If accepted in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs the evidence shows the following facts: In 1854 James ~W. Blackwell entered a tract of vacant land on Tellico River in Cherokee County, known as the Freeman land, and in the same year, (one witness said in 1864 or 1865) without obtaining a grant, executed his deed therefor to W. S. Gentry, the father of the plaintiffs and the defendant. Near the beginning of the Civil "War W. S. Gentry built a cabin on the land and put a tenant in it, who remained there ranging stock until the end of the war, and exercised other acts of dominion over the land until his death. He died in 1864, and his widow and the defendant then had charge of the land until her 'death which occurred in 1885 or 1887, listing it for taxation and annually paying the taxes thereon. The defendant, repeatedly admitting that the land was his father’s, said that the deed from Blackwell had been misplaced, lost or burnt and that he was going to get a release or quit-claim from the grantor, sell the land, and distribute the proceeds when collected among the heirs at law. *31At the date of his contract with Swan in 1909, and even after he had been sued for specific performance, he recognized their interest in the land and in the proceeds, if a sale should be effected. In 1900 he obtained a grant for the land upon a purported assignment of Blackwell’s certificate of survey, the validity of which the plaintiffs denied. On 25 July, 1916, the defendant in consideration of $1,962.49 conveyed the land to Swan’s assignee, and in 1922 the present suit was commenced.
This Court has recently emphasized the principle that the plaintiff’s right to impress a trust upon the proceeds arising from the defendant’s sale of the land is dependent upon the question of their right to impress such trust upon the title acquired by the defendant under his grant. If he held such title to the land in trust he likewise held in trust the proceeds arising from the sale. Little v. Bank of Wadesboro, ante, 1. It becomes necessary, therefore, to determine the legal relation of the parties at the time the grant was issued. Whether W. S. Gentry and his heirs acquired title by possession under the Blackwell deed as color, we need not inquire, because the evidence tends to show that after Gentry’s death his heirs (including the defendant, of course) claimed under him, and while' asserting such claim they were precluded from denying his title. Collins v. Swanson, 121 N. C., 67; Alexander v. Gibbon, 118 N. C., 796; Christenbury v. King, 85 N. C., 230; Johnson v. Watts, 46 N. C., 228; Thomas v. Kelly, ibid., 375. It appears then that the parties, as heirs of W. S. Gentry, claimed to be tenants in common of the land when the defendant obtained his grant. Did the grant change this relation?
Subject to certain exceptions there is a general rule that confidence characterizes the relation of cotenancy to such extent that while the relation exists it precludes one of the cotenants from purchasing, for his exclusive benefit, an adverse or outstanding claim of title. Chief Justice Pearson stated the principle in this language: “There is a fellowship between tenants in common. The law assumes they will be true to each other; the possession of one is the possession of all, and one is supposed to protect the rights of his cotenants and is not tolerated in taking an adversary position unless he acts in such manner as to expose himself to an action by his fellows on the ground of a breach of fealty; that is an actual ouster.” Day v. Howard, 73 N. C., 4. “If one of several tenants in common should buy in an outstanding title affecting the common property, equity will declare him to have purchased for the benefit of the others.” Saunders v. Gatlin, 21 N. C., 92. “The general rule is well settled that one cotenant cannot purchase an outstanding title or encumbrance, affecting the common estáte, for his own exclusive benefit, and assert such right against his cotenants.” Jackson *32 v. Baird, 148 N. C., 29. See, also, Woodlief v. Woodlief, 136 N. C., 138; McLawhorn v. Harris, 156 N. C., 111; Smith v. Smith, 150 N. C., 81; Troxler v. Gant, 173 N. C., 425; Everhart v. Adderton, 175 N. C., 403, 406; Ruark v. Harper, 178 N. C., 252; Note, 19 L. R. A., N. S. 591; Note, 37 L. R. A., N. S. 831.
Tlie evidence, if true, shows the defendant’s avowed purpose to bold the title obtained under bis grant for the benefit of all the heirs and to pay to each bis proportionate part of the proceeds derived from the sale to Swan’s assignee, and under these circumstances we must bold that there was evidence from which the jury might have inferred that the relation of cotenancy existed, and that it was admitted by the defendant as late as 1916. If this contention is sustained the cause is not barred by the statute of limitations. We have held that an action to have a party declared a trustee is barred by the lapse, not of three, but of ten years. C. S., 445; Sexton v. Farrington, 185 N. C., 339; Little v. Bank, supra.
As we are required to do in an appeal from a judgment dismissing the action as in case of nonsuit, we have treated the appeal as if the circumstances relied on by the plaintiffs were fully established. When the facts are developed upon the trial the jury may reject the plaintiffs’ contention entirely but we think the evidence as disclosed in the present record should have been submitted to-the jury, and to this end the cause is remanded to the lower court.
Error.