delivered the opinion of the court.
The deed from plaintiff to defendant describes by legal subdivisions the land conveyed, and it is admitted by defendant that the description covers or includes 154.41 acres of land, the full amount he claims to have purchased from plaintiff. But it is asserted that he understood his purchase was to include all the bottom land on the entire tract then owned by plaintiff; that the 17.90 acres in dispute is mostly bottom land; that it is not *319included in the description of the deed, but adjoins the land described on the east; that when plaintiff was showing him the land at the time of the negotiation for the sale, he, plaintiff, pointed out to defendant where the east boundary line ran, and that it was so described and located on the ground as to include the land in dispute; that relying upon plaintiff’s representations, he concluded the purchase, entered into possession, and made valuable improvements thereon. The main question to be determined is an equitable estoppel, set up by defendant against plaintiff’s right now to assert his title. To arrive at the merits of the case it is necessary first to clearly understand the situation of the parties as to the title at the time this suit was brought.
1. At the time plaintiff sold and conveyed to defendant 154.41 acres of the land, he was possessed of the legal title to the entire tract. It was burdened, however, with an equitable title in the State as purchaser at the foreclosure sale, which right, by the lapse of time and the execution of a sheriff’s deed, was liable to ripen into a full legal title. But upon payment to the State of the amount due under the decree, at any time within four months from the confirmation of the foreclosure sale, this equitable right would fall into the legal title: Cartwright v. Savage, 5 Or. 397, 399; Settlemire v. Newsome, 10 Or. 446; Flanders v. Aumack, 32 Or. 26 (51 Pac. 447: 67 Am. St. Rep. 504).
2. Thus plaintiff’s record title to that intended to be retained by him, as well as that conveyed by him to defendant, would be freed from the equity of the State, and defendant would have needed no other assurance of title than plaintiff’s deed. In the deed he received, he covenanted to pay to the State the amount of its judgment. It is manifest that this covenant was intended for plaintiff’s benefit, not only that the judgment should be paid, but that payment should be made in time to pre*320serve to him the legal title to that part of the land intended to be retained by him, as well as to render effective the deed plaintiff gave to the defendant. No time for such payment was named in the deed, nor is it shown by any satisfactory evidence dehors the deed that any time was agreed upon. Ordinarily where one agrees with another to pay a sum of money, or to do a thing, and no time is mentioned for the performance of such agreement, the law presumes that the money shall be paid, or the thing done within a reasonable time, and what a reasonable time is will be controlled by the circumstances of the case.
3. If the agreement is to pay the debt of the obligee, it is a promise to pay the same when it becomes due: Haas v. Dudley, 30 Or. 355, 362 (48 Pac. 168).
4. The circumstances presented by this case justify the inference that the judgment was to be paid not later than four months from the date of the confirmation of the sale, for otherwise plaintiff would lose his title to the land retained by him, and his deed to defendant would be insufficient to vest in defendant an unincumbered legal title to the part sold, which manifestly it was intended to do. It was not contemplated by the parties at the time of the sale that defendant should obtain a title through the State, but from plaintiff. By delaying payment until the legal title became vested in the State, and then securing from the State a conveyance of the entire tract to himself, he secured a legal title to land that he admits he had not bought, and to which he had no right, and this was done in violation of his covenant to preserve and protect plaintiff’s legal title to the remainder of the tract. By his acts he has made himself ex malificio plaintiff’s trustee of the title to the 111 acres of land not described in plaintiff’s deed to defendant, and in equity he is bound upon demand to reconvey the same. It is claimed in his behalf that he took the title in good faith, believing he *321had received from the State a deed only to that part of the land purchased by him from plaintiff. A careful examination of the record does not support this contention. Before final payment was made to the State he was apprised of the fact that the land now in dispute was not included in his deed from plaintiff. He mentioned the matter to L. A. Roberts, the local agent of the State, who had looked after defendant’s interest in the whole transaction. Roberts forwarded for defendant the amount of money due the State, requesting that a deed issue to defendant, without mentioning what such deed should contain. When Roberts received the deed he delivered it to defendant, saying: “I place this deed in your hands until I get this matter straightened.” Six days thereafter the deed was placed on record, but nothing was ever said to plaintiff about defendant having the deed, or about the mistake claimed to have been made in the original deed, and plaintiff did not learn of the issuance of the deed by the State until shortly before he commenced this suit. Under such circumstances can defendant resist plaintiff’s equitable right to assert his full legal title to the 111 acres of land by the equitable estoppel set up as to the 17.90 acres in controversy?
5. Under the most favorable circumstances before an estoppel can be raised there must be certainty to every intent, and the facts alleged to constitute it are not to be taken by argument or inference. 16 Cyc. 748. Mr. Justice Andrews in Trenton Banking Co. v. Duncan, 86 N. Y. 221, says:
“The authorities establish the doctrine that the owner of land may, by an act in pais, preclude himself from asserting his legal title. But it is obvious that the doctrine should be carefully and sparingly applied, and only on the disclosure of clear and satisfactory grounds of justice and equity.”
*322This case is cited and quoted from by this court in Clark v. Hindman, 46 Or. 67, 75 (79 Pac. 56). See, also, Ware v. Cowles, 24 Ala. 446 (60 Am. Dec. 482) ; Hubbard v. Insurance Co., 38 Iowa 325 (11 Am. Rep. 125). Moreover the party setting up the estoppel must be free from imputation of laches in acting upon the belief of ownership by one who has no right: Trenton Banking Co. v. Duncan, 86 N. Y. 221.
6. Without detailing the evidence it is sufficient to say that in our judgment defendant has not established the alleged estoppel by that clear and satisfactory evidence required by courts of equity. At the time of negotiating the sale plaintiff and defendant went upon the land and walked over a good part of it. They were accompanied by L. A. Roberts, who says he was looking after defendant’s interests. They then had a map or blue print of the premises, which showed the several subdivisions. There were some exterior fences on the lines, calculated to advise the parties as to the cardinal directions of the compass. It is testified, both by defendant and Roberts, that while they and plaintiff were along the north boundary of lot 3, section 18, and in the vicinity of the northwest corner thereof, plaintiff pointed southerly to a dead tree standing on the summit of a ridge, and said that the southeast corner of the land he was intending to sell to defendant was near that tree, and that the east line ran' from the tree on the hill down along the ridge to a pair of bars in the fence near the northeast corner of lot 3; that these two points are substantially the corners of the land conveyed by the deed, but it is denied by plaintiff that he represented or intended defendant to understand by what he said that the east line of’ the land sold ran along the ridge directly from the southwest corner to the pair of bars near the northeast corner of lot 3, thus dividing the lot diagonally. It is not asserted either by defendant or by his agent Roberts that he understood *323he was to get an irregularly shaped piece of land, such as the line they are contending for-would in fact make, but that such line was in fact a quarter-section line. A quarter-section line must necessarily run at right angles to the section line, extending along the north line of lot 3, the location of which line was pointed out to them at the time, and it does not seem reasonable that an intelligent person could have understood that a line so located, and running at an acute angle with the section line, was in fact the east boundary line of the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of that section. There were some fences in the neighborhood, upon the west boundary lines of this tract, which were calculated to advise defendant and his assistant of the true directions, and it appears from the testimony of Roberts, upon his cross-examination, that at the time he, with plaintiff and defendant, was examining the land he was confused, “turned around,” so far as directions were concerned, and that they took the supposed diagonal line for the true quarter-section line. It does not clearly appear that this confusion of his and defendant’s minds was caused by anything said or done by plaintiff, or that plaintiff, knowing of their confusion, took advantage of the situation. The wrong impression made at the time upon the minds of defendant and Roberts seems to have been the result of their own bewilderment, and not brought about by what plaintiff said or did. And again, as we understand the testimony of Roberts, given on cross-examination, he admits that what plaintiff said at the time, as to where the east line of the premises sold was, appears to him now to be consistent with plaintiff’s present contention, when he (Roberts) correctly understands the true courses and directions. He says:
“That might be for the reason that he told us the line followed near the ridge. He did not tell us the line ran across the bottom there. If we had examined that and measured that distance it would have been different.”
*324Neither does it appear that plaintiff put defendant into possession of the land in dispute, except that the latter soon afterwards leased his farm to another, who went into possession. A later tenant, supposing this land was included in the defendant’s farm, made some repairs upon the barn, and to some extent cultivated a small part of the land. But it does not appear that any considerable expenditure was made by defendant upon the disputed premises until after he had been informed that they were not included in the description contained in his deed.
7. The major portion of the improvements put upon the disputed premises was made after the issuance and recording of the state deed, which took place April 13, 1905. This suit was brought January 16, 1907. During that time defendant had said nothing to plaintiff about any errors in his own deed, nor that he had acquired the full legal title to the whole tract of land, but remained silent. It was only when he was compelled to answer the complaint in this suit that he set up an alleged fraud committed by plaintiff, to enable him to retain a title that he obtained through breach of his own contract. Here is laches accompanied by gross inequitable conduct by defendant, resulting in injury to plaintiff. Under such circumstances defendant is not in a position to ask a court of equity to construe doubtful and conflicting testimony in his favor, and for this reason, if for no other, the decree of the lower court ought to be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Affirmed.