5 Watts 13 | Pa. | 1836
>We think there is nothing in the first error assigned. It has certainly not been the practice, when a deed is regularly proved or acknowledged in conformity to our act of assembly, purporting to convey the right of a warrantee or patentee of land, to the plaintiff in the ejectment, first to make proof before such deed can be admitted in evidence, that the grantor therein named, bearing the same name as the warrantee or patentee, was the identical person to whom it was granted by the commonwealth. This is a matter of fact which must be submitted to the decision of the jury after all the evidence on both sides shall have been given. And as regards the admission of the deposition of William George, the other matter embraced in this first error, it is evident that some part, if not the whole of it, was admissible and free from all objection: But it was objected to by the counsel of the plaintiff in error in toto, and, therefore, the court were right in not sustaining the objection. If any part was not properly admissible, the objection ought to have been confined to such part, for if this had been done, the adverse party might have waived the reading of the part objected to, or have assented to its being suppressed.
The second error assigned consists of an exception to the answers of the court below to the first and second points submitted by the counsel for the plaintiff in error to the court for their instruction on them to the jury. In these points the court was requested to instruct the jury, that, according to all the evidence given in the cause, the improvement commenced by William George on the land in dispute, under which the defendant in error, who was the plaintiff below, claimed, was abandoned and of no validity whatever, as against the claim of the plaintiff in error to the land under his improvement and settlement. The court, however, refused to give this instruction to the jury, and submitted the question of abandonment to them to be decided as a matter of fact. In this we think the court were clearly wrong; for, from the evidence of the defendant in error, as well as that of the plaintiff in error, the improvement, upon which the defendant in error relied, in addition to his warrant, survey, and patent, to establish his right to the land, was commenced in 1822, and was never concluded by a personal resident settlement upon it, though more than six years elapsed afterwards, before any pretence or colour of right attached to the land under the warrant. An improvement upon vacant land is nothing of itself; and can give the person making it no right whatever to the land, unless it be prosecuted with reasonable diligence, and consummated by an actual personal resident settlement thereon, with a manifest intention of making it a place of abode., and the meaná of supporting a family, and was continued from time to time,
These observations show also that, the matters embraced in the third and last error assigned, would not have prejudiced the plaintiff in error with the jury, and that he has no ground for complaint on account of the charge of the court relative to them.
Judgment affirmed.