20 Johns. 478 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1823
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The lessors of the plaintiff have shown, prima facie, a title to half of the lot; and the question is, whether the defendant, on his part, has shown either a better title in himself, or one outstanding in some other person; and whether he has or not, depends upon the decision of the following points :
1st. Was the deed from Levi Hungerford, the heir at law, at the time of the death of the soldier, to his brother Daniel, sufficiently proved on the trial ? and if it was, then,
2d. Did the deed pass the title to the whole, or to a part of the lot only ?
1. The deed from Levi M. to Daniel H. was not proved or acknowledged until the 18th of September,- 1820, when it was proved by 1. Burnham, one of the subscribing witnesses, before a commissioner; but it never had been recorded. Burnham having had, in 1807, conveyed two thirds of the lot, with full covenants of warranty and seisin, was, I think, properly held to be an incompetent witness to prove the deed before the commissioner, as he would have been, if he had been offered as a witness to prove the same fact on the trial. The testimony of White, who proved the
2. Levi Hungerford, being the heir at law of the soldier, who died during the war, and having conveyed the whole lotto Daniel Hungerford,on the 17 th of November, 1796, the title to the whole lot passed by virtue of that deed to the grantee, according to the provisions of the seventh section of the act of the 8th of April, 1813 ; (1 N. R. L. 305.) and the defendant has thus, shown a title, out of the lessors of the plaintiff.
The lessors of the plaintiff have alleged, that this deed from Levi Hungerford was obtained from him by fraud : and he was offered as a witness to prove this allegation, twenty-six years after the deed was given. To his competency as a witness, as well as to the evidence he gave, the objections are insuperable.
(1) As to his competency; the lessors of the.plaintiff seek to recover an undivided moiety of the premises; and this deed being out of the question, they are tenants in common with Levi Hungerford, and the recovery in this suit would be for their common benefit; for, if they entered under a recovery in this suit, such entry would' enure to the benefit of Levi, in proportion to his interest in the lot. If a suit should be brought for the mesne profits, the judgment in this action would be conclusive; and the damages recovered would be for the use of Levi, in the same proportion.
(2) As to the evidence he gave: The lessors of the plaintiff"have no right to set up the fraud alleged to have been practised upon Levi. He, or those claiming under him, alone can avoid the deed on that ground. This, as to the lessors of the plaintiff, is res inter alios acta. No fraud was used as to them. They claim under a title separate from, and independent of Levi, and not derived in anv0way through him; they have no right to impeach the’ deed
The defendant is, accordingly, entitled to judgment.
Judgment for the defendant»