88 Va. 591 | Va. | 1892
delivered the opinion of the court.
The said J. P. Kane claimed title to the said tract of land under a deed of fee simple, with general rvarranty from Robert M. Magee, dated August 15th, 1823, to Henry ¡8. Kane, the grandfather of the said J. P. Kane, the said land having been alloted and assigned to the said J. P. Kane by commissioners of the circuit court of Scoit county, in a suit for partition of the lands of Henry ¡8. Kane, among his heirs at law, of whom the said J. P. Kano was one, and which partition and allotment was approved and confirmed by the said circuit court.
The said David R. Bishop claimed authority to enter upon the land in controversy, under -a lease, for a term of two years, from the said Christian Van Cunden, Frank Britton, Edwin F. Partridge and Charles A. Foster, dated 19th of September, 1889, which lease describes the said premises by metes and bounds, and as being originally part of the lands granted to one Hathan Field by the commonwealth of Virginia, by pat-tent dated 29tli January, 1796. The said Van Cunden, Brit-ton, Partridge- and Foster, claimed to have derived title to the leased premises by a deed dated 30th of April, 1888, made to them by J. Wyman Field in his own right, and as attorney in fact for sundry parties as heirs-at-law of Xathan Field, the patentee of the said land, as aforesaid. On the 12th day of March, 1890, the said Van Cunden, Britton, Partridge and Foster were, on their own motion, entered of record as defendants to the said action of unlawful detainer against the said David Bishop, in the said county court, in the place and stead of the said Bishop.
It was in the power of the county court at its July term to make the order and enter the judgment nunc pro tunc, which it had omitted to enter upon the verdict at its April term. It comes within tire provisions or intendment of the 3124th section of the Code of 1887, as a'cause on the docket. The county court did not err in entering the judgment at the July
The county court did not err in not setting the verdict aside as fatally defective and contrary to law; and the circuit court did not err in affirming the refusal of the county court to set it aside.
The appellants claiming to he the owners of the title to the laud, by purchase from persons claiming to be heirs of the patentee, after a lapse of over ninety years, were substituted as defendants in the stead of the actual defendant and trespasser, Bishop, in a summary action of unlawful detainer, to protect and restore the mere actual possession, which had been unlawfully entered upon and wrested from the plaintiff, Kane, by the trespasser, Bishop. It is clearly proved in the record that Kane was, at the time of Bishop’s entry, and had been for very many years, in the actual possession of the land in controversy, under a chain and claim of title; and though the appellants were substituted b}7 entry upon the record in the county court as defendants in Bishop’s stead, yet they, as defendants to this simple and summary proceeding for restitution of the possession of the land, must be held to be as Bishop or any stranger, trespassers unlawfully entering and withholding from Kane his right of possession. The jury so found, and our judgment is to affirm the judgment' of the circuit court, which affirmed the judgment of the county court of Scott county.
Judgment aeeirmbd.