30 Md. 536 | Md. | 1869
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action of ejectment, instituted on the 25th of November, 1863, by the devisees of Louis J. Lannay, to recover two hundred and forty-five and a half acres of land, lying in Baltimore county, comprising parts of three tracts, called “Labyrinth,” “Brother’s Choice,” and “Enlargement.”
It is unquestioned that Lannay, the devisor, acquired in 1801, legal seisin of 184|- acres, part of the land sued for, and that he became legally seized of the remaining 60f acres, in 1810, having had the equitable seisin thereof from 1801.
The leading question in the case, as presented by the prayers rejected, and the instruction given by the Court below, is, whether Lannay, the devisor, in his life time, so far divested himself of title to, or the right of possession of the land in controversy, as to defeat the right of recovery by his devisees.
It is certainly a familiar principle in the law of ejectment, that, to enable the plaintiff to recover, he must show in himself a good and sufficient title to*the land claimed. He can derive no assistance from the defects in the defendant’s title, for possession is presumptive evidence of right, and the defendant cannot be deprived of his possession by any person except the party who has the jus possessions. If, therefore, the defendant can answer the claim and pretension on the
It is unquestionably true, that, where the plaintiff shows a prima facie good title, it is incumbent on the defendant, setting up an outstanding title by' way of defence, to establish the existence of such title with clearness and precision; and generally a title of such nature as to entitle the stranger to recover in ejectment against either of the contending parties. Hall vs. Gittings, 2 H. & J., 125. It is not incumbent on the plaintiff to negative the existence of such outstanding title, but it is the duty of the defendant to make its existence clear and certain, in order to make it available as a defence. Greenleaf’s Lessee vs. Birth, 6 Pet., 302. But when we speak of an outstanding title, we must be understood ’ as having reference to the nature and character of the action of ejectment. To maintain the action, the claimant must be clothed with' both the legal title, and the immediate right of possession. These are the essential conditions of success. Wilson vs. Inloes, 11 G. & J., 351. Without a legal interest and a possessory title, not barred by the statute of limitations, no plaintiff, can recover in an action of ejectment, by the law of this State. Whatever, therefore, divests the plaintiff of either his legal interest, or his right of possession, takes from him the remedy of ejectment. For, as was said by Lord MaNSEIELD, in Atkins vs. Horde, 1 Burr, 119, “an ejectment is a possessory remedy, and only competent where the lessor of the plaintiff may enter; and every plaintiff in ejectment must show a right of possession as well as of property/’ The action is a fiction, founded on the principle that the tenant in possession is a wrong doer, as against the plaintiff; “ and unless he is so at the time the action is brought, the plaintiff cannot recover.” Doe vs. Jackson, 2 Dowl. & Ryl., 523, S. C., 1 B. & Cres., 448.
Had Lannay, then, at the time of his death, in 1835, a legal interest.in and a possessory title to the land in controversy?
Having thus incumbered his land, Lannay, on the 20th of November^ 1812, formally acknowledged that the mortgaged premises stood justly bound to Williamson, Tiernan, Riddlé, and Owen, for and on account of advances under the assignment and mortgage of the 30th of May, 1808, over and above the sum paid to Brice in the sum of $9,399.07. This sum, together with the sum of $4,395.05, paid to Brice, and the sum of $12,000, owing to McCulloh, with the interest thereon, constituted the mortgage incumbrance on the land, when, in December, 1813, Williamson, Tiernan, and Owen, survivors of Riddle, filed their bill in the Court of Chancery against Lannay and McCulloh for a sale of the mortgaged premises.
These are plainly the facts of the case, and we discover nothing in the record upon which any presumption could be founded, tending in the slightest degree to countervail them, or to overcome their force and effect.
It is contended, however, that as it does not appear that the purchase money was actually paid over to the trustee by the substituted purchasers, and that as no deed by the trustee appears to have been made for the land sold, the purchase itself is, therefore, to be regarded as ineffectual, the rights of the parties under the mortgages to be considered as extinguished by the lapse of time, and that the former legal title of Lannay has become available to entitle the lessors of the plaintiff to recover in this action.
To this proposition we cannot assent, in view of the facts disclosed by the record before us.
As to the payment of the purchase money, that is fully explained by the auditor’s report. The claim of the purchasers was preferred, and it was much greater than the amount of the proceeds of sale; and it would have been a very useless— to say nothing of it as a senseless — ceremony, to have required the purchasers to pay over the money that the Court had adjudged to belong to them, in order that the trustee might go through the form of paying it back. The taking of the notes for the purchase money was matter of strict observance of the terms of the decree, and was before the amount of the complainants’ claim had been finally adjudicated; and that they were found among the papers of the deceased trustee, has no significance, in the light of the other facts of the case.
Nor can the plaintiffs derive assistance to their right to recover from the absence of a deed from the trustee. In 1841-acres of the land claimed, the purchasers by substitution held the legal title by virtue of the deed to them of the 30th of May, 1808; and in the remaining 60f acres they held the equitable estate. The decree itself, and the sale made under
There is, however, another view .to be taken of this case, which is equally opposed to the plaintiffs’ right to recover, as the one just considered.
There being nothing in the case to rebut such presumption that, as matter of course, would have defeated the action. But it has been contended in argument, by the counsel of plaintiffs, that the mortgage interest of Riddle, who had died before the filing of the bill for sale of the mortgaged premises, was not represented in the chancery suit, and that, therefore, no good title could be made under the decree. Such proposition, however, is wholly untenable, as can be easily shown.
The deed of mortgage, or of assignment, of the 30th of May, 1808, was to four persons to secure the payment of an indebtedness due to them jointly, and not severally. And, to say nothing of the terms of the deed, which, being made before the Act of 1822, ch. 162, conveyed the estate in joint ^tenancy, it is now settled that the interest of mortgagees, or the assignees of a mortgage, where the debt secured is joint, as in this case, so far partakes of the nature of the debt secured, that for all remedial purposes, the doctrine of sur-vivorship applies as well to the estate as to the debt. If, therefore, one of the mortgagees dies, the survivor or survivors, as the case may be, may proceed in his or their own name, and do whatever may be necessary to foreclose, or to effect a sale of the mortgaged premises; and in such case it is not necessary to make the heir or personal representative of the deceased mortgagee a party. 7 Mass., 131; 19 Me., 430; 6 Mich., 72; 1 Wash. on Real Pro., 576. The bill, therefore, filed by Williamson, Tiernan, and Owen, as survivors of Riddle, was properly filed, and the title acquired under the decree obtained thereon is not impeachable on the ground suggested by the counsel of appellants.
It follows from what we have said of the facts of this case, that the Court below was right in rejecting the two prayers offered on the part of the plaintiffs; and while the instruction given by the Court, that there was no evidence in the cause upon which the plaintiffs could recover, was in form too general and sweeping to be approved; yet, it is clear that by a more specific and definite instruction, the same result must have ensued, and, consequently, the plaintiffs have not been injured by the instruction given. The judgment will therefore be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.'