25 Gratt. 137 | Va. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case comes before us on a writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit court of Patrick county, in a case of ejectment. Both parties claim under the same person, James Nowlin; the plaintiff in ejectment, under a deed of trust executed by said Nowlin on 2d of March, 1846, and the defendant under a sale by the same party, made prior to the execution of the deed of trust aforesaid, accompanied by delivery of the possession of the premises, payment in full of the purchase money, and the execution and delivery of a deed or title bond for the property, which was mislaid and never recorded, and on adverse possession of the pro
On the trial, the plaintiff below made out a complete paper un(jer James Nowlin, proved the value of rents; and rested his case. The defendant then proved the sale above mentioned as the foundation of his claim or title; and proved further, that after he had purchased and paid for the land in dispute, as above* set forth, and had received a deed or title bond therefor, and had been put in possession of the premises, he “immediately went to work, erected a dwelling house thereon, and put up other buildings.” And then, in further support of his claim to the land, he introduced a witness, to prove that he had been in actual adverse and peaceable possession of the premises in controversy for more than twenty years before the institution of the suit; but the court excluded the testimony, being of opinion “that adversary possession without title could be shown before the execution of the deed of trust from Nowlin to Staples, but not afterwards.” To this ruling of the court the defendant below excepted, and his bill of exceptions was signed and sealed by the court. The case was then submitted to the jury, who rendered a verdict for the plaintiff below for the premises in controversy, and $25 damages.
The defendant below then moved the court to set aside the verdict and award him a new trial, because the plaintiff had wholly failed to prove that the defendant was or ever had been in possession of the premises claimed. This motion was overruled by the court, and judgment was entered for the plaintiff below in accordance with the verdict; and, thereupon, the defendant below again excepted.
To this judgment a writ of error was awarded by a judge of this court, on which the case is now before us.
This latter proposition should be qualified, however, by stating that the holder and claimant of property under an equitable title derived from a vendor or grantor, who retains the legal title for future conveyance, does not hold adversely, but in subordination to the grantor’s title, and no length of possession under such title will ripen into a legal title. See opinion of this court delivered by Judge Allen, in Clarke v. McLure, 10 Gratt. 305. The case is different, however, when the defendant in ejectment or vendee claims absolute title under a deed purporting to convey title. In such case he enters and holds adversely to all the world. In the language of Judge Allen, in Clarke v. McLure, he enters and holds “ as vendee of the absolute estate, and not in subordination to a title which he supposed to be extinguished by his own deed. The defendant holding in his own right, by a deed which purported to pass the legal title, there was nothing in
The entry, or the holding in such case, imports no recognition of a subsisting title in another, by whose permission and in subordination to whose subsisting and continuing title the party enters and holds.” And
Whether the contract is executory or executed, whether the defendant or vendee claims title under an absolute deed or not, is a question of fact for the jury, and not of law for the court. Adams on Ejectment, appendix, p. 600, and cases there cited.
Now, the proofs in this case show that prior to the execution of the deed of trust under which the plaintiff below claims “the said James Nowlin bargained and sold the said tract of land to his son, who was then seventeen years of age, received the entire purchase money, executed a deed or title bond thereto, which was lost or mislaid and never entered of record, and delivered it to the said Columbus Nowlin, and put him in the possession of the premises, who immediately went to work, erected a dwelling house thereon and put up other buildings.” The defendant below then offered a witness to prove that he had been in actual, adverse and peaceable possession of the land thus acquired, for more than twenty years before the institution of the suit. The court excluded this testimony; being of opinion, as above stated, that “adversary possession without title could be shown by the defendant before the execution of the deed of trust from Nowlin to Staples, but not afterwards.”
Judgment Eeversed.