1 Cai. Cas. 394 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1803
We contend that on the circumstances as presented by the case, the judge ought to have directed for the defendant, and not for the plaintiff. The facts, indeed, are but limited ; some principles however are involved, which it is of the utmost importance to have decided. For, admitting that the defendant claimed under his father, still we insist the plaintiff, as appears from the case itself, is not entitled to recover. There is no evidence of title whatsoever from the expiration of the lease in 1758. That then, being only for three years, expired in 1761. After ’61, the lease is no evidence of a posessory right in the plaintiff to have the premises, unless subsequent acts of the defendant can be shewn equivalent to an acknowledgment that his title was under the lease. Without resorting to authorities, principles of law will bear out the position. The lessor’s right commenced in .1761. It was incumbent on him then to have entered, or have exacted some acknowledgment, which rendered the entry unnecessary. He was out of possession for 40 years without receipt of rent or profits; if his right did then accrue, and was not pursued, the defendant remaining in quiet possession, the court will not intend he held under the present plaintiffs. For the holding was tortious, against their right. If this be not so, where is the doctrine of the opposite side to carry us i If it be acceded to, atjy one entering under a lease, is forever to be supposed to hold under it; 200 years quiet possession might be shewn, and yet no title acquired. To evince, that when the lease determines, the plaintiff should have entered, Run. on Eject. 60 is fully in point.- “ Nor is a common person affected “ by the statute of limitations, where the possession is in “ the hands of his tenant, who has paid him rent within the
Harrison contra. It has ever been a principle of law, that where a person enters under a title from another, the person so entering never can dispute the right of the original holder. So where the relation of landlord and tenant has subsisted between the parties, though there should be a holding over, the tenant in an action against him cannot contradict the title of the lessor. If this be a mistake, it is so in the very foundations of the law. For the general principles thus stated, and to shew that a lessee cannot dispute the title under which he has entered, the court will find an authority in 2 Black. Rep. 1259.
Hoffman in reply. That a jury may infer from circumstances is not disputed ; but then there must be legal evidence of those circumstances before the court. That which was given, was inconclusive ; it rested on hearsay, and ought not to have had any weight with the court. The sale of the premises was merely hearsay, and it is to be observed, that the vendue was of personal estate, as if, land was totally out of the question : the lease is much relied on, expired in ¡761. Had we then disavowed holding un~ • tier the lessor of the plaintiff", the statute would have run. Can there be a stronger disavowal, than taking to ourselves the rents and profits for forty years ? After thirty years the law will intend an adverse possession. It is not reasonable that a proprietor should permit a person to go on for forty years, improving, and then set up an old dormant lease, after lying by so long. The jury ought to have been directed to presume an adverse holding, for the instant we are called upon, we assert our own right, and deny that of the lessor. On the grounds contended for by the plaintiff, had the lease been dated on the day of first taking possession of this country by the British, it would have been equally efficacious. The interests of the community require a different doctrine; if, for no other reason, the plaintiff ought t©
Per curiam delivered by Livingston, J. This is a motion for a new trial for misdirection of the judge, and because of the verdict being against evidence.
It appears that Joseph Marshall, father of the defendant, in 1758, held the premises by virtue of a lease from Thomas Fitch and John Raymond for 3 years, reserving one shilling annual rent. It did not appear that any rent had been paid or demanded. In 1774 Marshall died on the premises ; in 1775 Thomas Fitch died, one of the lessors, and his heir at law
Joseph Marshall died intestate, in 1774,when letters of administration were granted to his son.
A witness also declared, that after Joseph Marshall’s death, he was present at a vendue of the personal estate, when the auctioneer and the administrator, not in the defendant’s hearing, told him that the former had sold the possesson of the lot in question to the defendant. This witness was a brother and neighbour of the defendant, and has always supposed he held the said land by virtue of this sale. The defendant has been in possession since 1774, claiming the land as his own.
On this evidence, the chief justice charged the jury, that if they believed the defendant held under his father they should find for the plaintiff, which they did accordingly.
This direction and finding of the jury were both correct.
When a person enters under another, and transfers the possession, his grantee is supposed to hold under the same-title. Although the lease be expired, he will be regarded 1 as holding by-consent of the original landlord, and as his tenant at will; unless he can shew that, since the expiration of it, he has acquired a new title, either from, or paramount to that of the party under whom possession was
The defendant is not only his son, but the cotemporaneous declarations of the vendue master and administrator, although not in the hearing of the defendant, were, properly admitted, and unless the defendant produced some other title, would satisfy any reasonable mind that such was the case.
There can then be no adverse possession ; for until 1774, Joseph Marshall did not set up, for aught that appears, any title to that of Fitch, and since that time twenty years, deducting the period of the British war, have not elapsed. The rule, sherefore, for a new trial must be discharged with costs, and the plaintiffs have judgment.
England v. Slade
The case is exactly so.
See Stokes v. Berry, a Salk, 241.
B. 3, C. 2, title ejectment
Doe v. Lawrence. *n this case the lessee who was the defendant, had paid rent to the plaintiff!