| Md. | Jun 13, 1889

Bryan, J.,

after stating the case a's above reported, delivered the opinion of the Court.

The lot ixi question was sold for taxes, and purchased by John Morrow in the month of October, eighteen hundred and sixty-two. The deed was executed by the Collector in November, eighteen hundred and sixty-three. He paid taxes for that year and for each successive year up to and including eighteen hundred and sixty-eight. In September, eighteen hundred and sixty-eight, he leased the lot for ninety-nine years, renewable forever, to Charles Shipley, at an annual rent of fifty-four dollars, payable semi-annually. Shipley paid this, rent up to September, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, and paid all the taxes on the lot from eighteen hundred and sixty-*286nine to eighteen hundred and eighty-seven, (both included,) with the exception of those accruing for the year eighteen hundred and seventy-five. The lot was sold for the' non-payment of these last mentioned taxes, and purchased in behalf of Shipley; and the sale was finally ratified and confirmed by the Circuit Court of Baltimore City. Shipley also paid an assessment for paving an alley in the rear of the lot; and paved the side walk in front of the lot; and has kept the j>avement clear of snow during the winter, and the gutters clear of grass during the summer, ever since he obtained his lease. He also put up a sign on the premises offering the lot for sale or lease, which has been always kept there, except when knocked down by disorderly persons.

We will assume that the tax proceedings under which Morrow purchased were irregular, and not efficient to maintain his title. Yet the deed was valid on its face, and was made by a public officer who had the right to sell the property for the unpaid taxes; provided he complied with the requirements of the law. It could under no circumstances he considered as conveying less than color of title. In Wright vs. Mattison, 18 Howard, 56, the Supreme Court said: “The Courts have concurred, it is believed without an exception, in defining ‘color of title’ to he that which in appearance is title, but which in reality is no title. They have equally concurred in attaching no exclusive or peculiar character or importance to the ground of the invalidity of an apparent or colorable title; the inquiry with them has been whether there was an apparent or colorable title, under which an entry or a claim has been made in good faith. ’ ’ To the same purport, is Baker vs. Swan’s Lessee, 32 Md., 358. The effect of an entry by one under color of title is very different from the entry of a mere tort feasor. Before the Act of 1852, a person holding merely by adverse possession, *287without written title, had possession only to the limits of his actual enclosure; while he who entered under color of title had actual possession to the extent of the boundaries set forth in his deed, although the title conveyed by it might be good for nothing. Haye vs. Swan’s Lessee, 5 Md., 248. The efficacy of color of title in this respect was as great as that of a deed conveying a valid and indefeasible title. Now Morrow having an apparent, though imperfect, right of possession pays the taxes on this lot. Of course the payment of taxes is not equivalent to an entry on land, and cannot ipso facto confer any title on the person who pays them. But when the payment is made by one who has a right of possession, it is a declaration that he is claiming the exercise of his right, because it is a discharge of the burdens which legally rest upon such right. It is a claim of ownership quite as distinct as a corporal entry on the vacant and unoccupied lot. The actual pedis possessio of the lot is not necessary to give him the benefit of his title such as it is. But the subsequent action of Morrow could leave no doubt that the payment of taxes was made in consequence of ownership claimed and exerted over the property. He leases the lot for ninety-nine years, and he and his representatives receive rent for it up to a short time previous to the institution of this suit. The tenant pays the rent and does the other acts above mentioned, which are clearly acts of ownership in connection with payment of rents. The seisin and possession of the land is supposed to be in Morrow, the lessor, while the lessee is supposed to be possessed, not of the land but of the term of years. 2 Blackstone’s Commentaries, 144. The possession of the lessee is the possession of the lessor or reversioner. We consequently see that Morrow and his representatives have been in possession of this lot from the date of his deed in November, eighteen hundred and sixty-three, until the present time; unless their possession was *288ousted by the entry made in belialf of the complainants in 1881. But we must not overlook the second sale for taxes made in eighteen hundred and seventy-seven. This sale was finally ratified and confirmed by the Circuit Court of Baltimore City. The ratification established a prima facie title in the purchaser which could not be overthrown, except by proof that the proceedings of the collector were irregular. Guisebert vs. Etchison, 51 Md., 488.

It is maintained that the entry in behalf of the complainants defeated the possession under both of these tax sales. We suppose that we are to take it as conceded that Austin Woolfork died in the year 1841, seised and possessed of this lot of ground in fee, and that the complainants acquired title in fee under his will. Although they never made any entry on the land, yet, it is well settled in this State and in most of the States, that the title of an owner of real estate always draws to itself the possession of vacant property. This possession has sometimes been called constructive; hut it is in no wise different in its legal effect from an actual visible occupation. Cresap vs. Hutson, 9 Gill, 269; Hoye vs. Swan’s Lessee, 5 Md., 237. ' Tlie'possession of Woolfork’s devisees would therefore continue until it was displaced by an adverse holding of some kind. As long as they held the legal title, they would retain their right of entry, unless it was taken away hy the Statute 21 James the First. And they might hy the use of reasonable force expel any person wrongfully holding the possession. Manning vs. Brown, 47 Md., 512. It is said that by the ancient common law, the disseisee was not only allowed hut required to expel the wrong-doer incontineyier, flagrante disseisina et maleficio; but that if he did not eject him within a reasonable time, he was put to his assise of novel disseisin. Bracton, 166. And at the present day, although under the Statute 8 Henry 6, *289chapter 9, where there is a wrongful but peaceable entry and a forcible detainer, the possession may be restored to the rightful owner by proceedings before a justice of the peace; yet by a clause of the same statute, this cannot be done where the wrong-doer has had three years peaceable enjoyment of the property. And this 'exception is enforced by 31 Elizabeth, chapter 11. It would seem to follow that the rightful owner can not by his own act expel a wrong-doer, who has had three years peaceful possession, holding adversely. We do not, however, care to pursue this inquiry, because this question has other aspects which we prefer to consider. Under a deed valid on its face Morrow and his representatives held undisturbed possession for twenty-four years; counting, of course, the possession of the lessee, as that of the reversioner. Their title therefore is perfect under the Statute of James ; except as against such persons as are within the disabilities therein mentioned. Parties seeking to overthrow a title prima facie good, must maintain their pretensions by proof; and as a consequence the party in possession has a right to defend himself by countervailing proof. And this contest is not to be decided by the act of one of the parties, but by the tribunals appointed by law for the decision of such controversies. The same remark will apply to the title under the second tax sale, which, as has been already said, is prima facie good, and it will make no difference if it is really invalid; as we will assume it to be. If I leave my house vacant for a few days, and on my return find that a stranger is occupying it against my will, my possession is not ousted. The intruder is merely a trespasser, and I may eject him with strong hand. And the same may be said of any other wrongful invasion of my possession, unless I have lost my right of summary ejection by lapse of time. Rut the distinction is palpable, between such cases and those where *290possession is held tinder aprima facie title. In Hoye vs. Swan’s Lessee, 5 Md., 248, the Court speak of “the obvious and important distinction, which the reported cases and elementary writers recognize between a possession taken by a'wrong-doer, and one taken by a person under title.” And it is said : “It appears to be immaterial whether the title be valid or not, provided the entry and claim be bona fide under that title.” Blachstone mentions the difference between an apparent right of possession which may be defeated by proving a better and an.actual right of possession, which will stand the test against all opponents. 2nd Booh, p. 196. He also shows that the extra-judicial and summary remedy of the legal owner to obtain restitution of his land by entry is confined to cases where a wrong-doer has only a bare or nahed possession; and that where an apparent right of possession exists the law will not suffer that right to be overthrown by the mere act or entry of the claimants. 3rd Book, 175 and 177 pp. There is always a right of entry in every case where an ejectment will lie; but it is a very different proposition when it is asserted that an entry under this right will defeat a possession held under color of title. The occasion does not require us to discuss more fully the nature and limitations of this right. It will sufficiently appear from what has been said, that in our opinion the entry in behalf of the complainants did not defeat the previous possession, and that their occupation of the premises is not lawful.

We have considered the case as if the ’ complainants were within the provisos of the Statute of 21 James the First. But the record informs us that one of the devisees under Woolfork’s will died during the late -war, and one in the year eighteen hundred and seventy-one. The question arises as to the effect of these deaths on the operation of the statute. The second section saves the rights of entry and action to all persons who, at the *291timo when their title first accrued, were within the age of one and twenty years, femes covert, non compotes mentis, imprisoned or beyond the-seas; provided, however, that such person, or persons, or his, her, or their heir, or heirs, should within ten years next after his or their full age, diseoverture, coming of sound mind, enlargement out of prison, or coming into this realm, or death, take benefit of, and sue forth the same, (the writs mentioned in the statute,) and at no time after the said ten years. We have quoted the identical words of the statute. The obvious meaning seems to he that the persons under the disabilities mentioned are not barred by twenty years, provided they make entries or bring actions within ten years after the removal of the disabilities, and their heirs are not barred, provided they proceed within ten years after the death of the ancestor. And this is believed to he the settled construction. In Doe vs. Jesson, 6 East, m. p. 84, Lord Ellenborough said: “The word death in that clause must mean and refer to the death of the person to tvhom the right first accrued, and whose heir the claimant is; and the statute meant that the heir of every person, to which person a right of entry had .accrued during any of the disabilities there stated, should have ten years from the death of his ancestor, to whom the right first accrued during the period of disability, and who died under such a disability, (notwithstanding the twenty years from the first accruing of the title to the ancestor should have before expired.)” And Mr. Preston in the second volume of Abstracts of Title says: “Although the ancestor may die under a disability, it is now settled contrary to the opinion of former times, that the heir, &c., must make his claim within the period of five years; and it seems to be the sound and now established true construction of the statute of non-claim on fines, that no one, except the person to whom the right first accrues is within the protection *292afforded by the saving clause in the statute of non-claim; and consequently, if A. having a present right of entry or of action, dies while laboring under a disability, his heir, though laboring under a disability, must, enter or claim within five years, or he will be barred by non-claim on the fine.” P. 341. The author was referring to the Statute of 4 Henry VII, which allows five years within which to avoid a fine levied with proclamations, and makes the usual saving in favor of persons under disability; but the same principle of construction must apply to the Statute of James. And indeed it is well established that the disability is protected, which exists at the time when the right of action first accnies; but the operation of limitations can not be prevented by cumulative or successive disabilities. Dugan vs. Gittings, 3 Gill, 138. Some cases suchas Cotterell vs. Dutton, 4 Taunton, 826, and others, are in conflict with the views which we have expressed, but we deem them to be overthrown by the weight of reason and authority. -We think that where a disability exists at the time when a right of entry on land accrues, and the person entitled dies during the disability, the heir has ten years to make his entry; and that he is not barred then unless twqpty years have elapsed since the right of entry first accrued. In other words he is entitled to twenty years from the origin of the title, and ten years from the death of the ancestor; but that these limitations run concurrently and not successively. We also think that no disability of the heir can protra'ct these periods, or postpone the running of limitations.

As the entry has not defeated the possession under the tax sales, the complainants must establish their title by an action of ejectment, which is the legitimate mode of deciding possessory titles. The bill in this case was intended to remove an alleged cloud on the title to real estate, and is in the nature of a quia timet. It must fail *293on the principle stated in Polk vs. Pendleton, 31 Md., 124.

(Decided 13th June, 1889.)

“Those only who have a clear legal and equitable title to land, connected with possession, have any right to claim the interference of a Court of equity, to give them peace or dissipate a cloud on the title.”

It must be stated that the majority of the Court do not consider it necessary to decide the question of limitations, inasmuch as they hold that for the other reasons stated in this opinion, the decree of the Court below ought to be reversed.

Decree reversed, and bill dismissed with costs.

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