Appellee, Jasper' J. Hufty, brought this action against appellants to quiet his title to three tracts of real estate in Carroll county, Indiana. The first tract contained eighty acres, the second forty-nine and sixty-one onedrundredths acres, and the third four acres. Appellants Armstrong, Sampson, and Sampson filed a cross-complaint against appellee and a part of their co-appellants to quiet their title to all of said real estate. Appellant Edward E. Bowen filed a cross-complaint against his co-appellants and appellee to quiet title to the four-acre tract. After issues were joined and the evidence was heard, the court made a special finding of facts and stated conclusions of law thereon in favor of appellee against all the appellants as to the first and second tracts, and against all of the appellants, except Bowen, as to the third tract, and as to that tract that neither appellee nor appellant Bowen was entitled to have his title thereto qnieted as against the other. The judgment followed the conclusions of law. The errors and cross-errors assigned challenge the correctness of each conclusion of law.
*608It appears from the special finding that Joseph Sampson died testate on June 10, 1872, leaving as his only heirs at law his widow, Cároline Sampson, and his children, Dora Armstrong, and Anna and James Sampson, He .died the owner in fee simple of the first and second of said tracts, and claimed to be the owner in fee of the third tract, the facts concerning the ownership of which are specifically stated hereafter. His last will and testament was duly admitted to probate. The clause which devised his -real estate is as follows: “I give to my beloved wife, Caroline Sampson, all my property of every kind, real and personal, including moneys, rights, choses in action, credits and effects, which may remain after my debts and funeral expenses shall be paid, to be her own forever, she taking care of, providing for, raising, and educating our children, and she also providing that whatever of said property, either real or personal, shall remain undisposed of at the time of her death shall descend and be vested in our children.” Said Caroline Sampson died testate on January 20, 1878, and the administrator of her estate filed a petition to sell said three tracts of real estate, making said Dora Armstrong, .Anna Sampson, and James Sampson, defendants thereto. It was alleged in said petition that said Caroline Sampson was,, at the time of her death, the owner in fee simple of said real estate; that the eighty-acre tract was correctly described; the forty-nine and sixty-one one-hundredths acre tract was described as follows: “Forty-nine and sixty-one one-hundredths acres off of the north end of the fractional north half of the northwest quarter of section twenty-eight, in township twenty-five north of range three west”, which was incorrect in this, that it should have read “south” instead of “north” before the word “end.” The four acres were described as follows: “Also four acres of land described as follows, to wdt: Commencing at the southeast quarter of section twenty-on,e in said township twenty-five north of range three west, running thence north fifty-four rods to the center *609oí i-lie State road, thence west a sufficient distance to contain four acres, said lands being a part of the same lands in said section of which Joseph Sampson died seized, and being in the southeast quarter of said section twenty-one.” Said petition asked an order to sell -said real estate to make assets to pay the debts of her estate. Notice of said petition was given in all respects as required by law, and the defendants were' defaulted. Anna and James Sampson were minors, and a guardian ad litem was appointed, who filed an answer. After hearing the evidence the court found 'in favor of the petition, and the real estate being appraised at $3,200, an additional bond was filed, and said' real estate was ordered sold. After due notice the same was sold to appellee for $3,225, and the sale approved by the court. On October 17, 1885, the administrators of said estate, pursuant to the order of the court, executed to appellee a deed for said real estate. The real estate was described in the appraisement, order to sell, notice of sale, and in the administrators’ deed in the same way that it was in the petition to sell. The administrators of said estate intended to describe the .forty-nine- and sixty-one one-hundredths acres and the four acres as they are described in appellee’s complaint in this cause. Said lands and the eighty acres described in the ■petition were the only lands owned by said Caroline Sampson in said sections twenty-one and twenty-eight at the time of her death, and they were the only lands in said sections owned by Joseph Sampson at the time of his death. The said' two tracts, containing forty-nine and sixty-one one-hundredths and four acres, respectively, owned by said Caroline Sampson at the time- of her death, were actually sold by said administrators to appellee, but through the mutual mistake of-administrators and their attorneys, and the appellee, said erroneous and defective descriptions were ■ used in describing said lands instead of the- true and correct ones set forth in appellants’ complaint. Before said *610lands were sold to appellee, all the lands owned by said Caroline in said sections twenty-one and twenty-eight, as described in the complaint, were pointed out to> him as the lands for which they had obtained an order to sell in said proceeding, and which they were offering for sale, and appellee believed that he was buying all of said lands, and, after the sale, actually took possession of the same, as described in his complaint, and has held, and now holds, the same by' virtue of said administrators’ sale and deed, and has so held them for the eleven years last passed. Appellee paid the administrators the full amount of the purchase money, and they charged themselves therewith, and on final settlement of said estate they paid into court, for distribution among the heirs of said Caroline, the sum of $6'21.17, which was the full amount remaining from said éstate áfter the payment of the debts and liabilities of the estate; that, on proof of heirship, appellants Armstrong, Sampson, and Sampson each received and receipted for his share of said sum paid in by the administrators, and still retains the same.
As to the four-acre tract the court found that on July 1, 1861, Reuben Thayer and wife conveyed by warranty deed to one Austin the following described real estate in Carroll county, Indiana: Beginning at a stake on the south line of section twenty-one township twenty-five north of range three west, eighty poles west of the southeast corner of said section, thence west sixty poles to a stake, thence north fifty-eight poles to the center of the road leading to Pittsburgh, thence east along said road sixty poles, thence south'fifty-four poles to'the place of beginning, containing twenty-one acres; which deed was duly recorded December 26, 1860. On July 1, 1861, said Austin and wife executed to said Thayer and wife a mortgage on the real estate conveyed by Thayer and wife to Austin (the description thereof contained in the mortgage being defective) to secure the payment of a promissory note for $125, signed by said *611Austin payable to Reuben Thayer. Said mortgage wa's recorded-in the proper record December 26, 1861. On December 18, 1861, said Austin and wife executed a warranty ■deed conveying to one Benham “four acres off of the east side of the twenty-one acres conveyed by Thayers to said Austin”. Said deed was recorded May 12, 1862. On September 26, 1864, said Benham executed a warranty ■ deed conveying to one Downs said four acres of real estate", which deed was recorded October 29, 1864. On January 30, 1865, said Downs and wife executed to. Peter and Abigail Striker a warranty deed for said four acres of real estate. This deed was' recorded February 1, 1865. On February 1, 1865, Peter and Abigail Striker executed a warranty deed conveying to Joseph Sampson said four acres of real estate. Said deed was recorded February 5, 1870. On the same day, and before said Austin sold and conveyed said four acres to Benham, Thayer, the payee of the note secured by said mortgage executed by Austin and wife, released the four acres, so sold and conveyed by Austin to Benham, from said mortgage and the lien thereof, by a release written on the face of the record of -said mortgage and signed by him and attested by the recorder of said •county. On September 24, 1866, said Thayer, the payee of said note, assigned the said mortgage to James Matthews, and said Matthews, on January 26, 1867, assigned the same to Isaac Farneman. Said assignments were in writing, and were recorded on the face of the record where said mortgage was recorded in the office of the recorder of Carroll county, both on January 26, 1867. On December 21, 1868, Isaac Farneman brought an action to foreclose said mortgage so assigned to him making parties defendant thereto only the .widow and children of Daniel Austin. Said complaint did not contain a description of said real estate, but referred to the mortgage for a description thereof. A decree of. foreclosure was rendered against said widow and children, which described the twenty-one acres of real estate conveyed *612by Tbayer and. wife to said Austin. Afterwards, hy virtue of said decree, the sheriff of said county sold and conveyer said twenty-one acres - of real estate to Abner PI. Bowen. At the time-said suit was commenced, and when said decree was rendered, Peter Striker and Abigail Striker were in possession of the, four acres of land in controversy in this case, and claimed to own the same under their deed from said Eli Downs and wife, and they were not made parties to 'Said proceeding to foreclose said mortgage. On October 11, 1872, Sophia Austin, the widow of Daniel Austin, executed ' a-deed conveying to said Bowen all the real estate described in said mortgage. On April 28, 1877, the auditor of Carroll county, Indiana, for a consideration of $2.56, executed a tax deed to said B.owen for lands described as follows: “A part of the west half of the southeast, quarter of section twenty-one, township twenty-five north, three west, containing four aeres/’ and also rebiting ■■ that said land was sold FebruaryA, 1867, for taxes delinquent for the years 1865 and 1866, returned in the name of Peter Striker; this deed was not attested-by the county-treasurer. Afterwards, said Abner- H. -Bowen died intestate, leaving appellant Edward W. Bowen as one of his heirs, and on November 24, 1891, the other heirs of said Abner II. Bowen-, by deed, conveyed said twenty-one acres to said appellant Edward W. Bowen, by the same description -as that in the sheriff’s deed. ■ Joseph Sampson- took possession of the four acres of land when he received the deed therefor from Strikers, by driving over and across the same in passing to and from the public high-way to his eighty acre and forty-nine and sixty-one one-hundredths acre tracts of land, and at the same time pasturing a-few head of stock thereon, and building a partial line of fence upon one side thereof, separating it from other lands, which possession- continued until his death. After the death of said Sampson, his widow, Caroline Sampson, mentioned in his will as devisee, took and held the possession of said four-acre tract in the same manner until her death, *613wdien her administrators and her heirs took and held possession thereof- in like manner until the same was sol'd to ap-' pellee, who has held possession in like manner until'the trial After Abner II. Bowen received-'the sheriff’s deed for' the twenty-one acres of land he claimed do own said four acres, and has during a part of the time exercised acts of owner-’ ship over the same, by granting to tenants from' timé to time the privilege of cutting wood upon the same and repairing fences separating it from other land, and asserting to other claimants that he owned the same. Those claiming under- - him have exercised like acts 'of ownership. Double taxes have been paid on said four acres' during the tinie said parties have claimed the same, each party claiming to be the' owner and paying the tales' theréon during said time.
It is unnecessary to determine whether or not the estate which Caroline Sampson took in the lands of her deceased husband under his will was a fee simple absolute, or upon a condition subsequent, or whether she took the same as trustee for the benefit of-herself and children, for the reason that said children, Dora Armstrong, Anna and James Sampson, were all parties to the proceeding in which said . real estate was ordered sold to pay the debts of said Caroline Sampson, -and they are concluded by the judgment and order in that case from'asserting that she did not own'th'o same in fee simple at the time of li'er death,- and that it was not liable for her debts: Thomas v. Thompson, 149 Ind. 391, 394, and cases cited; Denton v. Arnold, 151 Ind. 188, and cases cited; Hutchinson v. Lemcke, 107 Ind. 121, 133, 135; Watkins v. Lewis, Adm., 153 Ind. 648. It is not necessary, therefore, to construe said will, for, if the propo-' sition stated is correct, said appellants are not entitled' to recover in this action under any construction urged' by’ them. The'petition filed by the administrators' of thé estate' of Caroline Sampson,'-deceased, as the statute requires, averred that she was the owner in fee simple of the real es- • tate described therein,- • and thereby challenged appellants *614Armstrong, Sampson, and Sampson, and all other defendants to that proceeding to meet and contest that question. The question was whether she owned said-real estathin- fee simple at the time of her death, and whether the - same was' subject to sale to make assets to pay her'debts. Watkins v. Lewis, Adm., supra; Parker v. Wright, 62 Ind. 398; Gavin v. Graydon, 41 Ind. 559; Lantz v. Maffett, 102 Ind. 23. It was indispensably necessary to try this issue. If. said decedent did not own said land in fee simple,- but appellees owned the same either as heirs or as devisees of their father; Joseph Sampson, as they- now- claim, said administrators were not entitled to an order to sell the samé to pay the-debts of said decedent. If said appellants owned said real estate they should have contested the question of ownership ■ in that proceeding. The issue of their mother’s ownership of said land and its liability to be sold to make -assets to pay her debts was presented, and was decided against them;-and they cannot now assert any title they had in said land when said judgment was rendered.
In Lantz v. Maffett, 102 Ind. 23, it was claimed that in a' proceeding to sell real estate by an administrator, the heirs were only challenged to meet the allegation of indebtedness, and no question of title was involved. In considering that' question, this court, by Elliott, J., said-: “If this assufnption were correct, then there would be no reason' for the petition to aver ownership in the decedent, or for making the heirs parties to answer as to their interests 'in- the land.’ • The fallacy of this argument is apparent; it unduly assumes that the heir is only challenged to meet the allegation of indebtedness; whereas he is challenged to meet that claim and also meet the claim that the land was' owned by the deceased, and is subject to sale for the payment of his-debts. One of the most important issues which the heir, or other party, is challenged to meet is the right of the 'administrator to sell the land. That such an issue should be met and settled is demanded by high considerations; it is de*615manded by the interests of society, which require the firm and speedy settlement of controversies; it is demanded for the security of purchasers.at administrator’s sales; it is de^ manded for the benefit of heirs and creditors who have an interest in securing confidence in judicial sales,, and it is demanded in order to give stability to titles and inspire confidence in the judgments of the courts. The administrator was bound to aver that his intestate owned the land — he could not of course sell a third person’s land — but when he made this averment in due form, and brought the adverse claimants into court by due process of law .to meet that issue,,and obtained a judgment deciding the issue in his favor, the question was settled. * * * The question whether the land was subject to the decedent’s debts depends upon whether she owned it; if the defendants to the petition owned it, of course it was not subject .to her debts, and this was the issue .presented by the petition. If presented the appellees were bound to meet it, and, if decided against them, they could not afterwards assert a title existing when they were brought into court.” . .. .
It was said in Bumb v. Gard, 107 Ind. 575, on p. 576, “It is a well established rule that children who are -made parties to an administrator’s petition to pay debts are bound ' by the order of court as to existing titles, but not as to titles afterwards acquired,” ; ■ . ....
Said appellants, however, insist that they were only made defendants in the proceeding to sell said real estate as the heirs of Caroline Sampson, and that they are not therefore , bound by said judgment and order to sell as heirs of . Joseph Sampson, deceased, upon the doctrine that a party is .only bound by a judgment in the capacity in which he is suedi It is an old and well settled doctrine that, “Judgments as' a general rule conclude the parties only in the character in which they sue or are sued. And therefore a judgment for .or against an executor, administrator, assignee, or trustee, as such, does not ordinarily preclude him, in an action affecting *616his own proper person, from disputing the matter decided, and vice verscCBigelow on Estoppel (2nd ed.), 65.
While it is evident -that one who is a party to an action as an executor) administrator, guardian, trustee or. public officer is, as a general rule, only bound as such, trustee or officer because the judgment is only rendered for or against him in that character, it does not follow that one who is made a party to an action in his own proper, person, on account of his being the heir of some one as alleged, is only bound as to his .rights as the heir of such person by the judgment rendered against him. When,one is made a party to a proceeding on account of his being an heir of some one, he is made, a party in his own proper person, as an individual, and not in any other character; and when a judgment or decree is rendered against him it is as an individual, and not otherwise. Why is he not bound, then, as an individual as. to all matters adjudicated by said judgment ? If. the issue in such case, or the facts necessary to be found in. order to entitle the plaintiff to recover, if they exist, would only bar such person’s right as the heir of the person alleged, then, of course, a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in such case would only bind him as to that interest because that is all that was adjudicated. But if there is an issue in such a case, or a fact indispensably necessary to be found in order ■ to entitle the plaintiff to recover, which, if it exists, bars every right of such person, whether as an heir or otherwise, then a finding and judgment against such person concludes him, not only from asserting any right as the heiy of the person alleged, but from every right whether it grows out of such heirship or not.
This case is of the kind last named. It was indispen-. ■sably necessary, before an order to sell said real estate could be. adjudged, and a judgment to that effect rendered, that the court should find that the decedent owned said real estate in fee simple at the time of her death. If she so owned the same at the time of her death, then said appellants’ interest *617therein, if any, was that of her heirs, or devisees,-and they could not have or own any other right, title, or interest in or to-the same. It follows, therefore, that the judgment in that case precluded them not only from asserting any interest in said real estate as the heirs of the mother, but any -other interest whatever.. ■ In response to an argument of like character this court said in Lantz v. Moffett, 102 Ind. 23, on p. 32: “The appellees' were brought into 'court in the capacity of h'eirs of the decedent, and .it was the land as her land that the administrator sought an order to sell. If they were not her heirs as to the land described,-they.should-have litigated that question, and cannot now assert that they were, not-her heirs, but-had then', and still have,: an interest of a different character in the land. ¡ If they were her -heirs, and' if she did own the land, it was subject to sale for the payment -of her debts, -and this is what the judgment conclusively adjudicates. If the heirs are in court, and if the issue is made-as to their heirship, it is not necessarily de^ cided by the order directing the sale of the land, and that issue was made here, for it -was alleged that Mrs. Niles owned the land, and that appellees were her heirs. The success of appellees in this case depends entirely upon--their overthrowing the 'j udgment of- the court th.at the decedent ■ owned the land, for, in order to succeed, they must make it appear that some other person did, in fact, own it, and this would require the complete and total overthrow of the judgment. The result would lead to a violation of dong settled principles. * * * A person made a party as heir * * *■ may be concluded from collaterally questioning any matter directly affecting him in the capacity in which he is. sued, and in such a case as the present this involves the question whether the decedent was or was not the owner of the land. Gavin v. Graydon, 41 Ind. 559.”
While in several of our cases in which the question here presented was not involved, or was unnecessary to .the determination of the cause it is said “that one who is sued as heir *618is only bound in that capacity,” our attention has only been called to one’case (Goldsberry v. Gentry, 92 Ind. 193), where the rule" so declared was held applicable to proceedings by an administrator to sell real estate to pay debts, and the application of the same was "necessary to the determination of the cause. Said case was decided upon the authority of Elliott v. Frakes, 71 Ind. 412.
In the case last named one Sipe died the" owner of eighty acres of real estate, leaving a widow and children. After the death of the widow, the administrator of Sipe obtained an order to sell, and sold said eighty acres of real estate to pay debts. The children brought suit against the purchaser to recover the undivided one-third of said real estate, which descended to their mother. It was held by this court, on p. 415, that the court ordering the sale of said real estate “had no power to order the sale of more than two-thirds of the tract of land in question, for the payment of the debts,” and that the order purporting to authorize and direct the sale of the whole tract was inoperative and void as against the interest which descended to the widow. It was held under the well settled rule in this State that the court has no power to order the sale of the interest which the widow inherits from her husband free from all demands of creditors, to pay the deceased husband’s debts, except that since the enactment of the decedent’s act in 1881, the same may be ordered sold under §§2503, 2504 Burns 1894, §§2348, 2349 Horner 1897. Lewis, Adm., v. Watkins, 150 Ind. 108, 110, 111, and cases cited; Clark v. Deutsch, 109 Ind. 491 494; Nutter v. Hawkins, 93 Ind. 260, 264; Henry’s Probate Law, §§224, 225, 227, 228. She may in some cases, however, be estopped from disputing the validity of the sale. Lewis, Adm., v. Watkins, supra, 111; Pepper v. Zahnsinger, 94 Ind. 88; Smock v. Reichwine, 117 Ind. 194. In such cases if the widow is made a party, or, if deceased, her heirs are made parties, the record will affirmatively show her rights; that the portion which she inherited as widow is not *619a part of the estate liable for the debts, and hence the court has no power to sell it for that purpose. The record is, therefore, notice to the court and the world that her portion of the real estate caímot be, and has not been, sold by the administrator. If her interest is ordered sold, the record shows upon its face that the order is void, unless the order was made'since September 19, 1881, under the provisions of §§2503; 2504 (2348, 2349), supra; Hutchinson v. Lemcke, 107 Ind. 121, 127-130, 132; Hanlon v. Waterbury, 31 Ind. 168.
If the trial court in Elliott v. Frakes, 71 Ind. 412, had no power or authority to order the sale of the widow’s undivided one-third of said eighty acres of real estate, to pay the husband’s debts, and the order of sale was void to that extent for want of power, then no party to the proceeding was boiind by the order to sell her interest, and what was said by the court in regard to the children being bound by the judgment as heirs of the father, and not as heirs of the mother, was not necessary to the determination of the cause and was therefore obiter dicta. The case of Goldsberry v. Gentry, 92 Ind. 193, as to the question mentioned, is therefore overruled.'
It is true that in Bumb v. Gard, 107 Ind. 575, after the death of the widow, the administrator procured an order and sold the real estate of the husband, including the widow’s interest therein, to pay the debts of the husband, and thé title of the purchaser of the real estate was sustained as to the widow’s interest as against the heir who was a party to the proceeding. Birt in that case the heir, with a full knowledge of all the facts, received and retained the proceeds of the sale of the real estate and was estopped thereby the same as the widow would have been under like circumstánces, under the rule declared in Pepper v. Zahnsinger, 94 Ind. 88.
In Lord v. Wilcox, 99 Ind. 491, it was held that an heir of a decedent was not, by an order to sell the real estate to *620pay the debts of said decedent, precluded from afterwards. enforcing a lien on s,aid .real estate. This was correct in said,case, because there was no issue in regard to liens on -the land, and every fact essential to the judgment could exist and the heir also have his lien on the land sold.- The decedent’s ownership of the land and its liability to-sale to pay his debts and the order to sell -the same are in no way inconsistent with the right of the heir to have and-enforce-a lien against the -land in the hands of the purchaser at administrator’s sale, except perhaps in a case where the land is ordered sold free of liens.
In Hutchinson v. Lemcke, 107 Ind. 121, a husband and wife owned real estate as tenants by the entireties, and. by-the husband’s death the wife became the owner thereof, not as widow, but by survivorship. This was prior to 1852, when the widow only took a dower interest in the real estate of her husband, and the probate court had the power to order the entire fee sold for the payment of debts.. The husband’s administrator made the widow a party to a petition .to sell said real estate to pay the husband’s debts, and she failed to appear, and the real estate was ordered sold to pay the debts - of the husband. It was held that she was bound by said proceedings and could not afterwards assert-said title to said real estate. .
It is insisted by appellee that, even if the sale of said real estate was void, the same is protected as against appellants, who were parties to said proceeding, after the expiration :of five years from the confirmation of the sale, under clause, four of §294 Burns-1894, §293 Horner 1897, which provides that “Eor the recovery, of real property sold by executors, administrators, guardians, or'commissioners of a. court, upon a judgment specially directing the sale of property sought to be recovered, brought by a party to-the judgment, his heirs, or any person claiming a title under.a party,, acquired after the date of the judgment, within five years after the sale is confirmed.” That his title, is protected by *621Said clause as to that part of the property which is defectively described. It has been uniformly held under said clause that such_ actions to-recover real property by a party to the proceeding are barred in five years from the confirmation of the sale, though the sales are void. Fisher v. Bush, 133 Ind. 315, 319; Davidson v. Bates, 111 Ind. 391, 400, 402; Hawley v. Zigerly, 135 Ind. 248; White v. Clawson, 79 Ind. 188, 192, 193; Vail v. Halton, 14 Ind. 344; Vancleave v. Milliken, 13 Ind. 105. The statute is one of re- ' pose, and it is not necessary that one should have good title 'to invoke its aid.- It is only those whose titles are not good that ■ need the protection of the .statute. As was said in Fisher v. Bush, supra, “Valid sales require no protection by statutes of limitation. * * * It is to ’the illegal and void sales that statutes of limitation are intended to apply.” . •
In Vail v. Halton, supra, and Vancleave v. Milliken, supra, it was held that said five years statute of limitations applies to sales of real-estate made by an administrator when the court had not acquired jurisdictions over the persons of the owners of the land sold. -
-Cases’ decided under the third clause of said §294 (293), supra; which requires that all actions for the recovery of ■real -property, sold on execution, shall be brought by the •execution debtor, his heirs, or - any person claiming under him by title acquired after the date of the judgment, within ten years 'after the -sale, involves principles substantially the* same -as -those involved in this case.
Said- appellees contend that as to erroneous, defective, and void descriptions of real estate, the rule applicable to sales by executors/ administrators, guardians, and commissioners; under clause four, is the same as that applicable to sheriffs’isales under decrees of foreclosure under said clause when' the misdescription in the mortgage is carried into ■the decree, ■ advertisement, and sheriff’s deed, but not to sheriff’s sales under an execution on a judgment for money only.
*622This court has held under the third clause of said section 294 (293), supra, that sheriffs’ sales, whether void on account of misdescription, or for any other reason, unless it be that the court which rendered the judgment upon which the writ issued had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter, are protected thereby, and that the same applies to foreclosure sales as well as to sales on ordinary executions. Marley v. State, ex rel., 147 Ind. 145, 147, 148; Moore v. Ross, 139 Ind. 200; Orr v. Owens, 128 Ind. 229; Sedgwick v. Ritter, 128 Ind. 209; Souders v. Jeffries, 107 Ind. 552; Wright v. Wright, 97 Ind. 444; Second Nat. Bank v. Corey, 94 Ind. 457; Brenner v. Quick, 88 Ind. 546; Brown v. Maher, 68 Ind. 14; Hatfield v. Jackson, 50 Ind. 507; Gray v. Stiver, 24 Ind. 174.
In Brenner v. Quick, supra, the decree foreclosing the mortgage was void for want of jurisdiction over the person of the owner of the mortgaged real estate, he being the mortgagor, and the sheriff’s sale and deed were void for that reason, but the court held that the title of the purchaser .at said sheriff’s, sale, who took and held possession of the real estate thereunder, was protected as against the mortgagor and his heirs after the expiration of ten years. The widow of the mortgagor, who was not a party to the proceeding in which the. decree of foreclosure was rendered, was given the undivided one-third of the real estate, not as the heir of her husband, but under §2562 Burns 1894, §2491 R. S. 1881 and Horner 1897, by virtue of her marital relations.
In Wright v. Wright, 97 Ind. 444, it' was held. that §2641, Burns ,1894, §2484 R. S. 1881 and Horner 1897, prevented the sale on execntion against a married woman, during her second marriage, of lands held by her in virtue of a previous marriage, if she have, children by the previous marriage,' but if such lands were sold on execution during the second marriage, and the purchaser took and held possession thereof under such sale, an action by such woman to recover the lands is barred, if brought after the lapse of ten *623years, and after two years from the death of the person who was her husband when the land was sold.
In Gray v. Stiver, 24 Ind. 174, which was an action to recover real estate sold under a decree of foreclosure, the court on p. 178, said: “This court has held, in a case involving like principles, that the statute applies even where the court has not acquired jurisdiction over the persons of the owners of the land sold. Vancleave v. Milliken, 13 Ind. 105; Vail v. Halton, 14 Ind. 344. Indeed, the statute would be useless, if it protected only titles which do not need protection.”
In Orr v. Owens, 128 Ind. 229, a mortgage on land in two counties was foreclosed in one of the counties where a part of the land was situated, and the sheriff of the latter county sold in his own county all of the mortgaged real estate in violation of §768 Burns 1894, §756 E. S. 1881 and Horner 1897, and it was held that while the sale of the land in the other county may have been void, possession having been taken and held under said sale and 'sheriff’s deed for ten years from the date of sale, the purchaser was entitled to the protection of the statute.
In Second Nat. Bank v. Corey, 94 Ind. 457, on p. 467, it was held that when real estate is sold by the sheriff by a defective and void description thereof in the levy of the execution, advertisement, sale, and conveyance of the land, and possession follows such sale and conveyance, an action to recover such real estate is barred if brought after the expiration of ten years by the judgment debtor, his heirs, or any one claiming under him by title acquired after the judgment.
In Sedgwick v. Ritter, 128 Ind. 209, an action to recover possession of real estate sold under a decree of -foreclosure, there was a misdescription of the real estate in the mortgage ■ foreclosed, in using the word “east” instead of the word “west” in describing the quarter sections, and the complaint to foreclose did not allege the mistake in the description of *624the real estate, nor ask for a reformation of the mortgage. A judgment on the note secured by the mortgage and a decree of foreclosure were rendered by default, in which the real estate was correctly described. The real estate was sold and deed made under-the-decree,'and the purchaser took and held- possession of said real- estate thereunder. It ■ -was 'claimed that the- decree ■ of foreclosure was- void,' because, without'the issues in the case, the'parties having been brought into court for the foreclosure on one tract of land and the decree entered for the sale of a different tract; the court held that even if the decree of foreclosure and sale were-void as urged, an action to recover the land sold under the. decree was 'barred after the expiration of ten years from the date of sale. • ■
• In Moore v. Ross, 139 Ind. 200, the real estate was properly described in the mortgage, decree,-notice of sale,-'and certificate of'sale, but in the deed only a part thereof was described, and the purchaser took and held possession of said land under said salé and conveyance. The-mortgagors, who were parties to the decree, brought' an action for possession of the real estate after the expiration- of ten years from the date éf the sale, and it was held that the same was barred. ’ ■ ■
■ In Marley v. State, ex rel., 147 Ind. 145, the lands of a judgment debtor sold on execution were misdescribed in the levy, advertisement, and deed, the lands so described never having been owned by the judgment debtor. When the sheriff’s deed was executed, the purchaser took-and-held possession of the land of the judgment' debtor intended to be sold. Held, that in an action against the judgment debtor, and those claiming under him, brought-after the expiration of ten' years from the date of the sheriff’s sale, by a party holding under the purchaser at sheriff’s' sale, such party is entitled to have his title quieted as against such defendants, even if the sheriff’s sale was absolutely void on account of the misdescription, because the statute protected him in a perfect title as against them.
*625Tn Souders v. Jeffries, 107 Ind. 552, it was held that a purchaser- of real .estate at' a sheriff’s sale, under a decree of foreclosure, and those claiming under him, who take and hold possession thereof under the sheriff’s deed for ten years from the' date of - sale, cannot be disturbed in their title to said-real estate under said sale, even though the description in the mortgage, decree of foreclosure, notice of sale, and deed is so erroneous as to describe real estate not owned by the mortgagor, or so defective as to be void. The court by Elliott, J., said on p-.- 554 “If the land was mortgaged and was sold, then, although there might be the gravest irregularities in the proceedings, no action-could be maintained after the expiration of ten years. It is true that the answer alleges that the ‘defendants executed a mortgage on 'the land described'in the cross-complaint by the description of out-lot number twelve, -in the town of Bloomington,’ while the description in. the cross-complaint is ‘seminary lot twelve’ in Blooiningtom • There is, unquestionably, a defective description; but, if the land of which the appellee took pos'session was 'actually sold, and was held'by him and his grantors for ten years without any interruption of possession, then the title of the appellee cannot be disturbed, even if the description was’ so defective as to make the sale void. Second Nat. Bank v. Corey, 94 Ind. 457; Wright v. Wright, 97 Ind. 444, see p. 447.
■“The statute protecting purchasers at sheriff’s sales was not intended to Cure mere irregularities, — for mere irregularities will not vitiate a sheriff’s sale, — but to prevent the disturbance of titles founded upon ' a sheriff’s sale made úndér color of authority, although the sale was utterly invalid.' Valid 'sales, of course, need no statute of repose to protect them; it is only the invalid ones that need this protection.” ' 1
It will be' observed that,' under the rule declared in the cases 'cited, the ten years’ statute of limitations protects a *626purchaser of real estate at a sheriff’s sale under a decree of foreclosure when he and those claiming under him take and hold possession of the real estate sold for ten years or more from the date of sale, even if the description of the real éstate in the mortgage, decree, notice of sale, and sheriff’s 'deed is so erroneous, insufficient, or defective as to be void, or describes land not owned 'by the mortgagor the same as in sales on ordinary executions.
In Smith v. Bryan, 74 Ind. 515, the same rule was applied to a tax sale. That was an action to quiet title to land and ‘recover possession against the purchaser at a tax sale. It was held, under §250, p. 127, 1 R. S. 1876 (Acts 1872 s. s., p. 117), which 'provides that actions to recover real property sold for taxes must 'be brought within five years after the date of the sale for taxes, that as the evidence showed that the lands intended to be sold and actually sold for taxes were taken into possession by the purchaser, and held by him and'those claiming under him for several years continuously before the commencement of the action, the plaintiff was barred by' said statute of limitations, regardless of whether the tax sale was void or voidable, on account of the defective description, or any other defects.
In Nutter v. Hawkins, 93 Ind. 260, 264, this court held that the fourth clause of said §294 Burns 1894, §293 Horner 1897, did not apply to an attempted sale and conveyance by< an administrator of so much of the decedent’s real estate as descended to the widow free from all demands of creditors on the ground that the court had no power or jurisdiction to order the sale of the widow’s interest, which fact appeared'on the face of the record, and that said sale was void for want 'of jurisdiction over said subject-matter, the widow’s said interest. That case, and perhaps other cases, hold that when it is shown by the record that the order of the court to sell the real estate is void for want of jurisdiction over the subject of the action, or any part thereof, that the said fourth clause does not apply to the sale of so much *627of the real estate as was beyond tbe power or jurisdiction of the court. Said cases are not in point here, however, for tbe reason that the record of tbe proceeding to sell tbe real estate of Caroline Sampson to pay her debts shows that her real estate was ordered sold for that purpose, and there is nothing on tbe face of said proceedings, showing that said order or proceeding, or any part thereof, was void fdr want of jurisdiction over tbe subject-matter of tbe action.
It is evident that tbe construction placed upon clause three of said §294 (293), supra, in regard to erroneous and defective and insufficient descriptions of real estate sold under decrees of foreclosure and on ordinary executions, must also be given to clause four of said section in regard to such descriptions, when tbe sale is made by executors, administrators, guardians, or commissioners, by order of tbe court.
The cases of Walton v. Cox, 67 Ind. 164, Angle v. Speer, 66 Ind. 488, Lewis v. Owen, 64 Ind. 446, Miller v. Kolb, 47 Ind. 220, Rogers v. Abbott, 37 Ind. 138, and cases of like character, in which it is held that mistakes in tbe descriptions of real estate in proceedings by administrators to sell tbe same, and in a mortgage and decree foreclosing tbe same, and in sheriff’s deeds cannot be corrected and reformed, are not in point here, for tbe question is not can such descriptions of real estate be corrected, but whether a defective, erroneous, or insufficient description will prevent tbe purchaser at an administrator’s sale of real estate from being protected by tbe five years’ statute of limitations. Souders v. Jeffries, 107 Ind. 552, 554-555.
Under tbe finding, tbe sale of said real estate was confirmed December 17, 1885, and appellee, as against appellants Armstrong, Sampson, and Sampson, took and held possession thereof from that date until thé time of tbe'commencement of this action, July 25, 1896, a period of'more than eleven years. .It is clear, therefore, that even if said order of sale could be attacked collaterally in this action *628by’appellants, appellee is entitled, under the fourth clause of said §294 (293), supra, to have his title quieted to all of said tracts of real estate, .eve'n though a part thereof may be so erroneously described as to make the sale voidable, or void. ■ i’ ■
’ "Appellee insists that upon the facts foilnd he was entitled to- have his title quieted to’ the four acre tract as ’against appellant Bowen, and therefore the conclusion of law to the contrary was erroneous. The special -finding shows that, when- Earneman instituted suit and foreclosed said mortgage executed'to the Thayers by the Austins, Peter and Abigail -A. -Striker owned and were in possession of the four acres, of- real- estate, which - it is claimed were included in said mortgage, and-they were not made parties to said proceeding.' It is not necessary to make the mortgagor, who has conveyed the mortgaged real estate, a party to a proceeding to foreclose the mortgage unless a personal judgment is desired against- him, but it is indispensably necessary that the person to whom he has conveyed the mortgaged real estate should be made a party, and, if he is not made a party, the foreclosure is void as to him. Petry v. Ambrosher, 100 Ind. 510, 511, 512, and authorities cited; Curtis v. Gooding, 99 Ind. 45. It is true, in such a case, the decree of foreclosure may be treated as a nullity, and the mortgage be foreclosed against the person owning the mortgaged real estate. Curtis v. Gooding, supra. -But in such a proceeding the owner- may make any defense he has to such foreclosure, the same as if--no foreclosure had been obtained against the mortgagor. It follows, therefore,' that said decree of foreclosure was void as to the- Strikers and all- persons claiming under them. The sheriff’s deed for the twenty-one acres' of real estate executed to Abner H. Bowen under said decree therefore conveyed to him no title to said four acres of real estate' as against said Striker and those claiming under him. The finding' also shows that Thayer, on the same day that Austin and-wife conveyed the tract of four acres to Benham, released said four acres from the lien of *629the mortgage executed to him by Austin and wife. It is evident, therefore, that said mortgage-was-not a lien on said four acres of real estate after the same was conveyed to Benham, and said four acres was held and .owned by Joseph Sampson under his deed from the Strikers free and clear from said mortgage. The description in'the tax deed made by the county auditorio Abner H. Bowen was so defective that it conveyed no title to any real estate; Cooper v. Jackson, 71 Ind. 244, 248. Moreover, if the description of the real estate was not defective, the tax deed would not be sufficient evidence to entitle said Bowen, or those -claiming 'under him, to recover possession thereon or quiet title thereto, because the same was not attested by the-county treasurer, as was, and still is, required by statute; 1 R. S. 1876, p. 123, §224, §8624 Burns 1894, §6473 Horner 1897; Bowen v. Striker, 100 Ind. 45, 48. The statute provides that if any tax deed shall prove invalid and ineffectual to convey title because the description is insufficient, or for any other cause than that the land in the deed was not liable for taxation, or if liable that the taxes thereon had been paid, the lien which the State has thereon -shall be transferred to and vested in the grantee, his heirs or assigns, and he shall be entitled to recover the amount of taxes¿ -interest, and penalty, etc., and such land shall be bound for thb payment thereof. §§6487, 6488 R. S. 1881, §§8631, 8632 Burns 1894, §§6480, 6481 Horner 1897, Scott v. Millikan, 104 Ind. 75. There is no finding, however, that any real estate was ever sold to said Bowen at a tax sale, or that said Bowen ever paid to the county treasurer any money for -real estate sold at a tax sale. The mere finding that a deed of the kind and character mentioned was executed to Abner H. Bowen is not equivalent to a finding of such facts. The finding that certain recitals were contained in said tax deed was not the finding of any facts, but of the evidence, and the same must be disregarded. Morgan v. Worden, 145 Ind. 600, 603; Fisher v. Louisville, etc., R. Co., 146 Ind. 558, 561. There is nothing in the finding, therefore, to *630show that said Bowen or those claiming under him are entitled to enforce any lien against the four acres in controversy under the tax law. There is no finding that the tenants, to whom Abner IT. Bowen and those claiming under him granted the privilege of cutting wood on said four acres, ever availed themselves of that privilege and cut wood thereon; and there is no presumption that they did so. Said four acres is off of the east side of the twenty-one acr.es purchased by Abner H. Bowen at the foreclosure sale, and, for all that appears, the fences repaired may have been on the line dividing said four, acres from the remainder of the twenty-one acre tract which was owned by said Bowen. • It is evident, therefore, that said Abner H. Bowen and those claiming under him did not have such possession of said four acres as entitled them to the benefit of the statute of limitations governing either tax sales or sheriffs’ sales. Said four acres of real estate was, therefore, owned by Joseph Sampson at the time of his death, free from any lien on account of said mortgage or tax deed, and appellee, having become the owner thereof, is entitled to have his title thereto quieted against all the appellants, including said Edward H. Bowen.
That part of the judgment quieting the title of appellee to the eighty acres and forty-nine and sixty-one one-hundredths acres of real estate described in appellee’s complaint is affirmed, and that part thereof in regard to the four acres described in appellee’s complaint is reversed, with instruction to restate all the conclusions of law except the first in accordance with this opinion, and render judgment quieting the title of appellee to said four acres .of real estate against all the defendants in the court below.