delivered the opinion of the court:
On November 11, 1879, Josiah Vaughn, being then the owner in fee simple, and in the exclusive possession, of the quarter section of land here sought to be partitioned, cqnveyed the same to his two sons, Edward J. Vaughn and Charles A. Vaughn, together with other lands, containing in all three hundred and forty-two acres, and the said deed contained the following reservation: “Reserves to the said Josiah Vaughn the sole control, use and occupation of the above described premises, and all the rents and profits thereof, during the term of his natural life.” This deed was recorded in the recorder’s office of Jersey county on the day of its date, to-wit, November 11,1879. Unquestionably, after the execution and delivery of this deed Josiah Vaughn had only a life estate in the property thereby conveyed, and his two sons, Charles A. Vaughn, and the appellee, Edward J. Vaughn, owned the remainder subject to the life estate.
Subsequently, on February 19, 1885, Josiah Vaughn executed and delivered~to the St. Louis, Jerseyville and Springfield Railroad Company (the original predecessor of the appellant railway company) a quit-claim deed to the strip of land, fifty feet wide on each side of the center line of the said railroad, as the same was located and built across the one hundred and sixty acres, here sought to be partitioned. The deed recited that it “is executed, acknowledged and delivered by the grantor, and accepted by the grantee therein, as a full performance of the covenants and agreements of the grantor,” contained in the bond or contract for a deed previously executed.
By the quit-claim deed, executed to it on February 19, 1885, the St. Louis, Jerseyville and Springfield Railroad Company took no other or greater interest in the strip of land, conveyed to it, than an interest for the life of Josiah Vaughn, and the appellant company, as the successor of the St. Louis, Jerseyville and Springfield Railroad Company, took the same interest held by its predecessor. The defense, made by the appellant in this partition proceeding, is that, under the deed of February 19,1885, as claim and color of title made in good faith, it went into possession of the strip of land, and has been in possession thereof for more than seven years, and, during that time, has paid all the taxes legally assessed against the strip or right of way. There is no dispute as to the facts of its possession, and payment of taxes, during seven years under the quit-claim deed, as color of title. But, under the circumstances already stated, the appellant cannot make a successful defense on the ground of possession and payment of taxes under section 6 of the Limitation law.
The possession of land by a tenant for life cannot be adverse to the remainder-man or reversioner; and, if he conveys to a third person by words purporting to pass the absolute property, the possession of the purchaser is n'ot, during the continuance of the life estate, adverse to the remainder-man or reversioner. The Statute of Limitations does not run against the remainder-man or reversioner, until after the life estate falls in, and it is only after the latter event occurs, that the possession will be adverse to the remainder-man or reversioner. The possession of the tenant for life, or his vendee, during the continuance of the life tenancj^, is, in contemplation of law, the possession of the remainder-man or reversioner. The latter cannot, during the life of the person for whose life the life estate is, bring an action against the person in possession under such life tenancy to recover possession of the premises. “No laches can be imputed to one who has no remedy or right of action; and to hold the bar of the statute could run against the title of a person so circumstanced, would be subversive of justice and would be to deprive such person of his estate without his day in court. ” (Turner v. Hause, 199 Ill. 464; Mettler v. Miller, 129 id. 630; Rohn v. Harris, 130 id. 525; Higgins v. Crosby, 40 id. 260). In other words, the Statute of Limitations, upon which the appellant railroad company here relies, could not run against appellee, Edward J. Vaughn, as remainder-man or reversioner, until the life estate of his father, Josiah Vaughn fell in. Josiah Vaughn died July 18, 1900. Prior to that date Charles A. Vaughn-and his wife conveyed by warranty deed their undivided .interest in the lands to the appellee, Edward J. Vaughn, the deed providing that it was “subject, however, to the rights and interests (if any) during the lifetime of Josiah Vaughn, Sr., of the-Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis Bailway Company in and to the right of' way, now used and occupied by said railway company, over and across” the north half of the one hundred and sixty acres, sought to be partitioned. The possession of the appellant company could not, and did not, become adverse to the appellee, Edward J. Vaughn, until the end of the life estate, and, hence, has only been adverse since July 18, 1900. In September, 1900, the appellee, Edward J. Vaughn, asserted his claim to the appellant railway company of title in fee to the property occupied as a right of way, and, at the same time, the appellant company asserted its claim of title to the said strip as a right of way.
It is claimed, on the part of the appellant company, that it had no notice—when Josiah Vaughn executed the contract in 1881 to convey the strip of land to appellant’s predecessor, or when subsequently Josiah Vaughn executed a deed to the railroad company on° February 19, 1885—that Josiah Vaughn was not the owner in fee of the property; in other words, that appellant’s predecessor had no notice that the interest of Josiah Vaughn in the land was merely a life interest. Whether the question of notice is material or not, it is not necessary here to decide. But if it is material, the deed, executed by Josiah Vaughn to his two sons on November 11,1879, was recorded on that day, and was upon the records when the railroad company took its contract and its deed from Josiah Vaughn. Therefore, appellant’s predecessor had constructive notice by the record of the nature of Josiah Vaughn’s interest in the property.
It appears from the evidence that, on August 8, 1902, the appellee, Edward J. Vaughn, executed and delivered to the appellee, Sarah J. Vaughn, his wife, a quit-claim deed conveying to her an undivided' half of the quarter section of land, over which the right of way runs. ■ It is charged by the appellant, that this deed was a fraud, and was made merely for the purpose of giving a court of chancery jurisdiction in this proceeding. But there is no proof to sustain the charge thus made. On the contrary, the stipulation as to the facts, upon which the cause was tried, shows that the appellant company abandoned its contention upon this subject. In the sixteenth paragraph of the stipulation it is agreed that, on August 8, 1902, Edward J. Vaughn executed to his wife this quitclaim deed for and in consideration of natural love and affection and one dollar, without any statement that the consideration in the deed was not sufficient, and without any statement that the deed was made for any improper purpose or from any improper motive. Therefore the deed cannot be regarded as otherwise than valid. (Danville Seminary v. Mott, 136 Ill. 289).
It is clear, therefore, from what has been said, that the decree of the court below was correct in holding that appellee, Edward J. Vaughn, and his wife, were the owners in fee of the property soug’ht to be partitioned, including the strip of ground claimed by appellant. When Josiah Vaughn, the life tenant, under whom the appellant company held, died, all the title of the appellant company ended, and the fee simple title was vested in the remainder-man.
But a more serious question is presented in regard to that portion of the decree, which requires the appellant company to surrender the possession of the property to the appellees, Edward J. Vaughn and his wife. A decree may be made in a partition proceeding, requiring- a surrender of the possession to be made by a third party, claiming an interest in the premises, to the parties found to be the owners thereof as tenants in common. (Mott v. Danville Seminary, 129 Ill. 403; Iberg v. Webb, 96 id. 415; Henrichsen v. Hodgen, 67 id. 179; Gage v. Lightburn, 93 id. 248; Gage v. Bissell, 119 id. 298). In Iberg v. Webb, supra, (by mistake referred to in Mott v. Danville Seminary, supra, as Gage v. Lightburn,) “the decree of the circuit court re-required the defendants, who held under the tax deed, which was claimed to be a cloud upon the title, to surrender possession to the complainants, and. allowed the defendants nothing for the improvements they had made upon the premises. The decree was held not to be erroneous in these particulars, because the defendants had asked no affirmative relief in respect of the matters so complained of.” (Mott v. Danville Seminary, supra). In the case at bar, the appellant company has claimed to be the absolute owner in fee of the strip of ground in question, and has asked no affirmative relief in regard to its improvements, placed upon said strip of ground.
In Smith v. Chicago, Alton and St. Louis Railroad Co. 67 Ill. 191, it was held that ejectment will lie against a railway corporation by the owner for land, taken and used by it for the purposes of its road, where the land has not been condemned under proceedings, instituted for that purpose in the mode prescribed by the constitution, and laws enacted in conformity therewith. (See also Chicago and Alton Railroad Co. v. Smith, 78 Ill. 96; Edwardsville Railroad Co. v. Sawyer, 92 id. 377; Chicago, St. Louis and Western Railroad Co. v. Gates, 120 id. 86; Postal Telegraph Co. v. Eaton, 170 id. 513).
In the case at bar, the appellant company commenced no proceeding after the termination of the life estate for the condemnation of the title, owned by the remainder-men or reversioners. But the railroad company cannot be regarded as a trespasser. ,It went into possession of the strip of land, occupied by it, under a deed from the life tenant, and had a right, during the life of the life tenant, to construct its railroad bed, and lay its tracks upon this strip, and operate its road thereon. There is nothing to show that such use and occupation by it of the strip in question worked any injury to the interests of the remainder-men or reversioners. It was intimated in Smith v. Chicago, Alton and St. Louis Railroad Co. supra, that, where the entry of the railroad company was legal as to the life estate, and no objection was made to its occupation by the reversioners, the railroad company would be entitled to a notice to. quit before action brought. There is no question, under the evidence in this case, that such notice was given, and efforts were made to induce the appellant company to commence condemnation proceedings. The’ owner of the land is not bound to take the initiative, so far as condemnation proceedings are concerned, because, by the statute, the corporation in such cases must be the actor; “the owner having no duty to perform, he is passive.” (Smith v. Chicago, Alton and St. Louis Railroad Co. supra.)
Although a court of chancery in a partition suit may make an order, requiring a surrender of the possession, and may issue a writ of possession to put such order in force, yet, we think that tlie-portion of the decree, requiring the appellant company to give up the possession, was prematurely entered. The decree directs as follows: “And the said defendant railway company is hereby adjudged to be ousted of the possession of the aforesaid strip of ground, and is hereby ordered and directed to surrender possession thereof td the complainant, and defendant herein within a period of sixty days of this date; and that, in default or refusal to so surrender possession thereof, a writ of possession issue by and under the authority of this court, directing the said defendant railway company to surrender possession thereof in accordance with the terms of said writ.” The decree then goes on to appoint commissioners, and directs the commissioners to make partition of the property, and prdvides that, if the property cannot be divided without manifest prejudice, etc., they shall appraise the value, and make a report to the court; and that they shall go upon the premises, and allot the several shares to the respective parties entitled thereto, designating such shares by metes and bounds; and that they may employ a surveyor, etc. The partition proceeding is not ended by the decree entered herein, from which the present appeal is prosecuted. The decree was final, in so far as it determined the titles or interests of the parties in the property, but it was not final in .the execution of all the steps, required by the statute for the partition and division of the property. It directs that possession be given to.the complainant, Edward J. Vaughn, and his wife,• Sarah J. Vaughn; but the commissioners, appointed to partition the property, may divide the one hundred and sixty acres in such a way, as to set apart that portion of the tract, where the railroad right of way is located, to one or.the other of these parties alone. If tfie portion of the one hundréd and sixty acres, over which the right of way passes, is set apart to Edwafd J. Vaughn, then he is the party, in whose favor the writ of possession should be issued. It certainly would not be proper to issue a writ of possession to put Sarah J. Vaughn in possession of the strip of ground in question, if in the partition there was set apart to her a portion of the tract, upon which the railroad right of way was not located.
In Kern v. Zink, 55 Ill. 449, which was a bill in chancery for partition, brought by a part of several heirs against their co-heirs, to which a party in possession, claiming as lessee of a portion of the premises, was also made a defendant, it was held to be proper, upon the lease being decreed to be void, and the portion of the premises so claimed under the lease being assigned to some of the heirs, who were defendants in the bill, to award to the latter writs of possession against their co- ■ defendant, claiming under the void lease; and in that case it was said: “The land was then partitioned, and two of the parties, to whom the land, held by Allison, was allotted, took out writs of possession. There was no error in. this. The validity of the lease was brought before the court"by the bill in behalf of all the heirs, and when the court decided it to be void, it was proper to carry that decree into full effect by giving the possession to whichever of the heirs the land might be assigned.” In the case at bar, there was no prayer in the bill that the deed, made by Josiah Vaughn to appellant’s predecessor, should be removed as a cloud upon the title, as being a deed, which, by its terms, conveyed the whole title, when, as a matter of fact, the grantor in it owned only a life estate. There is, therefore, no provision in the decree here, setting aside any instrument as a cloud upon the title, as the lease, held to be void, was set aside in Kern v. Zink, supra. But it is very clearly intimated, if not held, in the latter case, that the writ of possession, when issued, should be issued in favor of the co-tenant, to whom a particular part of the property has been set off or aparted, in order to put him in possession of his portion of the land.
For these reasons, we are of the opinion that the provision of the decree in regard to the surrender of the possession was made too soon, and that the court should either have waited until the commissioners had made their report, before it ordered a surrender of possession, or should have provided in advance that the possession' should be surrendered to the party, to whom that portion of the tract should be set apart, on which the right of way of the railroad company was located. It might . be, that the commissioners would report that the property could not be divided, and that the same should be sold, and then the question would arise, whether the purchaser at the sale would be entitled to be put in possession of the property.
In addition to what has been said, counsel for the appellee, Edward J. Vaughn, makes the following statement in his brief: “Appellee, Edward J. Vaughn, did not in his bill in the circuit court nor in the argument in said court, nor does he now claim the improvements erected by appellant on the strip in controversy. The circuit court held by its decree that the appellant' was ousted of possession in sixty days after the rendition of the decree, which was regarded as a reasonable time to the railway company to remove its improvements, or file its petition to condemn. * * * Appellee, Edward J. Vaughn, now stands ready to adjust the reasonable damages for the strip in controversy by a condemnation suit.” It is thus admitted, that there is no desire to take from the railroad company the improvements, which it has placed upon the property, and which, by the terms of the stipulation between the parties, are valued at §5400.00. It is also admitted that a condemnation proceeding to determine the amount of damages to be paid will not be objected to. If a condemnation proceeding is instituted for the purpose of taking the ground embraced in the right of way and making compensation therefor to the owners, the appellant company will not be required to pay the owners of the land for the improvements so placed upon it at its own expense. This is so, for the reason that the railroad company did not enter upon the land as a trespasser. In Chicago and Alton Railroad Co. v. Goodwin, 111 Ill. 273, which was a condemnation proceeding, and where a railroad company had entered upon land and constructed a railroad over it without injury to the inheritance under a license from the tenant for life, it was held that there was no trespass on the part of the railroad company, and that the law would not require the company, in seeking a condemnation of the land so entered upon for a right of way, to pay the owner for structures placed upon it at its own expense with a view of subsequently acquiring the right of way; and it was also held in-that case, that such entry, being originally lawful, would not subject the railroad company so entering to either an action of trespass, or ejectment, on the part of the remainder-men.
Certainly, the railroad company ought not to be required to take up its track located across this quarter section, and remove all its improvements entirely therefrom, if such a result can be in any way avoided, so as to protect the interests of appellees, because such action would necessarily stop the operation of tb'e railroad, and cut its right of way in two.
When the commissioners, appointed to make partition, submit their report, the court below should then enter a decree or an order, requiring the railroad company to surrender the strip of ground, of which it is in possession, within a reasonable time to be fixed by the court, unless within that tirpe it either removes its improvements, or makes compensation to the appellees for their property, either by agreeing with them upon the price to be paid for it, or by instituting a condemnation proceeding for the purpose of determining the price so to be paid. In other words, the'railroad company should have a reasonable time within which to condemn the property before it is summarily ejected from the possession thereof. We no not hold that, in this partition proceeding, the court of chancery should summon a jury to determine the amount of compensation to be paid to the owners, or to adopt a proceeding for the condemnation of the property as a part of this proceeding. But the court can easily so frame its order in regard to the possession, as to give the railroad company a reasonable time for making compensation-to the owners, either by negotiation, or by a separate proceeding for condemnation, outside of and independent of the present partition proceeding.
Our best judgment is, and we so order, that that portion of th„e decree of .the court below, which decides the ownership of the property here in controversy to be in the appellees, Edward J. Vaughn and his wife, should be, and is hereby affirmed; but that the portion of the de-. cree, relating to the surrender of possession, be reversed, and the court below is hereby ordered to make such order or decree upon that subject, after the coming in of the report of the commissioners, as is consistent with the views herein expressed.
Partly affirmed and partly reversed and remanded.