1 Wend. 502 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1828
By the Court,
The lessor of the plaintiff claims title to the premises in question, under a judgment in his favor against William Hagaman, obtained in the court of common pleas of Seneca county, in February term, 1816. An execution was issued upon that judgment, under which all the right and title of William Hagaman to the premises in question were sold to the lessor. The sheriff’s deed bears date on the 17th day of June, 1817. It appeared that the execution was received, and the sale was made by John Whitman, a deputy of the sheriff of Seneca county, and the deed was executed by I. B. Chapman, under sheriff of said
The defendant then produced the record of a judgment in escheat, in favor of the people of the state of New-York, for about two hundred acres of land, including the premises in question. The judgment was perfected in August term, 1822. A writ of possession issued upon said judgment, was also produced and proved, tested in August term, 1822, and returnable the October term following, with the sheriff’s return endorsed thereon, that he had executed said writ, by putting Mark Boyce and James A. Boyce out of possession, and delivering possession of said' premises to Gershom Powers, as agent for the state. James A. Boyce testified, that he was in possession of the premises in question, when the suit in favor of the people was commenced ; and that he was dispossessed and put out by the sheriff, and that Gershom Powers was put in. The defendant, upon this evidence, contended that the plaintiff could not recover at all; but, at all events, that he could recover but one-fourth of the premises in question. The judge decided, that he was entitled to recover all that the defendant was in possession of, and so charged the jury; to which charge the defendants excepted.
The case at bar is not as strong, on the part of the lessor of the plaintiff as was the case of Jackson v. Town. There, the defendant in the execution had been in the actual possession of the premises, claiming them as her own. In the case at bar, the defendant in the judgment and execution never was in possession, but merely claimed to be the owner of the lot; which, in judgment of law, amounted to nothing. This view of the case appears to me to be entirely decisive against the right of the plaintiff to recover.
The fact that William Hagaman, the defendant in the judgment and execution under which the lessor claims, in 1825 obtained the possession of the premises by a recovery in ejectment, is no evidence that he had any title to them in 1816, when the judgment was obtained against him. Neither the record nor the writ of possession was produced. Nothing but the naked fact is disclosed, that the possession, at that time, was delivered to him. The title upon which he recovered, may have been acquired by him within a year previous to his entry ; and connected with the fact, that in 1822, the lot of which the premises in question were a part, was recovered by a judgment in escheat, in favor of the people, and the possession taken by their agent, on their behalf, under a writ of possession, the inference is very strong, that the title of Hagaman, whatever it may have been, to the premises, was acquired subsequently to 1822. It is immaterial, however, when it accrued, as it was after the sheriff’s
New trial granted.