This is a statutory action of ejectment brought by appellee against appellants for the recovery of a tract of land in the county of Mobile. Subject to objections which will be noticed, plaintiff showed an unbroken chain of title back to the government of the United States. A patent to one Audley Gazzam, dated March 30, 1841, constituted the first link in the chain. The effort of the defendants, defeated by rulings in the court below, was to trace their title back to the United States through a patent, dated April 8, 1848, to the heirs of one Miguel Eslava. The Eslava patent was admitted without objection. They further attempted to show a grant from the government of Spain arising out of the acts of Spanish officials during the years 1802 and 1803. Congress had dealt with Spanish claims in that territory generally and with the claims of the heirs of Miguel Eslava in particular, and - both these patents were issued in pursuance of those acts of Congress. These patents, and the claims of the Eslava heirs derived from the acts of Spanish officials, raised a question of law which had elaborate consideration in the case of Eslava v. Bolling, 22 Ala. 721, decided by this court in 1853. In that case it appeared that conflicting patents to other lands, but raising questions identical with those here involved, had been issued under the same acts of Congress to Hunt and Gazzam and to the heirs of Eslava. Bolling held under Hunt and Gazzam. The heirs of Eslava brought, ejectment. The Eslava heirs in proof of their Spanish grant offered, as we understand, the identical documents offered by the defendants in this case. And they were competent, no doubt, for that purpose in that case and in this as going a part of the way towards establishing a title under the Eslava grant and the acts of Congress. But the effect of the ruling in that case was the patent to Hunt and
But appellants insist that the plaintiff failed in several particulars to connect himself with the Gazzam patent. Plaintiff introduced, as the next succeeding link in his chain of title, a conveyance of certain lands, including those in suit, made by Gazzam to one George Wragg, On May 19, 1888. The date of this conveyance, it will be observed, was about three years prior to the date borne by the patent to Gazzam. The bill of exceptions recites that the plaintiff offered in evidence the certified copy of a quit-claim deed from Audley H. Gazzam to George Wragg, dated May 19, 1838, and duly recorded on September 25, 1838, in the probate records of Mobile county. The deed itself is not set out. We are unable, therefore, without involving ourselves in a contradiction of the record, to consider what may have been the effect of any special covenants, which counsel in
Another link in plaintiff’s chain of title was shown by a mortgage from Wragg to Chandler. The property was. described in the quitclaim as “commencing twenty-five chains and seventy links due east from the northwest corner of section four in township number five south, and range one west, and running thence due south,” etc. In the mortgage it was described as “commencing twenty-five chains and twenty-five links due east from the southwest corner of section 4 in township 5 south, and range one west, and running thence due south,” etc. It is evident that these two descriptions do not cover one and the same parcel of land.
A, deed from W. W. McGuire, administrator of the estate of Jno. T. Stewart, deceased, stood in plaintiff’s chain of title. It is insisted that the record of the proceedings had in the probate court for the sale of this land fails to show that the court acquired jurisdiction to order the sale. By that record it appears that McGuire received letters of administration on February 13,1868. The petition for the sale of the land in controversy was filed February 22, 1870, and showed that “no personal property belonging to said estate ever came into his (the administrator’s) possession;” that under a previous order and decree the administrator had sold certain other property; that the amount realized had proved insufficient to pay debts, and a specific balance of debts remained unpaid. April 8, 1870, was appointed for hearing the application. The record next shows that on October 17, 1871, another petition was filed for the sale of this land which recited again the sale of other land under a previous decree, and alleged that it
Acts of ownership exercised by Geary were admissible in evidence as tending to show an interruption of the possession claimed to have been held by the defendants. But Geary did not derive his claim of title from any of the predecessors in title of the defendants, nor does the plaintiff connect himself with Julia S. Toxey to whom he conveyed. In the absence of some such showing the deed was irrelevant.
We dO' not perceive why the affidavit of Garrow should have been received in evidence. Its competency in respect to the claim of the defendants under the Spanish grant to Eslava has been discussed. It Avas likewise incompetent for any other purpose. It related to a time when the title was indisputably in the United States. Any possession held by Garrow subsequent to 1813 and prior to the patents under which the parties claimed was of no consequence as affecting that title. If possession in Garrow subsequent to the patents had
We have examined the assignments of error insisted upon. For the errors pointed out, the judgment will be reversed; the cause is remanded for another trial.
Reversed and remanded.