This appeal cannot prevail. The action was ejectment. Henry Fox was the common source of title. The defendants hold under conveyances from his heirs at law and widow. The plaintiffs base their title upon a will made by him in December, 1866, which, although he died in October, 1867, was not admitted to probate until 1896.
As a defense the defendants allege that they were purchasers of the premises in good faith and for a valuable consideration from the heirs of Henry Fox, who died in 1867, seized of the premises in question, and that no will devising them made by Henry Fox was, within twenty-eight years after his death, either admitted to probate or recorded in the office of the surrogate of Monroe county, or established by the final judgment of any court, except that a certain instrument in writing was, shortly after his death, admitted to probate by the surrogate of said county, but was, on the twenty-first of August, 1869, in an action in the Supreme Court in which all the parties interested under said pretended will were parties, adjudged and decreed by a judgment of that court to be void for the incompetency of the alleged testator. All .these facts were established upon the trial and were undisputed.
It was formerly provided by the Eevised Statutes and now by the Code of Civil Procedure that under circumstances, *46such as are alleged and established in this case, a purchaser shall not be affected by a devise of real property made by a person who died seized of it. But it also provides that if at the time of the testator’s death the devisee is within the age of twenty-one years, or if the will was concealed by one or more of the heirs of the testator, the limitation of four years created by that statute does not begin until the expiration of one year from the removal of such disability, or the delivery of the will to the devisee or his representatives, or to the proper surrogate. That the defendants were purchasers- in good faith and for a valuable consideration was firmly established upon the trial. One of the defendants testified, without contradiction, that he knew nothing of the alleged will until a year preceding the trial, and that the consideration of the deed to him was eight thousand two hundred and fifty dollars. As this proof was corroborated by the deeds and was uncontroverted it must be regarded as true.
The appellants seek to avoid the effect of this four years’ limitation upon the grounds: 1. That at the time of the testator’s death, the plaintiffs, who claim to be devisees under his will of 1866, were within the age of twenty-one years; and, 2, that the will was concealed by one or more of the heirs of the testator. We think it impossible to properly hold that the plaintiffs -were within the age of twenty-one years at the death of the testator. They were not then born, nor were they born until years afterwards. Certainly this exception was not intended to cover unborn children, especially before gestation. If this exception were to be extended to such a case, titles to real estate would become unsettled and rest upon doubtful and uncertain foundations.
The contention of the appellants, that the will of 1866 was concealed by one of the heirs of the testator, and, hence, falls within another exception to the limitation provided by the statute, is unfounded. In 1869 a litigation arose between the heirs at law of the decedent to which they and the widow were parties, whereby it was sought to set aside a subsequent will of the testator on the ground of his incompetency. Dur*47ing the progress of that litigation the will of 1866 was introduced in evidence, and was made a part of the record. The only proof of concealment contained in the appeal book is that after the death of Charles Fox, the plaintiff’s father, the will was found among other comparatively valueless papers in a box in an unfastened trunk in the attic in the house where he had lived. It is obvious that the existence of that will was known to the decedent’s widow, the plaintiff’s father, and to all the other heirs of the decedent at the time of that trial, and that they were apprised of its contents. The concealment intended by the statute is such as leaves the devisees ignorant of their rights under the will, and deprives them of knowledge of its existence. The statute does not relate to a case where the devisees or some of them have knowledge or possession of the will, and it is taken from the possession of one by another and secreted or destroyed. (Cole v. Gourlay, 79 N. Y. 527, 533.) To establish concealment of a will within the meaning of the law, something more than mere silence or inaction must he shown. There must be some act, arrangement or contrivance of an affirmative character, where the purpose or design is to prevent its discovery.
On the trial the plaintiffs requested the court to submit to the jury the question whether the will of 1866 was concealed within the meaning of the statute. This request was denied, and "the plaintiffs excepted. We think there was not sufficient evidence to require or to justify the submission of that question, and that the court properly declined.
Although a number of other interesting questions were discussed upon the argument and upon the briefs of counsel, still, as the statute which we have considered is a bar to the plaintiffs’ action, it becomes unnecessary to decide or specially discuss them at this time.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Parker, Oh. J., G-ray, Bartlett and Cullen, JJ., concur; Vann, J., dissents; Werner, J., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed.