4 Md. 138 | Md. | 1853
delivered ,the opinion of this court.
We are of opinion that the Court of Appeals has already settled most of the questions presented by the record before us. 11 Gill & Johns., 351. 1 Gill, 430. 6 Gill, 121.
It is said, however, on the part of the appellants, that in view of the large amount of property involved in this case, and in another in this court, and of other property held under similar titles, it would not be improper for us to revise and overrule the opinions of our predecessors if we should think that they erred in deciding the cases which we have mentioned. The appellants found their right to recover upon the act of 1745, ch. 9, and other acts and ordinances of the city of Baltimore, in connection with their title as owners of part of a tract of land called “Mountenay’s Neck.” These have received a construction without which the grant of “Mountenay”
But it is contended that this case is now different in material respects, from what it was on the trial of the former appeal; and this difference is supposed to consist in the withdrawal of all the testimony relating to the escheat of “Bold Venture,” and to the death of Oulton ; and to the boundaries of said pact, and of the patent of “Roger’s Inspection,” and all papers relating thereto ; and in the offering of the act of 1773,
But can this be said to be an open question? It appears that the plat of the addition to Baltimore was before the court on the former appeal in this case, and the act of 1773 was necessarily, also, before the court; because, apart from the reference by the plat to the act under which it was made, operating as a grant of the public domain, and affecting the rights of navigation and fishery, by allowing improvements to be made out into navigable water, we think it must have been judicially noticed by the court as a public law. But in the case of Wilson vs. Inloes, 6 Gill, both the act and the plat were in evidence. It cannot be said that the point now made was passed over without notice. The notes of the counsel, taken by the reporter, show, that the title of the plaintiffs was strongly pressed in the argument before this court, in connection with this plat and act of Assembly. True, the court does not advert to that portion of the argument, but we cannot suppose that the plaintiffs would have been denied the benefit of it, if the court had considered that the patent of “Bold Venture” had been fully met, and put out of the case. We are disposed to think that the title now
The second, fourth and eighth prayers relate to the question of outstanding title. We do not think that the doctrines of the law applicable to this defence in ejectment can avail the plaintiffs in this case. The plaintiff must always, in the first instance, make out a legal and possessary title to the premises in question, and the defendant’s evidence may be confined to falsifying his adversary’s proofs, or rebutting the presumptions which may arise from them. He need not offer any evidence of title in himself, or of title in a third person. It is sufficient if he makes it appear to the jury that a legal and possessary title does not subsist in the plaintiff. Adams on Ejectment, 285. 7 G. & J., 62. 2 Greenlf. on Ev., sec. 331. And this the defendants here do, by showing that at the time when, the title is said to have passed from the State, by the act of 1773, she had no title which she could have conveyed. There can be nothing clearer than that a plaintiff must be defeated, if it appears that the party under whom he claims the land in dispute had no title, no matter in whom the right may really be. But if he shows a prima facie case, the burden of proof is thrown upon the defendant.
As to the absence of proof of possession mentioned in the fourth prayer, it may be observed that the nature of the property was not such as to admit of possession and acts of ownership in the ordinary way. The patentee of “Bold Venture” could only claim in subordination to the rights of the public, as to fishing and navigation. And as this property was not made fast land until a few years before the commencement of the suit, we do not perceive how he could have claimed the possession before that time. The Court of Appeals have said, that the defendants could not have held it adversely by possession for this very reason. Whilst he was under no obligation to have made fast land out of the water, others had no right to invade his property. 1 Gill, 497.
The third, ffih and sixth prayers treat the defendants as
The seventh prayer was properly refused, because no act of 1816 had been offered in evidence; and if so, the particular act of that session is not specified in the prayer. The ninth prayer is obviously wrong, because it assumes the escheat of “ Bold Venture” upon the death of Oulton without issue. But a similar point to the one designed to have been presented by this prayer is raised by the tenth, which asserts that the act of 1773 is itself evidence, connected with the facts stated in the prayer, that John Oulton had died intestate and without heirs before 1773. The Court of Appeals, with these facts before them in the former trials, did not recognise this pretension of the appellants, even when supported by the direct evidence offered on the question of escheat. We cannot perceive that the plaintiffs’ case is made stronger by the absence of this testimony. The act of Assembly is not evidence, per sc, of any thing in regard to John Oulton. It can only avail the plaintiffs as proof of certain facts of which there is no legal presumption, though they need not be established by direct proof. Nor does the law presume that a person who is proved to be dead left no heirs. The death of a person may be presumed after a long lapse of time, as was done in Doe on the demise of Oldnall, vs. Deakin and Wooley, 3 Carr. and, Payne, 402, where the persons who were said to be dead, would, if alive, have been one hundred and fifty years old. When persons are known to have survived ninety and an hundred years, we cannot say that others have died at an earlier age, without some evidence on the subject. And, in addition to
From these views, it follows that we concur with the county court in granting the three prayers of the defendants, in doing which we but sanction what the Court of Appeals has said in the other cases substantially the same with this.
Judgment affirmed with costs.