On July 17, 1889, Abel Gates died intestate in Sherman county, leaving a widow, Jane A. Gates, and five children, four of whom were adults. The widoAv and five children Avere his sole heirs. At the time of his death he, owned and occupied with his wife, as a family homestead, 160 acres of land. On February 8, 1890, letters of administration were issued by the county court of Sherman county for the purpose of administering the estate of the deceased, and on that day the county judge commissioned the county treasurer, county clerk, and another freeholder of the county, to appraise the homestead. On the 14th of the same month the appraisers reported, finding the value of the homestead to be $900. The incumbrance consisted of a mortgage to the Lombard Investment Company of $600. Jane A. Gates, the widow, on the day the report was made, filed a written acceptance of the homestead, subject to the incumbrance. The estate appears to have been administered on the theory that the widow took absolute title to the homestead under the provisions of chapter 57, laws 1889. On September 5, 1891, the widoAv conveyed the premises by warranty deed to M. D. Green, and through mesne conveyances by warranty deed the title finally vested in John Horn on May 15, 1894, who gave a purchase price mortgage to his grantor. The conveyances were all recorded at about the date of their execution. The Lombard Investment Company mortgage was paid and released as a result of the transaction with Horn.. On October 30, 1899, Horn and wife conveyed the premises by warranty deed to Theodore L. Pilger and John *170Kahl, subject to tbe Horn mortgage, wbicb had been assigned to tbe plaintiff herein. On April 16, 1902, tbe Horn mortgage being unpaid, plaintiff proceeded in tbe district court to foreclose tbe same, and such proceedings were bad as resulted in a decree and sale of the premises to tbe plaintiff under tbe decree, confirmation of tbe sale, and tbe execution and delivery of a sheriff’s deed. Thereafter Augusta E. Pilger, wife of Theodore L. Pilger, procured from each of tbe five children of Abel Gates, all of whom were then of age, quitclaim deeds, paying each tbe sum of $10 as a consideration for tbe conveyance. These deeds were placed of record, and thereupon, on January 3, 1905, tbe plaintiff, being in possession, commenced this action in tbe district court to quiet its title as against these conveyances. Tbe defendant filed a cross-bill asking similar relief. In tbe trial court tbe finding was for tbe plaintiff as to an undivided four-fifths interest in tbe land, and for tbe defendant as to tbe remainder; the finding being that tbe plaintiff bad acquired title to four-fifths interest by adverse possession; that by reason of tbe fact that one of tbe heirs of Abel Gates was a minor tbe statute bad not run as against bis share, and tbe title tó tbe four-fifths interest was quieted in tbe plaintiff, and tbe remainder in tbe defendant, Augusta Pilger. Tbe defendant appeals.
Tbe questions presented by tbe appeal are tbe rights of the .plaintiff under tbe provisions of chapter 57, laws 1889, as affected by tbe legalizing act found in chapter 32, laws 1895; and, second, whether tbe statute of limitations has run against the cross-bill of tbe defendant. Jane A. Gates, tbe widow, died only a few months prior to tbe commencement of tbe foreclosure proceedings under wbicb tbe plaintiff acquired title to tbe land, and the appellee, claiming title through tbe remaindermen, tbe children of Abel Gates, insists that no action on behalf of tbe remaindermen or their grantees could be maintained to quiet their title in tbe real estate until after tbe death of tbe widow, who held tbe life estate. She bases this con*171tention upon the provisions of section 61, ch. 78, Comp. St. 1905. Three sections of that chapter should be noticed in connection with this claim; they are sections 57, 59 and 61, as follows:
Section 57. “That an action may be brought and prosecuted to final decree, judgment, or order, by any person or persons, whether in the actual possession or not, claiming title to real estate, against any person or persons, who claim an adverse estate or interest therein, for the purpose of determining such estate or interest, and quieting the title to said real estate.”
Section 59. “Any person or persons having an interest in remainders or reversion in real estate shall be entitled to all the rights and benefits of this act.”
Section 61. “The provisions of this act shall not in any respect apply to the settlement, partition, or division of real estate among the heirs of a decedent, where the same is provided for by the intestate laws of this state.”
On the last section appellant bases her contention. We db 'not think that section 61 has any application to the facts involved in this action; in fact the question seems no longer to be an open one. In Hall v. Hooper, 47 Neb. 111, it was held that any person claiming title to property in this state, whether in or out of possession, may maintain an action against any person or persons claiming adversely, for the purpose of determining such estate and quieting the title, citing Foree v. Stubbs, 41 Neb. 271; and, further, that such an action might be maintained by the remainderman during the continuance of the particular estate. The recording of the warranty deed from Jane A. Gates, the widow, was notice to the world that the grantee claimed an interest in the-land such as the deed purported to convey. Murray v. Quigley, 119 Ia. 6. It is clear that an action to quiet the title might have been maintained by the children of Abel Gates immediately after the recording of the first warranty deed by the widow on September 5, 1891, and that the statute of limitations commenced to run against such an action from that date. The purpose *172of the statute is well stated in Murray v. Quigley, supra. where a similar statute is in force. It is there said: “Without such statutory authority, a reversioner out of possession, and with no right thereto, could not maintain an action against one in possession as a life tenant, and it was undoubtedly the thought of the legislature that the welfare of those interested as well as of the public in general would be best subserved by providing a means whereby apprehended litigation affecting the use and enjoyment of real property might be at once settled.” This form of action must, of course, be distinguished from one where the right of possession is involved, and is not affected by the rule that an action for possession cannot be maintained by the remainderman until the life estate is terminated by the death of the life tenant. It follows that the cause of action set out in the cross-bill of the appellant was barred by the statute of limitations at the time of the commencement of the action, at least to the extent that it was so held in the trial court, and that she has obtained all of the relief to which she is in equity entitled. This conclusion renders a discussion of the other question unnecessary.
It is recommended that the judgment of the district court be affirmed.
Duffie and Albert, CC., concur.By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.