7 Wend. 401 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1831
By the Court,
The charge of the judge was correct, and proper on the assumption that Jacob Spear was actually in possession of the premises at the time of his recognition of the title of Winter, and agreement to purchase, for it would be unreasonable to preclude a defendant from shewing that the plaintiff had no title, or that he himself had the title to the premises in question, if the acknowledgment of the title of the plaintiff was produced by imposition, or made under a misapprehension of the rights of the respective parties, Jackson v. Cuerden, 2 Johns. C. 353 ; but I apprehend that there was another very material question, growing out of the facts of this case, which should have been submitted to the jury, and which was not embraced in the view of the case presented., to them, viz. whether or not Jacob Spear entered
New trial granted.