(after stating the facts.) Appellant, Files, bases his claim of title-upon three grounds: First. The land had been forfeited for non-payment of taxes, and on November 17, 1875, appellant, Files, purchased from the State, and the State Land Commissioner made him a deed.- This deed was destroyed by fire. Appellant introduced a certificate from Commissioner -of State Lands, upon which he relies for title, which recites: “At the Auditor’s sale of land forfeited 'for taxes on the 9th day of June, 1873, the following tract of land, situated in Ashley County, remained forfeited to the State,” the land in controversy.
The obvious and natural meaning of this certificate is that the land was offered for sale by the collector in -1873 for the taxes of 1872 pursuant to section 5188, Gantt’s Digest, and was forfeited to the State, and that, pursuant to section 5218 of Gantt's Digest, the land was offered for sale by the Auditor and remained forfeited to the State. The Auditor, as directed by the statute, forwarded a description of the lands to the Commissioner of -State Lands, who caused the same to be placed on the books of his office as vacant land. “The court takes knowledge of the fact that all tax sales for the non-payment of the taxes of 1872, if the same were made in 1873, are invalid, having been so declared by this court.” Allen v. Swoope, 64 Ark. 579; McConnell v. Day, 61 Ark. 464. Hence Files’s tax deed is clearly void.
Second. Appellant; Files, claims by deed from Mrs. Emma Dorman and Mrs. Emma T. Johnson, executed since the institution of this suit. It appears that on the 10th day of November, 1888, Mrs. Emma T. Johnson and Mrs. Emma Dorman, who was then Emma Moss, conveyed this land by deed to appellee T. A. Jackson and A. H. Wilson, and that the same was duly acknowledged, and was filed for record on the 31st day of January, 1889.
It is claimed that the last mentioned deed is a forgery.. Mrs.-Dorman says she was sick with the measles at the time it purports to have been executed, was incapable'of executing it,. and did not execute' it. A number of ’expert witnesses were introduced, who testified that the signatures to the deed, viz., Emma Moss and A. N. Moss, were written b3r the same person. A. N. Moss testified that Emma Moss was sick at the time the deed was executed, and that the deed was signed in her presence by J. R. Bingham, who attested the deed. Bingham testified that the deed was signed by Emma Moss in his presence, that she was not well, but that her mind was normal, and that no undue influence was used to influence her to sign the deed. On cfoss examination, in response to the question, “There seems to be quite a similarity in the handwriting of Emma Moss and A. H. Moss. It is not possible that one person affixed both signatures to this deed?” he answered, “I think not; I hardly know how to answer. The parties signed this deed, is my recollection.”
B. B. Staton, the justice of the peace before whom the acknowledgment was taken, testified that he was present, and saw Mrs. Emma Moss sign the deed. Although she resided in the county a number of years after this time, Emma Moss never exercised any control over the land, nor has she paid or attempted to pay the taxes on it.
The chancellor found that the deed was not a forgery. The persuasive force of the chancellor’s finding is not overcome by the testimony.
1 Third. Appellant, Files, claims title ¡by adverse possession. He says that, soon after his purchase of the land from the State in 1875, he began cutting and using stove wood, and poles for gardening purposes from the land, and openly claimed title to it, and knew of no one that disputed his ownership until ap'peliees set up claim of ownership. That he lived near the land until latter part of 1882, when he moved to Rittle Rock. That he asked his brother and some of the neighbors to prevent any one from trespassing upon the land. This was not sufficient to constitute adverse possession. In the case of Driver v. Martin, 68 Ark. 551, it was held: “Prior to the act of March 18, '1899, payment of taxes on wild and unimproved lands, in connection with fitful acts of ownership, such as cutting trees for fuel and rails, did not constitute such adverse possession as would set the statute of limitations in motion.” See Earle Improvement Company v. Chatfield, 81 Ark. 296, and Arkansas cases cited therein.
In the event of an adverse decision on his main contentions in the case, appellant, Files, claims that -he is entitled to a lien for all taxes paid by him. In, this he is correct. In construing the act of March 16,-1879, “to provide for the redemption of delinquent lands,” the court held the act void, but said: “The court is of the opinion, however, that, under the circumstances of the case, the petitioner Bagley would have an equity to b.e reimbursed the amounts paid but to relieve the land from taxes. The act was short-lived, and has been since repealed. Doubtless, many purchases from the State have been made under it in good faith; and, as they have inured to the benefit of the owners, it would be inequitable that the, owners should be thus relieved at the expense of those who had relied upon what they had gj-ood reason to believe was a valid act of the sovereign power. For the equitable adjustment of all such cases growing up whilst the law was supposed to be in existence, it is reasonable that those who have paid the taxes should have a lien upon the lands for the burdens discharged, not only by original purchase,- but by the payment of the taxes of subsequent years.” Bagley v. Castile, 42 Ark. 91; Lester v. Richardson, 69 Ark. 201.
This principle applies with peculiar force here. The original purchase of Files was under section 3914, Gantt’s Digest, which provides that “at any time after the close of the Auditor’s sale, the Commissioner of Immigration and State Bands shall sell any of the lands and town lots offered for sale by the Auditor, and not sold for want of bidders, to .any person wishing to purchase the same, who .shall pay the State and county tax, together with the interest, penalties and expenses due thereon.”
Files only paid the State what the owner could have paid had he redeemed the lands. This and the subsequent payment of taxes inured to the owner’s benefit.
The chancellor should have rendered a decree in favor of appellant Files for the $24.46 shown to have been paid by him to the State for the purchase of the land, being the State and county tax, with'interest, penalties and expenses, and also for the amount of taxes paid by him for subsequent years, with interest on same and on the amount of the original purchase at the rate of six per cent., and declared the same a lien on the land.
For this error, the cause is reversed and remanded with directions to enter a decree in accordance with this opinion.
Wood, J., not participating.