after stating the facts of the case, delivered the opinion of the court,
The questions which it is deemed material to consider relate to the ruling of the court. 1st. In maintaining the exceptions to the several pleas of the statute of limitations. 2d. In refusing the several instructions asked by the defendants.
1. In maintaining the plaintiffs’ exceptions to the several pleas of the statute of limitations, the court appears to have acted
The pleas of limitation of the defendants, Portis and wife, must be considered in reference to the act of 1836 [1 Stat. 156, sec. 39], or the 16th section of the act of limitations of 1841, these being the only acts prescribing the period of five years. But these pleas are insufficient in not alleging the facts which are made to constitute the statutory bar'in favor of the party in possession, and in not alleging the possession of the defendants to have been adverse.
Of the several pleas of limitation of the defendant, Samuel A. Cummings, the first appears to have been framed with especial reference to the 17th section of the act of limitations of 1841, alleging that the defendant had been in the “ adverse, peaceable possession of the said land, using and enjoying the same,” for a period of more than ten years. No reason is perceived why this is not a good plea of the limitation prescribed by the 17th section of the statute.
The second plea of the defendant, Cummings, though not good as a plea of the limitation of five years prescribed by the 16th section, for the want of an averment of the due registration of the title or deed under which the defendant claims, is still a good plea of the prescription of three years, since it includes every fact necessary to constitute the bar. created by the 15th section. And the third plea of the defendant, being in exact conformity to the 15th section, and averring all the facts which constitute the limitation of three years prescribed by that section, is evidently a good plea. These pleas allege that the possession of the defendant, attended by all the cir-
2. The remaining inquiry respects the ruling of the court in refusing the several instructions asked by the defendants. Of these, the first five seem to have been framed with the view of asserting the proposition, to enable the heirs to maintain the action, the estate of their ancestor must appear to have been administered, and that this, it devolved on the plaintiff to show in this action. This proposition we do not think well founded, and we are of opinion that the instructions numbered from one-to five, inclusive, were rightly refused. The sixth instruction had been anticipated by the previous rulings of the court, which it is not deem'ed material now to consider. It had no application to the issue, or evidence before the jury, and was rightly refused.
The defendants, Portis and wife, not having admitted or claimed any title or interest in themselves derived from James Cummings, but on the contrary having denied “ all and singular ” the allegations of the petition, including the averment of their heirship and co-tenancy, to entitle the plaintiff to a decree of partition and a judgment for costs as against them, it was incumbent on him to deduce and prove title in himself, and also their heirship and co-tenancy, and the court erred as to them in refusing the 7th, 8th and 9th instructions asked on behalf of the defendants. Because, therefore, the court erred in maintaining the plaintiffs’ exceptions to the pleas of the defendant, Samuel A. Cummings, of the limitation of ten