This is an action of ejectment for the recovery of a tract of land in Johnson county. There was a judgment for plaintiff, from which this appeal is prosecuted. The cause was tried on an agreed state of facts, which is as follows : James C. Rogers, father of plaintiff, died in 1873, seized of the land, his wife and plaintiff surviving him. In 1876, the real estate in controversy was duly set off to the widow as a homestead,, she having previously intermarred with Fayette P. Payne, and in 1878, she and her said husband, by deed,, conveyed the premises to Amanda E. Edwards, and defendants subsequently acquired this title and are in possession of the land. Plaintiff was born in September, 1871, and his mother died in 1881. '
The court tried the cause without the intervention of a jury, and, at plaintiff’s instance, declared the law to-be, “that upon the facts agreed upon, and the pleadings in the case, the finding and judgment should be for the plaintiff,” and refused to declare that the plaintiff and his mother were seized as tenants in common of an undivided half interest each, in the premises, during the-minority of the plaintiff, and that he could only recover *525an undivided one-hall of the premises in controversy, during his minority. The counsel for plaintiff in error contends, that the declaration of law given for plaintiff is erroneous, because, “it allowed the plaintiff to recover the possession for all time to come, notwithstanding he was entitled, at most, only during his minority.”
The action of ejectment is a possessory action. There is no allegation in his petition of the extent of his title, but only of his right to the possession. If that is an exclusive right, -he is entitled to the entire premises, for the time that right of possession continues. If only to possession in common with others, he will have a judgment accordingly. Canole v. Hurt, 78 Mo. 649, does not decide otherwise. Whether the plaintiff and his mother, while they both lived, were tenants in common, or joint tenants, or what the relation between them was with respect to the land, it is not necessary to determine; it was their homestead, and, at her death, it was his. She had no right to dispose of it, and the parties claiming under her acquired no title as against him, which will prevent a recovery in this action. This, we think, settled by the case of Canole v. Hurt, supra. If it were otherwise, the head of the family dying, it is in the power of his widow, not only to deprive herself of a home, but to turn her children out of the homestead, and give it to strangers. This case illustrates the wisdom of the law makers in the provision made for the family.
Rogers died in March, 1873. His widow married again in December, 1873, and, having joined with her second husband in a conveyance of the land to strangers, died in 1881, leaving plaintiff, the only child of her first marriage, without a home if her conveyance is to be held as passing the title. The following language of Commissioner Philips, in the report of the commission in Canole v. Hurt, supra, will show that counsel for plaintiff in error has misconceived that case : “The construction of this act must, therefore, be that the right to hold *526and enjoy the estate was in no wise interrupted by the' death of the widow. The first child, during its minority, holds not by inheritance, but by virtue of the homestead law. And as the absolute fee, which the widow took, was burdened with the homestead interest and right of the first child, and as the after-born child is not claiming, nor, indeed, can claim any right under the homestead act as such, but solely by the law of descent from the mother, it takes an interest in the fee, but burdened with the paramount right to the possession of the first •child, during its minority.” And that was a contest between the child of the first and the child of the second marriage, and under an act which gave the widow a title as fee simple to the homestead, which is not now the law. Here it is a contest between the child of a father, who •died seized of the premises, and strangers.
The judgment is affirmed.
All concur.