Statutory ejectment, instituted by appellees against appellants, for tbe recovery of tbe mineral interest, only, in the lands described in tbe complaint. Tbe plaintiffs would deduce tbeir title, to- one tract, from one Benager Williams, through mesne conveyances, and, to tbe other, from one Justice, through mesne conveyances. Both Williams and Justice appear to have been tbe original patentees of tbe lands in question. Tbe defendants would trace tbeir rights in tbe premises back to tbe state of Alabama.; its asserted title being tbe product of tax sales and purchases by tbe state of Alabama. Tbe verdict returned by tbe jury reads: “We, tbe jury, find for tbe plaintiffs for tbe lands sued for. A. A. Dougless, foreman.” Tbe judg ment declares that plaintiffs recover “tbe possession of tbe following lands, to-wit, sued for in tbe complaint; Tbe coal, iron ore, and other minerals in tbe” lands described in tbe complaint.
Minerals in situ are a part of tbe realty — are lands. Hence the employment of tbe term “lands” in tbe verdict and in tbe judgment, as was done, was not at all inapt. Nor are tbe verdict and judgment broader than tbe interest claimed in tbe comlpáint. '
In the bill it is recited: “It is admitted that W. H. Show, if present, would testify that be was a brother-in-law of Benager Williams, deceased, and that said Benager Williams died soon after the Civil War. He was never married. He left a mother who has been dead about 15 years, and five sisters as follows” — naming them.
A fair construction of tbe foregoing recitals leaves no room for doubt, we think, that tbe mother and five sisters of Williams were all tbe heirs left by him upon his decease.—Singo v. McGhee, 160 Ala. 252, 253, 49 South. 200.
*631As against a stranger to the title, one, or more, less than all, tenants in common may sne for and recover the whole of the realty, the subject of the tenancy in common, and the recovery inures to the benefit of all.—Dorlan v. Westervitch, 140 Ala. 283, 37 South. 382, 103 Am. St. Rep. 35-41; Lecroix v. Malone, 157 Ala. 134, 47 S. W. 725; Blakeney v. Du Bose, 167 Ala. 627, 52 South. 746; Freeman on Cotenancy, § 343; note to Marshall v. Palmer, 50 Am. St. Rep. 838-843; note to Williams v. Coal Creek Coal Co., 6 L. R. A. (N. 8) 710 et seq.; Warvelle on Eject. § 123; Griswold v. Railroad Co., 12 N. D. 435, 97 N. W. 538, 102 Am. St. Rep. 572.
There are, in other jurisdictions, decisions in express opposition to the stated doctrine. They may be found in part, by reference to Warvelle on Eject. § 124; 15 Cyc. p. 183.
The several decisions delivered here, cited by counsel for appellants as opposing the doctrine of Dorlan v. Westervitch and its successors, do not, when properly analyzed, so conclude. There is no factor of damages or mesne profits in this case, for none were awarded; hence the application of the rule announced to that matter is not to be considered on this appeal. We have been unable to find any deliverance by this court aside from Dorlan v. Westervitch, Lecroix v. Malone, and Blakeney v. Du Bose, supporting the doctrine before announced; and it must be conceded that, according to express statement, the announcement made in Dorlan v. Westervitch in this regard was dicta, as well as unsupported by the three decisions of this court therein cited. Notwithstanding, after a careful consideration of the reasons underlying the respective conclusions to which, on the present inquiry, learned courts and text-writers have yielded assent, we are convinced that the doctrine before stated is sound. No other con*632elusion appears to us as rationally possible, when it is accepted, as must be done, that as against all the world, except fellow tenants in common, a tenant in common is entitled to the unrestricted possession of the whole of the subject of the tenancy in common. Being so entitled, he must have his remedy against one without right to the possession. If such an one may, in effect, claim and assert and also retain an associate possession with one entitled to the rightful possession before stated, the inevitable result must be to establish for the stranger a status and relation equivalent, for all practical purposes, to that belonging to a tenant in common —a status and relation that rests, not on right, for such he has not, but on the mere negative fact that all of those entitled to the possession, per my et per tout, have not impleaded him. The result, in our opinion, refutes the proposition that must underlie it, viz., that tenants in common can only recover to the extent of his, or their interest or interests, against one without right to be in possession. One wrongfully in possession certainly ought not to be heard to complain of an ejection in to to, or be permitted to prolong such a possession solely because all those entitled to the possession have not brought their action to oust him.
There was no evidence tending, even, to support such an adverse possession, of the mineral interest in question, as operated to divest the title of the true owners thereto. After severance of the mineral, in situ, from the surface, the possession of the latter is not possession of the former. The effect of the severance is to create two closes, adjoining but separate. 20 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 774; 1 Cyc. pp. 994, 995 ; Caldwell v. Copeland, 37 Pa. 427, 78 Am. Dec. 436; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Massey, 136, Ala. 156, 33 South. 896, 96 Am. St. Rep. 17; Barrenger & Adams on Mines, §§ 568-575; White on *633Mines, § 436; Wallace v. Elm Grove Coal Co., 58 W. Va. 449, 52 S. E. 485; Murray v. Allred, 100 Tenn. 100, 43 S. W. 355, 39 L. R. A. 249, 253, 66 Am. St. Rep. 740; Chartiers Block Coal Co. v. Mellon, 152 Pa. 286, 25 Atl. 597, 18 L. R. A. 702, 705, 34 Am. St. Rep. 645.
The mineral, after severance, is a corporeal hereditament, and mere nonuser will not affect the owner’s title; and to lose his right, by adverse possession, the owner must be disseized. 1 Oye. pp. 994, 995; Wallace v. Elm Grove Coal Co., supra; Armstrong v. Caldwell, 53 Pa. 284; Caldwell v. Copeland, supra; Caldwell v. Fulton, 31 Pa. 475, 72 Am. Dec. 760; Kingsley v. Hillside Coal Co., 144 Pa. 613, 23 Atl. 250; Williams v. Gibson, 84 Ala. 228, 4 South. 350, 5 Am. St. Rep. 368.
The mere claim- to property, unaccompanied by adverse possession, will not render available, to the claimant against the owner, the statute of limitations. 25 Cyc. p. 1012; Newman v. Newman, 60 W. Va. 371, 55 S. E. 377, 7 L. R. A. (N. S.) 370; Sewell v. Nelson, 113 Ky. 171, 179, 180, 67 S. W. 985; Warvelle on Eject. §§ 418, 419; Pugh v. Youngblood, 69 Ala. 296; Doe ex dem. v. Anderson, 79 Ala. 209.
In Pugh v. Youngblood, supra, wherein the limitation, then in force, against actions, after the defined period, presenting for determination rights with respect to lands sold for taxes, was under consideration, it was pressly ruled that a prerequisite to the protection the limitation was intended to afford was that the asserter thereof should have been, for the period, in “open continuous possession with a claim of title. * * *” The possession referred to in Pugh v. Youngblood and contemplated in the general proposition above announced, must be actual. No other character of possession could meet the conditions pronounced in Pugh v. Youngblood. In short, in order for a purchaser of a tax' title to in-*634yoke the protection of the statute of limitation considered in Pugh v. Youngblood and of a like character of statute, now Code 1907, § 23li, he must have had, for the requisite period, adverse possession of the premises involved. Doe ex dem. v. Anderson, supra, and Jones v. Randle, 68 Ala. 261, also so conclude.
What will constitute adverse possession of minerals, severed, in title, from the soil?
Barringer & Adams on Mines, at pages 568, 569, say: “Such a possession (adverse) must he actual, notorious, exclusive, continuous, peaceable and hostile for the statutory period. And in these respects the surface owner is in no better position than a stranger. * * * Actual possession is taken by the opening of mines and carrying on of mining operations. That possession is continuous if the operations are continuous, or are carried on continuously at such seasons as the nature of the business and the customs of the country permit or required. A cessation of operations in accordance with the custom of the neighborhood, or from necessity occasioned by some natural agency, would not be an interruption of the possession. But there must be something evidencing possession in the interval which connects the operations when resumed with those which have gone before, and to distinguish such possession from a series of repeated acts of trespass.”
To the same effect is White on Mines, §§ 430, 431, 432, 433.
Under the authorities, it is essential to effect adverse possession of minerals, after severance, in title, from the surface, that the adverse claimant do some act or acts evincing a permanency of occupation and use, as distinguished from acts merely occasional, desultory, or temporary — acts suitable to the enjoyment and appropriation of the mineral so claimed, and hostile to the *635rights of the owner. Warvelle, § 420; 1 Cyc. pp. 983-985, 994, 995; Newman v. Newman, supra; Eureka Co. v. Norment, 104 Ala. 625, 16 South, 579; Alexander v. Savage, 90 Ala. 383, 8 South. 93; Elyton Co. v. Denny, 108 Ala. 553, 18 South. 561; Jackson Lumber Co. v. McCreary, 137 Ala. 282, 34 South. 850; Washington v. Norwood, 128 Ala. 390, 30 South. 405.
Before the title of the owner of real estate can he divested by proceedings to enforce the payment of taxes from him, substantial compliance with the statutory requirements thereof must be had; the burden to show such compliance being upon him asserting rights under the tax proceeding.—Reddick v. Long, 124 Ala. 260, 27 South. 402; Johnson v. Harper, 107 Ala. 706, 18 South. 198. Though the tax deed be ineffective to pass title, it may operate as color of title. — Reddick v. Looig, supra. The auditor’s deed, assuming to convey lands bought in by the state, at tax sale, passes no title if the state was without title.—Fleming v. McGee, 81 Ala. 409, 1 South. 106.
The sales of lands involved, from which the alleged title of the state was derived, were made in 1892. The procedure, in part, with respect to tax sales at that time was provided by Code 1886, § 576.—McKinnon v. Mixon, 128 Ala. 612, 29 South. 690. Among other substantive requirements, in that statute, for a sale, under the decree to that end, should state “the amount for which each decree was rendered, and the person against whom the taxes embraced in such decree were assessed, or, if assessed to ‘owner unknown,’ stating that fact.” Without objection, certificates, by the judge of probate, reciting the assessment of a part- of the lands in controversy to owner unknown, their sale under decree, and their purchase by the state, were admitted in evidence. Assuming, for the occasion, only, that these certificates. *636after admission in evidence without question, possessed probative force to the extent of their recitals, they still fail because of the omission, to show full compliance with the statute cited. Section 576, ante. It is not recited in them that the notice of sale bore a statement of the amount for which the decrees were rendered; nor did they contain the statement that the assessment was against “owner unknown.” These omissions, or one of them, if occurring in fact, avoided substantial compliance with the statutory requirements in the premises; such a compliance being essential to divest the owner’s title.—McKinnon v. Mixon, supra; Johnson v. Harper, supra. The sole reliance to establish compliance with the decrees, being the certificates of the judge of probate, and these being omissive in the particulars indicated, the asserter of the tax title failed to carry the burden; and hence it was not shown that any title passed to the state under its alleged purchase at the tax sale. The state having no title, according to this record, the auditor’s deed conveyed no title.
It may be conceded, but for the occasion only ,that, had those claiming under the state gone into possession of the mineral interest in the lands in question, they might have referred to the conveyance from the auditor as color of title in the premises. It may be further conceded, but for the occasion only, that the ineffective conveyances from the auditor were efficient, to put in operation the statute of limitations of three years provided in Code 1896, § 4089. So assuming, we find, after careful review of the evidence most favorable to the possession requisite to invoke the application of the limitation stated, that the claimants, through the state, never took and maintained such possession of the minerals in question as to afford the limitation’s protection, if it were available. The acts shown in the evidence *637evinced no such continuity and permanency as the rules before stated contemplate. Indeed, these acts were desultory merely, indicating no more than occasional prospecting, to see whether mineral was there, rather than approaching the assumption of possession of the mineral. The mere claim of ownership of the mineral interest, without assuming an hostile (to the owner) actual possession of at least a part thereof, could not avail. AJuthor, supra. For that reason, the statute of limitations cannot be applied.
It is by no means clear that the assimilatory statute (Code'1896, § 4102 [Code 1907, § 2325], conferring on purchasers from the state the like rights, remedies, etc., hended the limitation provided in Code 1896, § 4089 enjoyed by purchasers at a tax collector’s sale, compre(Code 1907, § 2311). See Capehart v. Guffey, 130 Ala. 425, 30 South. 390, and Sheffield City Co. v. Tradesman's Bank, 131 Ala. 192, 32 South. 508, stating the purpose and effect of this and related statutes. There is no specific reference in the assimilating statute to the limitation provided in the other statute. The limitation begins to run in favor of the purchaser at tax collector’s sale, when the deed is demandable. When the right to demand accrues is fixed by other provisions. It is in relation to the expiration of the fixed period when the owner may redeem that the limitation statute makes provision for the point, of time when the deed is demandable. Of course, no such conditions surround the purchaser from the state. He is, simply, a buyer for cash. There is no redemption right or period to be considered. May the assimilatory statute be read as conferring the right provided by the limitation?
In the particular with which we are now' concerned, section 4102 (section 2325) belongs to that class of statutes called “reference statutes.”—Phenix Assur. Co. *638v. Fire Dept. of Montgomery, 117 Ala. 631, 646, 23 South. 843, 42 L. R. A. 468; Ex parte Greene & Graham, 29 Ala. 52; Lewis’ Sutherland on Stat. Construction, § § 405, 406, 407; Endlich’s Int. Stat. § 493.
In Ex parte Greene & Graham, supra, this rule is recognized : That ordinarily a “reference statute” embraces only the general, not the particular, powers. In Matthews, Finley & Co. v. Sands & Co., 29 Ala. 136, the rule stated was applied. In Beason v. Shaw, 148 Ala. 544, 42 South. 611, 18 L. R. A. (N. S.), 566, it was ruled that a “reference statute” did not avail to provide for the contest of a stock law election, because the means, viz., the contest of a constable’s election, contemplated were inappropriate.
In section 407 of Lewis’ Sutherland, a number of instances, which, we take it, illustrate the application of the rule before stated, may be found. With these suggestions, we leave the inquiry without deciding it.
Error not being made to appear, the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
All che justices concur.