupied it as a residence until they removed to the state of Texas ; that they then leased it to a tenant, who remained in possession fourteen months and until he was informed by the plaintiffs’ agent that they had sold it. The house-keys were delivered to this proposed purchaser, who put a schoolmistress in as his tenant. But from apprehended difficulty in the title, this party declined to consummate his purchase. And when possession was demanded of the school-mistress, she stated that she had no other place to go to and was allowed to remain. Afterwards, ■ as i.t appears, she colluded with the defendants and agreed to hold under them. .
We think the plaintiffs had sufficient possession to maintain this suit. The possession of the school-mistress was their possession. A tenant in possession cannot disclaim his landlord’s title, without surrendering possession to him. Clemm v. Wilcox, 15 Ark., 102; Miller v. Long, 99 Mass., 13.
ried MwVMiLd: edgemeSr." 1^ is further contended that the deed from the Bells and the certificate of acknowledgement, not being in the loma prescribed for the conveyances of the wife’s estate, are so defective as not to vest title in Mrs. Winburn, according to the doctrine of Little v. Dodge, 32 Ark., 453 and Wentworth v. Clark, 33 Id., 432. Perhaps this objection has no great force coming from the appellants, who do not claim through the Bells and who purchased with notice of Mrs. Winburn’s rights in the premises, whatever they were. But the deed was executed since the adoption of the constitution of 1874, which enables a married woman to convey her separate property the same as if she were single. Mrs. Bell did join in the operative words of grant, as well as relinquish dower, which last estate, of course, she had not in her own lands. And although her acknowledgment is defective, yet asbetween her and her grantee, the deed might be good without acknowledgement, or vest an equitable title. Stirman v. Cravens, 29 Ark., 548; Jackson v. Allen,30 Id., 110; Roberts and wife v. Wilcoxon & Rose, 36 Id., 355; Donahoe v. Mills, 41 Id., 421.
Affirmed.