This is an action of ejectment instituted in the circuit court of Cass county by plaintiffs, who are husband and wife, to recover a strip of land in said county, taken and held by the defendant Morrison as a right of way for the road of said company, he being the owner, by purchase, of said road.-
The petition is in the usual form, and the amended answer of Morrison, upon which the cause was tried, alleged that the company located and constructed its road from the city of Pleasant Hill, Cass county, Missouri, to the city of *211Lawrence, in the state of Kansas, and ran over the land in controversy; that the right of way for said road was expressly given by said plaintiffs, and each of them, as a partial inducement to secure the location of the road along the route upon which it now runs, and for other valuable considerations moving to said plaintiffs, including the location of a depot where the railroad station of Raymore was located and now stands; that the company entered upon the land under said gift, and upon the express invitation and with the knowledge and consent of each of said plaintiffs, and thereupon proceeded to grade said right of way and construct said road thereupon at great expense; that the railroad company entered upon the land in 1871, and from the time of its completion said road has been continuously operated by said company while it remained the owner, and by said Morrison since his purchase; that from the time of the first entry upon said land to the date of the institution of this suit, in February, 1876, plaintiffs, and each of them, permitted the construction of said road upon said land without objection, but encouraging and consenting thereto. The reply was a general denial. The cause was tried by the court without the aid of a jury. Plaintiffs obtained a judgment, from which defendants have appealed.
It was admitted that the title to the real estate, when taken by the railroad company, was in the plaintiff’s wife, and was her general property. She testified that she did not consent to the original occupancy of the land by the railroad company, but that after the company entered she acquiesced and encouraged the completion of the road, and had taken no legal steps against the company until the institution of this suit. The defendant Morrison introduced evidence to establish the special facts alleged in his answer.
The court gave the following declarations of law for plaintiffs:
1. Although the court may believe from the evidence *212that said St. Louis, Lawrence & Western Railroad Company did, as alleged in the answer of the defendant Morrison, enter and construct and put in operation the railroad upon the land in the petition described, by the leave, license, acquiescence and encouragement of either one or both of said plaintiffs, and that said Morrison afterward, about the year 1877, under and by virtue of a foreclosure of a mortgage thereon and sale of said railroad, acquired and became, and is now the owner of the franchises, railroad and all property rights of said railroad company, including the alleged right of way over said land, yet if the court shall also further believe from the evidence that said plaintiff, Mrs. A. L. Kanaga, did on the 9th day of December, 1870, acquire title to, and ever since has been the owner in fee of the land aforesaid, and was during all said time a married woman, the wife of her- co-plaintiff, F. C. Kanaga, then the court ought to find for said plaintiffs.
2. The said plaintiff’, Mrs. A. L. Kanaga, being a married woman, and owning said land as her general legal property by patent dated in the year 1870, could not by any act or declaration of hers, other than a deed executed by herself and her husband, by her duly acknowledged and delivered, confer upon said railroad company any right to enter upon her land or any interest therein, or estop herself from maintaining an action for the recovery of the possession of said land.
3. The said plaintiff, F. C. Kanaga, could not, as the husband of his wife and co-plaintiff’, Mrs. A. L. Kanaga, she being the owner of said land by patent dated in the year 1870, as her general property, by an act, declaration or deed of his own, not signed, sealed, acknowledged and delivered by his wife, confer upon said railroad company any right to enter upon said land, or any interest therein, or estop himself and wife, or either of them, from maintaining an action for the recovery of the possession of said land.
The following asked by defendants were refused :
*2131. The court declares the law to be that if it appear from the evidence that plaintiffs are husband and wife, and that the real estate described in the petition is the general property of the wife, and that plaintiffs have living issue of said marriage, then the plaintiff husband is entitled to the possession of said real estate during his lifetime, and if the St. Louis, Lawrence & Denver Railroad Company, under which defendant Morrison claims, entered upon the land described in the petition with the knowledge and consent of plaintiff husband, or remained thereon after such entry with his acquiesecnce, for the purposes of a right of way for its said railroad, and constructed its track there-over, and that said land has been used for such purposes and none others, by said company and its successors, including defendant Morrison, and is now so used, the finding will be for defendants.
2. If the court finds that plaintiffs acquiesced in the . occupation of the land in controversy for the construction of the St. Louis, Lawrence & Denver Railroad, without pre-payment of land damages, upon an understanding or contract that no depot should be located nearer to Ray-more than Rankin, and that the road is completed and in operation, the finding must be for defendants, even though a depot was located nearer than Rankin in violation of said understanding or contract.
3. If the court finds that plaintiffs consented to the occupation of the land in controversy for the construction of said railroad, upon condition that the railroad company would not locate a depot nearer to Raymore than Rankin, and that said railroad was constructed and is now in operation, the finding must be for defendants, even though a depot was located at Belton in violation of said condition.
1. railroads : ac-ownere?neooeup¿ tion of jus land. It is well settled law, in this State, that if the owner of land encourages or permits a railroad company to enter an<3- construct its road upon his land, he can-n°f afterward maintain his action of eject-men£ recover possession of the part so *214taken for a road-bed. Provolt v. C., R. I. & Pac. R. R. Co., 57 Mo. 256; Baker v. C., R. I. & Pac. R. R. Co., 57 Mo. 265; Hubbard v. K. C., St. Jo. C. B. R. R. Co., 63 Mo. 68. It is equally indisputable that by a purchase of the road, the purchaser acquires all the right the company had to the road-bed.
The only difference between the case at bar and those above cited is, that here the title to the land was vested in the wife, whereas, in the above cases, the sole plaintiffs were the owners in fee.
Whether the wife would be estopped by her conduct from claiming the land against the company, if her husband were dead, we are not called upon to determine, because the husband, during the marriage, has an exclusive right to the possession of her real estate, not held to her sole and separate use, and is the only proper party plaintiff in a suit to recover possession thereof; and it is sufficient to say that, if he acted in a manner to estop him from asserting his right to the possession, he nor she can recover, whatever right his wife or her heirs may have after the dissolution of the marriage by the death of one of the parties, or otherwise. In Bledsoe v. Simms, 53 Mo. 308, this court held, Adams, J., delivering its opinion, that: “An action of ejectment can only be brought against a person in possession of the land. The possession of a husband is the possession of a wife when she holds the title. Under our statute concerning married women, (Wag. Stat., 938, § 14,) the rents, issues and products of the real estate of a married woman, and the interest of her husband in her right in any real estate which belonged to her before marriage, are during coverture exempt from attachment or execution * * and no eonveyance during coverture can be made by the husband, without joining his wife in the deed, etc. The statute is intended to protect the wife’s land for her benefit, during coverture, but does not alter the common law relations of husband and wife. He is still her protector and representative, and is entitled as such to the *215possession of her fee simple lands, and he is the proper and only party to he made a defendant in a suit for lands claimed to belong to her.” If the only party to be sued, he is, for the same reason, the only party to sue for such possession. He has a marital right to the possession, and this right is exclusive. To the same effect are Wilson v. Garaghty, 70 Mo. 518, and Hunt v. Thompson, 61 Mo. 153. Eor the foregoing reasons we hold that the court erred in giving the declarations of law, Nos. one, two and three? asked by plaintiffs, and in refusing No. one, asked by defendant.
"With regard to Nos. two and three, asked by defendants, no declarations on the same subject were asked by plaintiffs, or given by the court, and, from the agreed abstract, it does not appear that any evidence was adduced on those issues.
All concurring, except Sherwood, C. J., who dissents,the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.