9 Gill 269 | Md. | 1850
delivered the opinion of this court.
This appeal is taken from a judgment rendered in Allegany county court. The suit was brought to recover divers parcels of land for a part of which the defendant took defence. There are many exceptions to be found in the record, few questions however are presented by them.
The plaintiff undertook to prove title to the lands in controversy, and we are to assume that the will of James D. Cresap, his father, gave him title to the lands, and that the title continued in him until a conveyance was made by him of all the land to Elizabeth C. Tomlinson and Hannah Gastell, by deed bearing date the 8th day of March 1847.
Whether this deed was a bar to the recovery of the lands in controversy, seems to be almost the only question arising in the case, and almost all the exceptions were taken because of a refusal by the court, to give to the jury instructions designed
We find, to be sure, in some of the exceptions, that the court after refusing to give the instructions which were asked for, did sometimes give others. For these however the plaintiff does not claim-a reversal, and moreover whether correct or not, does not appear to be very material, as the plaintiff was not injured by them.
We infer from the various prayers made by the plaintiff, that he claimed the verdict notwithstanding his conveyance: 1st. Because the deed being of a later date than the lease declared on, could not prejudice the supposed title of the lessee; and 2nd. Because it was an attempt, pending the suit too, to convey land, of which another liad the adverse possession.
If the deed of the plaintiff does not for either of these reasons prevent a recovery, it is thought that there is nothing in the record which will warrant a reversal of this judgment.
Of course it cannot be denied that in order to sustain an action of ejectment, there must be proof of title in the lessor at the time when the alleged lease commenced. Without this proof the lease would give no title. But it is said, that if the plaintiff had a title when the suit commenced he may maintain the action, because no subsequent conveyance by him could prejudice the lessee whose lease is admitted. This would be true if there really was a lease, and the lessee was the real plaintiff. But there is none, and for the want of one the plaintiff could not recover, but for the terms imposed upon the defendant when he asks to take-the place of the casual ejector.
Care is to be taken that these fictions do not work wrong to the defendant. If the plaintiff succeeds he recovers the whole of the term declared upon, and in his action for the mesne profits, he has to prove, to be sure, that the defendant retained the possession during the time for which he claims the rents and profits, butthe judgment in ejectment is all the proof that is required, that he was entitled to the demised premises during the whole term mentioned in his lease. If in the action for mesne profits, the plaintiff recover damages as long as the defendant
But we are told that the deed from the plaintiff’s lessor, dated 8th March 1847, cannot defeat his action, because at the time of its execution, the defendant had an adverse possession of this land.
None of the authorities which have been cited, make any distinction in this respect between a sale before the institution of a suit, and a sale while such suit is pending. The question is, whether the defendant had such a possession at the date of this deed, as would render a deed for the land by the plaintiff’s lessor a nullity? If there be in Maryland any such law, it is strange that it was unknown to the many learned jurists, who in times past have been at our bar and on our bench. Yery many and most important cases of which we have reports, certainly might have been defeated, if such be our law.
In the case of Davidson vs. Beatty, (3 H. & McH., 594,) the plaintiff’s lessor obtained his title as late as 1796, from a man who as far back as the year 1768 lost the occupancy, and he thought the title, to the property in dispute. The man who entered upon it, and it was supposed dispossessed him of it, sold it. The land was laid off into lots, which formed a part, of Georgetown, in tire district of Columbia, and upon many
The same objection might have been taken to the title of the plaintiff’s lessor in the case of Ridgley’s lessee against Ogle and Leonard, (4 H. & McH. ,123.) Many other cases might be mentioned, in which the plaintiff’s title commenced after it was supposed that the tenant in possession had so long occupied the land, that adverse, continued and uninterrupted possession, was sufficient to give him a good title. See also Gittings vs. Hall, 1 H. & J., 14.
In 2nd Smith’s leading cases, p. 413, we are told that “ it is a settled principle in the law of apparently all the States, that title to lands from the commonwealth, draws the seizin or actual legal possession to it; so that one who has title derived out of the commonwealth, is, by force of his title, in possession until an ouster or disseizin is committed by some one entering upon the land, with a cjaim of possession adversely to him.”
Among the numerous American cases to which reference is given for this, is that of Miller vs. Shaw, 7 Serg. & Rawle, 129. In that case Judge Duncan said: “Constructive possession always accompanies the right. The right always draws to it the possession, and it there remains until seized by the wrongdoer, whose possession is strictly possessio pedis, who must necessarily be confined to what he has grasped—his real and actual possession. Beyond that no length of time will protect him; because beyond that the owner’s possession has never been changed. “ These,” he adds, “ are the dictates of com¡mon sense, of common justice and of common law.”
In some of the States it would seem to be somewhat doubtful what constitutes this adverse possession in a trespasser, and which turns the real owner out of possession. In the very .case to which a reference has been given in Sergeant & Rawle,
In 2nd Johnson’s N. Y. Repts., 234, it, is laid down that “there must be a real and substantial inclosure, an actual occupancy, upossessio pedis, which is definite, positive and notorious, to constitute an adverse possession, when that is the only defence and is to countervail a legal title. ’ ’ In Barr vs. Gratz, (4 Wheat, 213,) the Supreme Court held, that a patent granted for vacant land vested the patentee, by operation of law, with a constructive actual seizin of the whole land contained within the patent.” In 2nd Gill & Johnson, 183, Judge Earle says, “'it is a case of constant occurrence, where a grantor having a right of entry on land, conveys it to another and therewith necessarily a power to maintain an ejectment for it.”
The pending of this suit, at the date of the deed, could not render it a void deed. The plaintiff surely cannot say this was a sale of a pretended title, nor was it the sale of a law suit, as might be said of the case of Hammond vs. Dorsey’s lessee, which we learn in 5 H. & J., 267, was entered for the use of Richard Ridgely, prosecuted at his expense and for his benefit, and being for his use was considered to be his suit.
Those who have gone before us have not left us to settle the law, that the plaintiff, to sustain an action of ejectment, must have a title not only at the commencement of the suit, but also at the trial, and certainly never discovered that the deed which defeats the suit, if made after its commencement and before the trial, was, for any of the reasons suggested, void. If there be any such law in England, it would seem that it was not found applicable to “ our local and other circumstances.”
We cannot think that because of any of the circumstances
There is certainly reason to believe that the plaintiff and his brother were both of them mistaken about the division line, but any such.mistake cannot affect the title of either. Surely the defendant cannot claim by adverse possession, because he and the real owner supposed the line which divided their farms to run in a different direction. Neither held adversely to the other.
We see nothing in the record, which would warrant us in saying, that the plaintiff, when he executed this deed, was guilty either of maintenance or champerty. The case affords us no opportunity of enforcing or recognizing such law on this occasion.
At the time this deed was executed, the defendant had taken a defence, which he afterwards abandoned; and the plaintiff would make use of this defence, in order to avoid his own deed. This he could not do at the trial, even if the defendant had not narrowed his defence; a defence upon warrant, is not necessarily a defence by adverse possession. If the defendant could have given himself an adverse possession by his defence, as originally taken, when it is abandoned, the plaintiff could not well use it for any such purpose. If a defendant pleads payment, and afterwards substitutes for that plea, non est factum, the former plea cannot be relied on, to prove the instrument to be his deed. The plaintiff must take judgment against the casual ejector, for all the land undefended, and surely cannot make-the defendant hold any part of it adversely.
There remains one other exception in the record of which we must dispose. It presents the question, whether an attorney for a suitor, can also be a witness for him?
The same question was put to us in a case (Beatty vs. Davis,) which has been argued and decided this term, (ante 211.) In this case, the witness was offered for examination, after he had opened the case. We have been referred to several English and American cases, which, it is thought, sustain this objection.
We find in none of (he exceptions to which the record calls our attention, any reason for reversing this judgment.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.