10 Me. 274 | Me. | 1833
delivered the opinion of the Court.
As both parties claim under Sullivan, both admit his original title. The case finds, that though the deed from Benner to Eugley of the large tract included the locus in quo, and though Eugley entered on the land, and has ever since lived on the westerly part of it, yet he was never in the actual possession of the locus in quo. Of course, Sullivan was not disseised of any part of the large tract, except that part which Eugley held in actual and exclusive possession, until his deed from Benner was registered in 1812. Then a disseizin'of Sullivan commenced. Therefore, no entry by Jackson, in 1808, was necessary to enable him to convey to the person under whom Sullivan held. We need not inquire whether such entry was sufficient to purge the disseizin, provided Jackson had then been disseised, because he was not disseised as to the locus in quo. For this reason, the instructions of the Judge, as to the legality and sufficiency of Jackson’s entry may be laid out of the case as wholly immaterial in the decision of the cause. After Eugley’s deed was registered, it is clear that Sullivan could not convey to a third person any part of the tract described in Benner’s deed, so long as the disseizin continued, which was created by the registry of that deed and Eugley’s open and permanent possession of a part of the tract conveyed by the deed. Prop.