7 Pa. 62 | Pa. | 1847
There is no rule more clearly settled than that a person shall not be permitted, during his possession of premises, to dispute the title of the landlord under whom he enters. He must first give up the possession, and then if he, or any one claiming under him, have a title aliunde, that title may be tried by ejectment. But this, although true as a general rule, is not without exceptions, as, for example, where the landlord’s title has expired, and also, as in this case, where the person in possession has _ the legal title and sells to another bona fide, and without notice of the tenancy. I agree that, where the relation of landlord and tenant is once established, it attaches, as a general rule, to all who may succeed to the possession through or under the tenant, either immediately or remotely. Thus it attaches to the person who buys from the tenant, because the purchaser may protect himself by inquiring as to the extent of his title, and, if he omits to do so, it is his own fault. All the cases cited are of purchases from the tenant himself, and in such cases it matters not in which character the purchaser enters, whether as tenant or under a deed from the tenant in fee-simple, for still he is considered as entering as tenant of the lessee: Jackson v. Davis, 5 Cow. 129; Jackson v. Harsen, 7 Cow. 325. The court made this case depend on the question of tenancy, independent entirely of title, and for this reason it must be reversed. The defendant contended that he was protected' at all events, because he purchased from Roadman, and Roadman and Lloyd purchased from Best without any notice of plaintiff’s claim. To which the court replied that, if the tax sale was void for residence, his title was imperfect, and the purchaser of such a title was not entitled to avail himself of such a plea. And this may be true, but the court adds that it is of no consequence whether the vendees of Best had notice or not, if the jury believe that Best obtained the possession from Polly Carpenter, who was the tenant of Fanny Clark. The law regards him as the tenant in her place, and so are all those who come in under him; and, if the jury are satisfied such is the fact, the question of title is not material. The tenant must restore the'possession to his landlord, and, after that is done, if he has a better title, he may recover in another suit. From this instruction we dissent. We take no exception to the general principle, which is sustained by all the authorities; but we differ from the court in this, that they deem it immaterial whether the vendees of Best had or had not notice of the tenancy... But this is a point on which this part of the case must turn; for, if the vendees were aware of the tenancy, the defendant has no case.
Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.