9 Watts 111 | Pa. | 1839
The opinion of the court was delivered by
We think that none of the errors assigned in this case has been sustained, and that there is nothing in any of them which seems to require our particular notice, excepting in the fourth. The fourth is an exception to the charge of the court to the jury; wherein'the latter were instructed, that if they believed that Murray claimed the lañds in dispute, and paid the public taxes on them, by himself or his tenants for thirty years, before .Jack, under whom the plaintiffs in error claimed, brought his ejectment, and that Jack in the mean time omitted and refused to be assessed for them, and to pay the taxes, Murray might be considered as having gained a complete title to the lands by the statute of limitations. The evidence on this head showed that the 'lands had been assessed in the name of Murray and that he and his tenants had paid the taxes so assessed upon them, from the
Judgment affirmed.