6 Md. 525 | Md. | 1854
delivered the opinion of this court.
Three objections were taken to the admissibility of the deed of 24th December 1850, all of which were properly ruled against the defendant below.
A certified copy of an instrument required by law to be' recorded, proves itself as prima facie evidence of all circumstances necessary to give it validity. 6 H. & J., 234, Craufurd vs. State. Ante, 78, Barry vs. Hoffman.
Upon the question of residence of the grantors, we do not perceive that there is any difference in principle between this and the case of Carroll vs. Tyler, 2 H. & G., 57, where it was decided that the acknowledgment of a receipt was prima facie evidence that the party resided in the county in which it was taken, and certified under the act of 1809, ch. 168, which requires such papers to be acknowledged in the county of the party’s residence.
The justices of the peace certified that the persons acknowledging the deed, were known to them to be the parties named as and professing to be parties to the same. This, we think, was a sufficient compliance with the act of 1831, ch. 205. It shows that they were satisfied of the identity of the parties from their own knowledge; the law requires a substantial compliance. This was decided in Hollingsworth vs. McDonald, 2 H. & J., 236, in relation to an acknowledgment under the' act of 1715, ch. 47, where the form is prescribed. 7 G. & J., 260, Young vs. State.
The certificate of the clerks to this deed is sufficient under the act of 1766, ch. 14. The words^ “were at the time of so-doing,” relate as well to the acknowledgment by the parties, as to the signing of the certificate. In contemplation of law they are but one act. The acknowledgment in 2 H. & J., 380, referred to on the part of the appellant, is more specially drawn; but the certificates before us are in accordance with a form which has been in use for many years, and should not be questioned by this court. 1 Ev. Har., 22.
We approve of the court’s refusal to admit the agreement offered in the second exception. It is not understood to have
The ruling of the court in the third exception is not objectionable. The plaintiffs offered proof, that Hammond, under "whom they claimed, had held the lands by possession since 1811, by renting to a person, in consideration that the tenant would enclose them, and that part had been enclosed: the plaintiffs stating at the time, that they relied on title by patent and by possession for more than twenty years. The defendant then offered to prove, “that the lands had never been enclosed for more than twenty years at one time,” in order to lebut the title of the plaintiffs so far as it relied on possession. This evidence the court excluded. The question was, whether the lands had been possessed for twenty years, not whether they had been held by enclosures for that time. Whatever the law was before the act of 1852, ch. ITT, sec. 2, it is certain, that since its passage it is not necessary to prove possession by enclosures. It was, therefore, immaterial to the issue, whether ¡the plaintiffs, or those under whom they claimed, had held the land under fences or not. They offered proof of possession for more than twenty years; the defendant offered no such evidence in his behalf. The act was gratified by the plaintiffs’ proof, and their right to rely on such possession could not be affected by the inquiry, whether it was by inclosure or not. If, as was said, this evidence on the part of the plaintiffs was also immaterial, it was no reason for admitting similar testimony on the other side. 4 Md. Rep., 255. 5 Md. Rep., 385. 6 Gill & Johns., 481. It was not admissible for the purpose for which it was offered, and was therefore properly rejected. 3 G. & J., 435, Sothoron vs. Weems.
In disposing of the fourth exception, we need not determine what would have been the effect of the purchase at the sheriff’s sale, upon the title of James G. Hardy, if he were claiming the land. The point now presented seeks to convert the fictions in the action of ejectment into realities, and thereby defeat the very object for which they were introduced. The lease in this case is a fictitious proceeding, as in any other action of
The fifth exception sets out the plaintiffs’ title, composed of a patent, deeds, wills and parol proof. It appears that Eden Hammond, under whom the plaintiffs claim, came into possession of the land described in the declaration about the year 1811, and remained in possession until his death, in 1834, and that some of the fields were fenced by one of his tenants, in consideration of his tenancy. The defendant then proposed to inquire of one of the witnesses, “whether, to his personal knowledge, Eden Hammond possessed the lands, by enclosure, peaceably, uninterrupted and exclusively for twenty years at one time,” but the court refused to allow the question to be put. We think that this point depends, in a great degree, on the doctrine announced under the third exception, As the plaintiffs had offered proof of possession of the land as claimed in the declaration, which explicitly states the extent of their demand, it was immaterial whether the possession was by enclosure or not. If there had been none at any time, the possession might have been such as to gratify the requirements of the act of 1852, ch. 177.
The first prayer in the sixth exception was properly refused, upon the principle decided in Cresap vs. Hutson, 9 Gill, 277.
The second prayer, by confining the plaintiffs to proof of title under a patent, or by possession for more than twenty years by those under whom they claim, overlooks the evidence of title, “otherwise good,” furnished by the deeds, wills and parol proof offered on the part of the plaintiffs, which, as we think, brought the case within the second section of the act of 1852, ch. 177.
The third prayer presented no point or question for the consideration of the court. To ask the court to instruct the jury,
Concurring with the circuit court on all the exceptions, the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.