— This action was brought to obtain an accounting between plaintiff and defendant as tenants in common, and a recovery from the latter, it being charged that defendant had excluded plaintiff from his-rightful interest in the common estate and had also committed waste thereon to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $3,994, for which judgment was asked with other relief.
There were several amendments of plaintiff’s original statement of the cause of action and to each of them defendant answered, except to the last. As to that, plaintiff’s petition was finally taken as confessed and upon further hearing, a judgment against the-defendant for the sum of $3,447.77 was rendered, February 20, 1888, at the January term of the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri. At that-term no motion of any sort was thereafter filed by defendant until April 4, 1888, when it moved “to set. *423aside the judgment” for reasons appearing in the statement accompanying this opinion. That motion was duly heard but was carried over to the next term and ultimately overruled, June 12, 1888. At the latter (the April) term, defendant took the now pending appeal, after filing its exceptions.
On this record arises at once a question of a technical nature; but one which a proper regard for the correct administration of law forbids us to ignore.
Defendant interposed no motion for new trial or in arrest in the trial court. Its motion to set aside the judgment was filed more than thirty days after the date of the judgment. That motion is not based on any irregularity of procedure. Its grounds assign only judicial errors in the proceedings, the chief of which being (and on that particular stress is laid here) that the facts of the last petition do not sustain the judgment which the trial court gave.
To warrant a review of such errors, upon an appeal taken in the circuit court, the statute law requires that such appeal be taken at the term at which the final judgment occurs. (Revised Statutes, 1889, sec. 2248.) An undisposed of motion for new trial or in arrest, seasonably filed, will'suspend the finality of a judgment (for the purpose of appealing) until such motion be determined. But where no motion of that kind is interposed, and the term of court ends, the pendency of such a’ late motion as that- in question now, to set aside the judgment, will not have the effect to keep the antecedent record open until the next term for a general review, as a matter of right.
The trial court, in its discretion, after expiration of time to move for a hew trial or in arrest, may set aside a judgment during the term at which it was rendered upon any ground that may satisfy the conscience of the court. Whether it may exercise that discre*424tionary power afterwards, by carrying over a motion filed at the term of judgment, we need not decide. It is better to avoid, as far as possible, intimating an opinion on a point not in judgment. The trial court in the present case overruled the motion,-so its power to sustain it does not come under review. It is evident that its denial of the motion (in view of the reasons assigned therein) presented no tenable ground for imputing error to the trial court because of that denial.
A motion to set aside a judgment for irregularity may be entertained by the trial court within three years after the judgment entry (Revised Statutes, 1889, sec. 2235), and a ruling upon such a motion may be reviewed upon appeal taken in season, with reference to that ruling. But such an appeal at a term subsequent to that at which the original judgment becomes final, cannot properly be extended to secure a review of errors that may have entered into the judgment. Even giving the motion “to set aside” a standing similar to-one based on an irregularity of procedure, it could not rightly be held to open up the same range of review of errors which a writ of error would secure. To accomplish that object, under the law of Missouri, the appeal in the trial court must be made at the term at which the judgment becomes a final one. Lengle v. Smith (1871), 48 Mo. 276.
The present appeal, from the’ decision overruling the “motion to set aside,” is groundless, so far as any irregularity is concerned; and,, having been taken too late to reach a review of any alleged errors with which the- original judgment may be tainted, the only appropriate action to be taken is to affirm the judgment, which is done accordingly. The other judges of this division concur in affirming, for reasons given in a separate opinion. '
*425SEP ABATE OPINION.
Black, P. J.— By the opinion just filed it is held ■that the appeal taken in this case brings nothing before this court for review. To this ruling I do not agree, nor do I agree to any of the reasons assigned therefor.
To an understanding of this appeal it is necessary to set out a concise history of the suit. As it now •stands, it is an action to require the defendant to account for the use of one undivided half of a strip of land used by the defendant as a right of way, and for the one-half of rock taken therefrom. The plaintiff filed an amended petition, to which defendant filed answer. It was set up in this answer, among other things, that if the plaintiff and defendant were tenants in common, then the plaintiff’s remedy was an action of account. Thereupon the plaintiff filed a second •amended and supplemental petition, setting out at great length the grounds for an accounting. At the ■October term, 1887, the defendant moved to strike out this amended and supplemental petition because it stated an entirely new cause of action, which motion was overruled, and the defendant excepted and at the same time filed a bill of exceptions. The defendant •did not file any other or further answer.
The cause came on for trial at the January term, 1888, and the defendant failing to appear, the plaintiff produced evidence and obtained judgment for $3,447. The defendant filed no motion for new trial or in arrest. At the same term, but more than four days after the rendition of the judgment, the defendant filed a motion to set the judgment aside. This motion was ■argued and submitted at the same term, the January “term, but the court took the same under advisement until. the next term, it being the April term, at which *426term the court overruled the motion, and the defendant then sued out this appeal.
Two affidavits were read in evidence on the hearing of the motion to set aside the judgment, showing the reasons why the defendant’s counsel failed to appear at the trial; but the fact that the cause was heard when counsel for defendant were absent is not made a ground for setting the judgment aside. Of the twenty grounds assigned in that motion, those now relied upon fall under these heads: First, the court erred in overruling defendant’s motion to strike out the supplemental petition; second, the amended and supplemental petition fails to state any cause of action whatever.
1. It is well settled law in our practice that there is a plain distinction between mere matters of exception and errors appearing upon the face of the record proper. In order to give this court the right to review rulings which are matters of exception, the exceptions must be taken at the time the rulings are made, and they must be again brought forward in the motion for a new trial as grounds therefor, and they must be made matter of record by a bill of exceptions. The refusal of the court to strike out a pleading is a matter of exception and nothing more. Bateson v. Clark, 37 Mo. 31. The motion to set aside the judgment filed in this ease cannot be treated as a motion for a new trial because it was not filed within four days after judgment as the statue requires. As the defendant filed no motion for a new trial, it follows that the alleged error in refusing to strike out the amended and supplemental petition is not before us for review.
2. The next question is, whether the grounds of the motion, to the effect that the petition states no cause of action, can be considered on this appeal.
Our code of civil procedure is explicit in this, — that the objection that the petition does not state facts suf*427ficient to constitute a cause of action, is not waived by a failure to make the objection by way of demurrer or answer. Eevised Statutes, 1879, section 3519. In view of this and section 3776 it has been held, time and again, that this court will reverse for error appearing on the face of the record proper, though no exceptions were taken in the trial court. The record proper consists of the summons, pleadings, verdict and judgment. The failure of the petition to state facts constituting a cause of action, is an error appearing upon the face of the record proper. And hence it has been held in a long line of cases from an early day down to the present time, that this court will reverse a judgment had on a petition which fails to state any cause of action, though no such objection was made by motion in arrest or for new trial or in any other way in the trial court, unless the defect is one which is cured by the statute of amendments and jeofails. Burns v. Patrick, 27 Mo. 434; Bateson v. Clark, 37 Mo. 31; Jones v. Miller, 38 Mo. 363; Miller v. Davis, 50 Mo. 572; Peltz v. Eichele, 62 Mo. 177; State ex rel. v. Griffith 63 Mo. 548; McIntire v. McIntire, 80 Mo. 471; State ex rel. v. Scott, 104 Mo. 26; Smith v. Burrus, 106 Mo. 96. It does not follow that every defect which might be reached by motion in arrest will be available without such motion. As said in Mclntire v. Mclntire, supra, the error must be a material one, and again in State, etc. v. Scott, supra, it must be a defect of a fatal character.
But it is said this appeal is of no avail to defendant because not allowed until the term after ■ that at which the judgment was rendered. A. motion for new trial filed at the proper time and term and continued over to the next term, suspends the judgment, so that a bill of acceptions may be filed and appeal taken at the term when the motion is overruled. Such a bill and appeal will bring up for review all the exceptions *428taken during the progress of the trial at the prior term. Riddlesbarger v. McDaniel, 38 Mo. 138; Gray v. Parker, 38 Mo. 160; Henze v. Railroad, 71 Mo. 636; Givens v. Van Studdiford, 86 Mo. 149; Randolph v. Mauck, 78 Mo. 468. And the filing of a motion for rehearing in an appellate court after the adjournment of the term, under an order allowing the motion to be filed in vacation, continues the cause so that the opinion filed does not become the opinion of the court until the motion is disposed of at the next term. State ex rel. v. Philips, 96 Mo. 570.
As a general rule, a judgment cannot be set aside by the court rendering it after the term at which it was rendered; but during the term it may be set aside. And a motion filed at that term for that purpose and continued over to the next term suspends the judgment, so that' the motion may be sustained at the succeeding term. Until the motion is disposed of, the judgment is not a finality. Memphis v. Brown, 94 U. S. 715; Amy v. Watertown, 130 U. S. 301; Baker v. Baker, 51 Wis. 538; Windett v. Hamilton, 52 Ill. 180. While, under the authorities before cited, this court will on appeal or writ of error reverse for errors appearing upon the face of the record proper, though no exception was made in the trial court, still it is proper practice to make the objection in the trial court, even where the alleged defect is a radical one appearing on the face of the record proper, thus giving that court an opportunity to correct the errors. A motion to set aside a judgment strikes at its validity, and when filed at the term at which the judgment was rendered and continued to the next term has the effect to suspend the judgment so that that the court can act upon the motion the same as at the prior term. The proceedings remain in the breast of the court until the motion is disposed of, and the appeal taken at the time when *429the motion is overruled brings up the same matters foi\ review as if taken at the term when judgment was entered. We are, therefore, in duty bound to examine the petition in this case, and if it states no cause of action, if it is radically defective, reverse the judgment.
3. Guided by the foregoing considerations we come to the objections urged against the sufficieny of the supplemental petition. This pleading states in substance, these facts: That one Stevens, being the owner of one hundred and two acres of land conveyed the same to Hannah Parsons and George S. Park in 1844, and the grantees then took possession; that Hannah Parsons died thereafter and prior to the sixth of July, 1872, leaving four heirs; that on the last named date Park and one of the four heirs of Hannah Parsons, by their contract in writing, sold the land to the plaintiff, Childs, and he then entered into possession; that on the fifteenth of September, 1873, the said four heirs of Hannah Parsons conveyed the undivided one-half of the one hundred and two acres to George S. Park; that prior to May 17, 1882, the defendant or its predecessor built and operated its road across the one hundred and two acres of land, but did not acquire any title nor assume to hold adversely to the owners ; that on the last named date George S. Park conveyed to the defendant company the undivided one-half of a right of way one hundred feet wide across the track of land; but the conveyance was made “subject to the rights of .the plaintiff in and to the other undivided half of said right of way;” that on the fourteenth of August, 1883, George S. Park, in execution of the before mentioned contract of date July 6, 1872, conveyed to the plaintiff said land, which conveyance was made subject to the conveyance made by Park to the defendant company of the undivided half of the right *430•of way; “and, by the express terms of said deed, the other undivided half of said right of way through said land was assigned, without recourse, with all rights of action of the same, and all claims for damage against said railroad company, so far as said Park was able to transfer his rights thereto.” Several deeds of correction are also set out, which need not be noticed; and it is alleged that plaintiff sold the land to one Darling in ■June, 1887, which was after the commencement of this suit, but by the terms of the sale he reserved and retained his claim against the defendant for use of the premises and for stone taken therefrom.
It is further alleged that the railroad was built and in operation over said land on and before sixth of July, 1872, and has been operated thereon ever since that date; that the “defendant’s occupancy of said right of way * * * has been of such a nature as to preclude the use and occupancy of the same by the plaintiff so as to derive any benefit or profit therefrom;” that from 1872 to the date of the deed from plaintiff to Darling the defendant quarried and removed from the strip of land large quantities of stone and has refused to account for the same and the use •of the land. An account for the one-half of the stone and use of the property is then set out amounting to $3,994 with a prayer for accounting and for judgment.
The defendant company, it will be seen, has had possession of the strip of land since July 6, 1872, to the commencement of this suit in August, 1883, and during that time operated its road thereon, the plaintiff being in the possession of the residue of the tract. These facts, it is urged by the defendant, show such an acquiescence on the part of the land owner as to amount to a waiver of his rights, save the right to be •compensated for the Value of the land, estimated as of .the date of the first entry by the defendant.
*431The ease of Provolt v. Railroad, 57 Mo. 256, cited is support of the foregoing proposition was an action of ejectment. One railroad company commenced proceedings to condemn the property, and, while they were pending, entered into possession of the land and constructed a railroad thereon with the knowledge of “the land owner, and without objection from him. The road was then leased to another company. Subsequently the report of the commissioners was confirmed, but the compensation awarded was not paid. The plaintiff, it was held, could not recover. The conclusion reached is placed on the ground that he waived prepayment, because of the fact that he was present all the time, witnessed the progress of the work, and made no objection to .the construction of the road before payment of the compensation.
Baker v. Railroad, 57 Mo. 265, was also an action of ejectment. The plaintiff had agreed to relinquish the right of way on condition that the company should comply with the law in regard to fencing and making cattle guards and farm crossings, and the company took possession and constructed its road by the consent of the land owner, but did not perform the conditions upon which it was to receive the deed of relinquishment. In that case there was a clearly proved permission given to the company to construct the road over the land, and because of this consent it was held the plaintiff could not eject the company. By attending to the facts of the cases just cited, it will be seen that they hold the land owner may waive prepayment ■of the compensation, and when he does this, or permits the company to take possession and construct its road, he cannot treat the company as a wrongdoer and sue in ejectment or trespass. The permission or license to enter and construct the road may be inferred from attending circumstances. But it is equally well *432settled that when a railroad company builds its road upon land without having acquired a right of way under the eminent domain law, and without the consent of the owner, the latter may recover in ejectment or trespass. Mere inaction on his part, though he is informed of the fact that the company has entered or constructed its road upon his land, will not deprive him of these remedies. Walker v. Railroad, 57 Mo. 275; Bradley v. Railroad, 91 Mo. 493; Railroad v. Randolph Town Site Co., 103 Mo. 452.
The doctrine that the public has an interest to be protected after the railroad has been constructed, has been invoked in some adjudicated cases to protect the company, but such a doctrine cannot justify a wrongful entry and use of private property. The constitution secures the right to have the compensation for the property taken paid to the owner or into court for his use before his property rights are disturbed; and this right guaranteed by the present constitution and former statutes cannot be nullified by any supposed public interest. In this state the duty of instituting proceedings to condemn is devolved upon the railroad company, and the company must obtain the assent of the property owner to enter and construct its road or procure the right so to do by condemning the property, otherwise it will be a wrongdoer, and the property owner has the same remedies that he would have against any other like wrongdoer. The mere fact that he saw the road build upon his land, and did not object, will be no protection to the company, unless such want of objection and the other circumstances justify the inference of consent on his part. Speaking of some of the decided cases Mr. Lewis says: “So far as regards mere acquiescence as an estoppel, it seems to us the cases aré not well founded. There is no law which compels a man to protest against a wrongful *433entry upon Ms land at the peril of being held to ratify it. Both parties know their rights. The law provides a mode in which the party seeking to obtain property for public use may do so lawfully. If such party disregards the mode prescribed and enters upon property without consent, it is a wrongdoer and can acquire no rights by expending money on the property. Nor does the owner lose any rights by mere delay.” Lewis on Eminent Domain, sec. 648.
While it appears from the petition that defendant has been in possession of the strip of land from 1872 to the commencement of this suit in 1883, and during that time operated its road over the same, still, it does not necessarily follow that plaintiff or any of his grantors assented to such use and occupancy. Such a conclusion cannot be drawn in the face of the allegation that defendant or its predecessor built its road on the land without having acquired any title thereto or interest therein. The holders of the legal title could have maintained ejectment at any time from 1872 to May 17, 1882, 'at which date the defendant procured a deed from Park for an undivided one-half of the strip occupied as a right of way. The defendant was also liable for the rental value of the property, and for waste in such an action, or in a suit brought for that purpose only, on the facts stated in the petition in this case. Whether the plaintiff could have maintained such a suit on his equitable title and possession we need not determine; for the deed from Park to him not only vested in him the legal title to the undivided half of the land used as a right of way, but it assigned to him all claims for damages which Park had or held against the defendant. Such a claim for damages may be assigned. Chouteau v. Boughton, 100 Mo. 406. It follows from what has been said that the petition shows *434a good cause of action in favor of the plaintiff for one-half of the rental value of the strip of land, and for one-half of the value, of the stone taken therefrom down to May 17, 1882.
4. When the defendant acquired the deed from Park on the last named date for the undivided one-half of the land used as a right of way it and the plaintiff became tenants in common. The point is made that the deed from Park to plaintiff does not convey the undivided half of the right of way. That deed first conveys the entire land including the right of way by the use of the words grant, bargain and sell, and then says ‘ ‘subject, however, to the conveyance made by said Park of one undivided half of the right of way through said land to” the railroad company. Thus far this deed vested in plaintiff the undivided one-half of the land, including the right of way. Eor title to this half the plaintiff does not, therefore, stand on the subsequent assignment clause before mentioned. The plaintiff and the defendant being tenants in common, the further question-arises whether plaintiff can recover for rents and rock removed while that relation existed.-
One tenant may recover in ejectment against a cotenant by showing that defendant ousted him of did some act amounting to a total denial of his rights as such cotenant. 1 Revised Statutes, 1879, sec. 2248. Should the plaintiff recover possession he would, under our statute, be entitled to recover damages for waste and for . rents and profits. Another section of the statute, 3111, makes ope tenant in common liable to a cotenant for waste. Where the land is free to all of the tenants in common so that each may enter and -enjoy the premises and one of them enters, he cannot be made to pay rent to the other cotenant who neglects or refuses to do the same. But where one tenant occupies the whole of the land and excludes his coten*435■ant from entering and enjoying the property, he will be liable to the tenant thus excluded for the latter’s proper share of the rental value of the property, as well as for waste, and this without regard to any .statute like that of 4 and 5 Anne.
Trespass will lie in favor of an ousted cotenant. Freeman on Cot. & Part. [2 Ed.], sec. 300; 11 Am. & Eng. Encyclopedia of Law, 1101. An actual ouster or turning out is not necessary, but the act or declaration constituting the ouster must be unequivocal and notorious. Warfield v. Lindell, 30 Mo. 272. Ouster is the actual turning out or keeping excluded the party ■entitled to the possession of any real property. Bouvier’s Law Dictionary. Any resistance preventing the plaintiff from obtaining effective possession of the land of the cotenancy is an actual ouster. Freeman on Cotenancy and Partition [2 Ed.], sec. 301. The petition shows that defendant continued to use the property as and for a railroad right of way. The property being farm land, such a use must of necessity have excluded the plaintiff. Besides this it is in terms .alleged that defendant’s occupancy of the right of way has been of such a nature as to preclude the use and •occupancy of the same by the plaintiff so as to derive any benefit or profit therefrom. An ouster is sufficiently disclosed by the petition. It follows that the plaintiff could have maintained ejectment for his •interest in the land, and in that or an independent suit recovered damages for rents and waste.
5. It is alleged that the defendant excavated and removed.from- the land a large quantity of rock, the ..amount and value being stated, and sold a part thereof and used the residue in the improvement of its road at various places and has refused to account for the rock ■so sold and used, and that the removal of the rock diminished the value of the land. Waste on the part *436of a tenant for life or for years, it has been held, consists in such acts as tend to the permanent loss of the owner in fee, or to destroy or lessen the value of the inheritance. Proffitt v. Henderson, 29 Mo. 325. Waste is an injury done or suffered by the owner of the present estate which tends to destroy or lessen the value of the inheritance. Cooley on Torts [2 Ed.], 392. Accordingly it was held in the Proffitt case just cited, that the cutting of timber would not1 be waste if cutting it enhanced the value of the land, but would be-waste if the cutting of the timber produced lasting damage to the inheritance or lessened its value. Applying these principles of -law to the averments of the petition, it must be held the defendant committed waste in excavating, removing, selling and using the-rock.
6. The second amended and supplemental petition sets up a continuation of the acts complained of, from the date of the filing of the first ■ petition down to the date at which plaintiff sold the property, which was subsequent to the commencement of this suit. It appears on the face of the judgment that damages were assessed down to the last named date, and it is insisted that this is error. Section 3573, Eevised Statutes 1879, provides: “A party may be allowed, on motion, to file an amended or supplemental petition, answer or reply, alleging facts material to the cause, or praying for any other or. different relief, order or judgment.” This section-of the' code, it will be seen, provides for filing a supplemental petition. Such a pleading was well known in equity, and as many of the sections of our practice act are taken from rules of equity pleading, it is proper to look to such rules for the purpose of ascertaining what the statute means by a supplemental petition. In equity pleading the extent of relief could be enlarged by-stating a continuation of the same *437grievance after the commencement of the suit, and the new matter was brought in by way of a supplemental .bill, and this may be done under our code. Ward v. Davidson, 89 Mo. 445. That was an equity suit, it is true, but the statute before quoted applies to legal as well as equitable causes of actions. It seems to be held in other code states that matter showing a continuation of the same wrong may be brought on the record by a supplemental petition and damages recovered for the continuation of such grievance down to the filing of such pleading. 1 Boone on Code Pleading, sec. 40.
The second amended and supplemental petition was framed on the theory that the suit was one in equity for an accounting; and the further contention is that the judgment cannot stand, because if the petition discloses any cause of action it is one of law. The first amended petition was framed on the theory that the suit was one at law, and the charge seems to have been made because the defendant insisted in its answer to the first amended petition that the suit should be in equity. We pass over the question made by the plaintiff that the defendant is now estopped from questioning his right to sue in equity. If we are right in what .has been said, the plaintiff has, on the face of his last pleading, on action at law for all the damages sued for. Nor is it necessary to say whether he may or may not also sue in equity on the facts disclosed. It is enough for all the purposes of this case on the present record, to know that the petition sets forth facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action at law or in equity; for the judgment rendered is such as flows from the alleged facts.
And, if it be true that the petition discloses two causes of action which should have been separately stated, still that can be of no avail here; for the remedy in such a casé is by motion. Mooney v. Kennett, 19 Mo. *438551; Otis v. Mechanics’ Bank, 35 Mo. 128; Christal v. Craig, 80 Mo. 367. The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed.
Brace and Macfarlane, JJ., concur in-this opinion.