The defendant in error recovered a judgment in an action of ejectment against plaintiff in error for the possession of Lota one (1) and four (4), section 11, township 15, S. of range 27 E., situated in Volusia county. To maintain the action plaintiff below offered in evidence a certified copy of a patent from the United States to him bearing date Pebmary 13fh, 1084, and describing the land mentioned in the declaration. The copy was certified to by the acting Commissioner of the General Land Office as being a true and literal exemplification from the record in his office, and was under his hand and seal of office. An objection was made to the introduction of the copy in evidence on the ground that it was a copy, and not the original. Plaintiff’s attorney then testified that the original patent was in his office on a date mentioned prior to the trial, and that his office and the patent were then destroyed by fire, and that the copy offered in evidence was a substantial copy of the original patent, with which he was very familiar. The court overruled the objection and admitted the copy in evidence, to which ruling the defendant below excepted.
There was no error in the ruling of the court admitting the certified copjr of the patent in evidence. The exemplification of the record of a patent, recorded in the (General Land Office, under the hand of the Commissioner and the seal of the (General Land Office is evidence in the courts of this State of the facts therein stated. Liddon vs. Hodnett, 22 Fla. 442.
In reference to the tax deed excluded by the court the bill of exceptions states that defendant ‘ ‘offered in evidence and read the record of a tax sale deed for said lands from the State of Florida to said defendant, recorded on pages 275 and 276, of book A of the records of tax sale deeds of said county of Yolusia, in the words and figures following, to-wit: See exhibit B.” It was admitted that the original deed, the same as set forth by the record, was before the court, and one of the subscribing witnesses then testified to its formal execution. There is copied into the transcript, and marked “.exhibit B,” a tax deed to the land executed by the Clerk-of the Circuit Court of'Yolusia county to E. E. Ropes, and bearing date August 6th, 2885. This deed was executed under the act of 1883, Chapter 3413, and recites a sale of the land by the col
The testimony entirely fails to show any adverse possession of the land on the part of plaintiff in error. It is true he says that he had possession and occupied the land for twenty-five years, but the possession necessary to confer title under an adverse holding must be actual, continuous and adverse to the legal title for the full statutory period. Barrs vs. Brace, decided at this term. Tf it be true that defendant in error commuted the homestead entry to a cash one in November, 1882, there is no showing that plaintiff in error, since that time, has held 'possession of the land adversely to the true owner. An. admission of the facts stated in the letter would not have relieved the plaintiff in error.
Without the tax deed, a.nd it duly recorded, there is no support, it is evident, for the further contention made in the brief that the suit was barred by the limitation of three years prescribed in section 61 of Chapter 3413, laws of Florida 1883.
We have, in what is said, disposed of every assignment of error having any basis of support whatever in the record, and in conclusion it is only necessary to
An order affirming the judgment will be entered.
