43 Mich. 313 | Mich. | 1880
The plaintiff brought ejectment for an eighty-acre lot in St. Clair county, and on the trial the circuit judge directed a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff proved the following conveyances: First, a warranty deed under date of Septemper 19,1860, from Lewis Brockway and wife to John McGregor; second, a warranty deed from John McGregor to John A. McBae, under date of January 16, 1875; third, a warranty deed dated June 14; 1878, from John A. McBae and wife to the plaintiff.
The plaintiff further proved that the defendant was in possession prior to her purchase and her deed from McBae, and had continued in possession uninterruptedly since; that she demanded possession of him both orally and in writing, and gave him ninety days’ notice in writing to quit and yield up possession, and that he positively refused.
She also submitted evidence that whilst she was negotiating with McBae for the premises, her husband, as her agent, personally called upon the defendant, who was in possession, and informed him that she was talking about buying the land, and wished to know what claims he had thereto, and that he replied he had no claims except to the crops, which he thought he ought to be paid for, and that if plaintiff bought the place, and he was paid for his crops, he would yield possession at once, and that he was on the place by permission of his brother, John McGregor; that soon after this, which was in June, 1878, she received her deed from McBae, and that her husband, acting as her agent in her behalf, again called on defendant upon the premises and requested possession, and that defendant declined'
The plaintiff also gave evidence that during the haying season of 1878, the defendant informed J. W. Avery that he went in under and by permission of his brother, John McGregor, expecting that John would never sell the place, and that he would be permitted to continue in occupation, and that he made no claim of title in himself; that the husband of plaintiff had frequent talks with defendant concerning his occupation, and that he never made any other or different claim than that of; holding under his brother, John McGregor,
The defendant offered no evidence.
In directing a finding for defendant the court erred. The case should have been left to the jury with an instruction to the effect that if they believed the undisputed evidence on the part of the plaintiff, and found from it that defendant, holding under his brother John, rested on the ownership John held at and before his deed to McRae, the grantor of plaintiff, and not on some ownership or right of John derived by him subsequently to that deed to McRae, and of force against it, then they should find for the plaintiff. Because if both claimed from the ownership which John McGregor held at the time he deeded to McRae, it was a mutual admission of the sufficiency of the title of John McGregor for the purpose of the suit, and the plaintiff was not required to go further back in the chain of title; and in the absence of proof of any other title in defendant than his permission from John to occupy as stated, the plaintiff’s title derived from John’s grant was good against it in ejectment.
The defendant being in possession, it was incumbent on the plaintiff to inquire of him respecting his claim, and it was his duty to explain it truthfully, and his statements and explanations were admissions of the
There is no pretense that defendant possessed any paper title to stand in the way and control the question, or that he possessed any other right than that mentioned by the plaintiff’s witnesses. In short, the fair and just construction of the evidence respecting defendant’s occupancy, and the way the parties on the trial below understood, is that it was under the right granted to his brother John by the Brockway deed, and not under some imaginary later right of John, of which the case affords no pretense of existence. In view of the action and the situation of the parties, it is not perceived that any other course was open to the plaintiff. No right of John McGregor was shown as a basis for defendant’s holding except the very ownership which John appears to have alienated to McBae, the plaintiff’s grantor, and if there was any other it was for the defendant to show it. The case was therefore brought to the narrow ground whether the jury would believe the evidence for the plaintiff concerning the statements and explanations of defendant. There is no question of estoppel or parol disclaimer, nor any question relative to the admissibility of acts or admissions by a tenant in derogation of the title held by the landlord at the creation of the term, nor any question concerning the allowance of oral proof to contradict a paper title. The objection that the deed from John McGregor to McBae was not recorded until after the commencement of the suit has no force. The record could not be excluded for that reason. Russell v. Sweezey 22 Mich. 235. Moreover, the deed itself was produced.
There does not appear to have been any ground for suspecting that the maker of the deed to McBae was not the same John McGregor described as grantee ■ in the
The judgment should be reversed with costs, and a new trial granted.
I think that the statement by McGregor that he held under his brother, being made some years after the deed from John McGregor, was not an admission that he held under the prior grantee, and that judgment was right.