delivered the opinion of the court.
The commissioners, in making partition of certain land, to which Kate R. Jameson and Mary George Gibson, the wife of J. C. Gibson, and others, were entitled, charged the parcel of land allotted to Mrs. Gibson with the sum of $419, in favor of the parcel of land allotted to Mrs. Jameson for owelty of partition.
The Circuit Court of Culpeper county by its decree of July 13, 1870, confirmed the partition and the report of the commissioners, and ordered and decreed that “ J. C. Gibson and wife” pay to Kate R. Jameson the said sum of $419.
This suit was brought to subject the land on which the lien was charged to its payment. The Circuit Court held that the Ü6n was merged in the personal decree made against Gibson and wife, and that, as the decree n as barred by the statute of limitations, the lien could not be enforced, and dismissed the bill.
A lien for owelty of partition partakes of the nature of the vendor’s lien, and constitutes a prior encumbrance upon the land on which it is charged, and follows the land into who*344soever hands it may come. The lien is not released by taking the personal obligation of another, or other security for its payment, nor is it merged by a judgment or decree therefor, but subsists until it is clearly shown to have been waived, or released, or has been satisfied. Coles v. Withers, 33 Gratt. 186; Hanna v. Wilson, 3 Gratt. 243; Knisely v. Williams, 3 Gratt. 265; Paxton v. Rich, 85 Va. 378, 383; Jones v. Sherrard, 2 Dev. & B. (Eq.) 179; Dobbin v. Rex, 106 N. C. 444; and Halso v. Cole, 82 N. C. 161.
The court, by its confirmation of the partition made by the commissioners and of their report, confirmed and established the lien for $419 on the parcel of land allotted to Mrs. Gibson, as provided by the commissioners in the division of the land. The decree in such cases properly should only adjudge that the amounts charged by the commissioners on the most valuable parcels of the land shall- constitute liens thereon. The parcel of land on which the debt is charged is held in such cases to be “the debtor and the sole debtor,” and not its owner. It is improper to decree personally against the tenant of the lot for the amount of the lien. We are notwithstanding, however, of opinion that the personal decree against “J. C. Gibson and wife” did not have, the effect of merging or abrogating the lien established on the land, but that the lien continued to exist and the land to remain the primary fund for its payment. The debt created by the lien was not his debt, and if he had paid it under the force of the decree made against him, he would have been entitled in equity to be subrogated to the lien. And, so far as she was concerned, being a married woman, the decree was void as to her and a nullity.
In Halso v. Cole, supra, it was held that a judgment obtained for the sums of money charged in partition proceedings upon a parcel of land for owelty of partition, and upon which execution had issued, did not merge the lien or release the *345land from it, it not appearing that the judgment had been satisfied.
And in Paxton v. Rich, supra, Judge Lewis, in distinguishing between the lien of a judgment and a lien of the kind under discussion, said: ‘ ‘The lien (of a judgment) and the judgment are inseparable, and the extinguishment of the latter is the extinguishment of the former. But not so where there is a judgment for a debt secured by a mortgage, deed of trust, or a vendor’s lien. There the lien is collateral to the judgment, and may be enforced in equity, although the judgment be barred or annihilated.”
The Circuit Court erred in holding that the lien charged upon the land of Mrs. Gibson for owelty of partition was merged by the decree against her husband and herself, and that, as the decree was incapable of enforcement by reason of being barred by the statute of limitations, the lien was lost.
It was contended that, although the court below may have been mistaken in its opinion as to the effect of the decree, yet that the lien, if still existing, was itself barred by the statute of limitations. This position also is untenable. Prior to the Code of 1887 there was no statutory limit to the enforcement of the vendor’s lien, or the lien for owelty of partition, but, as before stated, these liens continued to exist until waived, released, or satisfied, or until sufficient time elapsed to raise the presumption of payment. Coles v. Withers, supra; Hanna v. Wilson, supra; Tunstall v. Withers, 86 Va. 892; Paxton v. Rich, supra; Smith's Ex'x v. Washington, &c. R. Co., 33 Gratt. 617; Bowie v. Poor School Society of Westmoreland, 75 Va. 300; Stimpson v. Bishop, 82 Va. 190; Dobbin v. Rex, supra; Ruffin v. Cox, 71 N. C. 253; Sutton v. Edmonds, 5 Ire. Eq. 425.
The present statute prescribing a limit to the enforcement of a deed of trust, mortgage, or lien reserved to secure the payment of unpaid purchase money (Code, Sec. 2935), was enacted long after the creation of the lien sought to be en*346forced in this case, and if the statute applies to a lien for owelty of partition, as to which no opinion is expressed, it being unnecessary to do so, it is very clear that it does not bar the plaintiff from enforcing her lien. Code, See. 2938.
ISTor can the presumption of payment be relied on to defeat the enforcement of the lien. Payment will be presumed after the lapse of twenty years, or may be inferred from circumstances tending to support it, within a less period than twenty years; but the presumption of payment is simply the presumption of a fact, and may be successfully rebutted by testimony. Wharton on Ev., sec. 1361; Snavely v. Pickle, 29 Gratt. 27; Booker's Adm'r. v. Booker's Rep., Id. 605; and Updike's Adm'r et als. v. Lane, 78 Va. 132. This was fully done in this case. The husband of Mrs. Gibson, as well as the plaintiff j deposed positively that no part of the debt had been paid, and there was no evidence to the contrary.
It was further contended that the right to enforce the lien had been lost by the laches of the plaintiff. The partition was made inl870, and, as we have seen, was confirmed by the court in July of that year. This suit was instituted in 1892.
The evidence shows that the plaintiff was not aware of the lien until the summer of 1890, when, having occasion to examine the record of the partition suit in the clerk’s office for the purpose of ascertaining on which side of the division line between Mrs. Gibson and herself was a certain house, she discovered the lien charged in her favor upon the former’s land. This is made very clear by her own testimony, and that of Mrs. Randolph, who was at that time the deputy clerk of the court. Mrs. Jameson instituted her suit to enforce the lien within less than two years thereafter, which was within a reasonable time after making the discovery. It has been repeatedly held by this court, as a well settled rule of equity jurisprudence, that laches cannot be imputed to a person who is ignorant of his or her rights. Rowe v. Bentley, 29 Gratt. *347763; Lamar's Ex'or v. Hale, 79 Va. 147; Massie's Adm'r v. Heiskell's Trustee, et als., 80 Va. 789.
It was argued, however, that the plaintiff, being a party to the partition suit, roust be considered to have had notice of the lien from the time it was created. That suit, so far as the record before us discloses, was a friendly one. and was conducted and managed by the father of Mrs. lamesonand Mrs. Gibson, and the other parties entitled to the land, and there is no evidence that she had actual knowledge of the provisions of the división prior to her discovery of the lien in 1890. But conceding that she had knowledge of it all the time, the debtor as well as the creditor is still alive, and no evidence has been lost by the death of either of the parties to the transaction, or by the destruction of records, or loss of papers, the equitable circumstances which generally constitute the grounds for the application of the doctrine of laches. Rowe v. Bentley et als, 29 Gratt. 763; Bargamin et als v. Clarke et als, 20 Gratt. 553; Morrison's Ex'or et als v. Householder's Adm'r et als., 79 Va. 627.
It is perfectly clear that the lien has never been satisfied, but that the debt is still due. if or was aDy sufficient ground shown to warrant the presumption of an abandonment of the claim. Mere delay is not always to be considered laches; and it is explained in this instance by the near kinship of the parties and their friendly relations, living in the same house for a great part of the time; by the fact that M'rs. Gibson was a borrower of money from Mrs. Jameson from time to time until the aggregate reached a very considerable sum; and by the further fact that Mrs. Gibson was w thout means of discharging the lien except by a sale of the land.
It was still further contended that the plaintiff was estopped from enforcing the lien against the land in the possession of Mrs. Rixey as purchaser, but it is not easy to see upon what ground the doctrine of estoppel can be invoked in this case. The record discloses no act of deception in the conduct or *348declaration of Mrs. Jameson, nor such gross negligence on her part as to amount to fraud, by which Mrs. Bixey was misled to her injury. Bo thing is charged against her except her silence. It is insisted that she should have asserted her lien or made known to Mrs. Bixey her claim to it during the long litigation between LeGrand and wife, and Samuel Bixey, and between them and Mrs. Bixey, his administratrix, after his death.
The partition suit was the very source of the title to the particular parcel of land involved in this controversy. Jt was the instrumentality by which the undivided interest of Mrs. Gibson in the tract of land devised to her and the other children of Elizabeth Shackelford was segregated and defined. The suit was referred to by its name and style, and the partition therein made adopted, by the trustee in advertising for sale by direction of Samuel Bixey the lots acquired by Mrs. LeGrand and Mrs. Gibson respectively for the payment of the debt to Samuel Bixey, and which their undivided interests were conveyed to secure prior to the partition. The advertisement not only referred to the suit and the partition therein made, but also designated the book and the page thereof in the clerk’s office in which the partition was recorded. A copy of the advertisement was filed as an exhibit with the bill in the suit of LeGrand and wife v. Bixey, and became a part of the record thereof. Samuel Bixey also filed as an exhibit with his answer to the bill a copy of the report of the commissioners making the partition. These records, if inspected, could but have brought home to the purchaser of the land under the decree made in the last mentioned suit knowledge of the lien charged thereon for owelty of partition. It is the duty of a purchaser to look to the title papers under which he buys. If he close his eyes to the sources of information, he does so at his peril. “Means of knowledge, with the duty of using them, are, in equity, equivalent to knowledge itself.” Wood et als v. Krebs et als, 30 Gratt. 708; Long et als v. Weller's Ex'or et als., 29 Gratt. 347; Burwell's Ex'ors v. *349Fauber et als., 21 Gratt. 446; and Lamar's Ex'or v. Hale et als., supra.
Mrs. Rixey, as purchaser of the land under the decree made in the said suit, was affected with notice of all that the record disclosed affecting the title to the land, and also of all to which knowledge there acquired would have led her. She was clearly put upon enquiry. If she had performed her duty, and availed herself of the means pointed out to her, and easily within her reach, .she must necessarily have discovered the encumbrance in favor of Mrs. Jameson, and could have ascertained from her whether it had been satisSed or abandoned. She neither made the examination which was her duty as purchaser, nor inquired of Mrs. Jameson, and her injury is the result of her own negligence.
The facts in regard to the encumbrance were matters of public record, and as accessible to Mrs. Rixey as to Mrs. Jame-son. Where the same means and opportunity of tracing the title to real estate are equally open to both parties, the doctrine of equitable estoppel does not apply. It is essential for the application of the doctrine of estoppel in pais with respect to the title of real property, said Justice Field, in delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court in Brant v. Virginia Coal & Iron Co, et als, 93 U. S. 337, “that the party claiming to have been influenced by the conduct or declarations of another to his injury was himself not only destitute of knowledge of the true state of the title, but also of any convenient and available means ' of acquiring such knowledge. Where the condition of the title is known to both parties, or both have the same means of ascertaining the truth, there can be no estoppel. ’
Ho sufficient ground of defence has been shown against the ■ enforcement of the lien of the plaintiff against the land in the bill m entioned. The decree appealed from must therefore" be reversed, and the cause remanded to the Circuit Court for further proceedings to be had therein to that end.
Reversed.