48 Pa. 187 | Pa. | 1864
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— The plaintiff sought to recover on his paper title, and on the trial put in evidence a warrant from the Commonwealth to one John Clark for the land, dated the 30th No vember 1793, and a survey of the 1st of May 1794.
The next step was the deed from Thomas Jackson to Philip Rheam, for the same land, dated the 7th July 1840, but without showing any title to the Clark warrant, or possession under it. From this point downward the title to the plaintiff was regularly derived.
This raises the inquiry, how did Jackson’s conveyance operate to convey Clark’s title as warrantee? The learned judge, usually so ample in reasons and research, has not given us the benefit of those which led him to treat Jackson’s deed as effective in conveying title to the warrant.
There is not a particle of evidence on the paper-books to show that Jackson had ever been in possession of the land; had ever
, I do not discover that there was anything to raise the presumption in favour of those taking title under Jackson. We see nothing excepting a greater lapse of time. There occurred no other “unquestioned assertion of title and acts of ownership” as was said to be necessary in Eox v. Thompson, 7 Casey, supra. This being so, the defendant might have rested on his possession alone; but he opened his case, and showed a treasurer’s sale and deed for the land. This let in the plaintiff’s rebutting testimony, which seems to have established in the estimation of the jury one or both of two aspects entirely unfavourable to its validity. But if the plaintiff’s title was without force enough to recover on, it mattered not that the defendant had none. He could rely on his possession. As the case appears now, the plaintiff had neither title nor previous possession on which to recover, even if he could bring the defendant’s position into that of a mere intruder. We
We cannot decide, as we have not the testimony before us, that notwithstanding all this, the plaintiff was entitled to the possession, on the ground that the defendant occupies the same ground as would the plaintiff’s agent if he had contested his title. Nor can we tell on which of the two grounds the jury condemned the defendant’s title, whether for the alleged fraudulent combination to defeat the redemption of the treasurer’s sale, or because the taxes had been paid, and the sale void. We cannot, therefore, say that, notwithstanding the defect in the plaintiff’s chain of title, that the recovery was right on the principle that would undoubtedly estop an agent in possession from contesting his principal’s title, and which would also place the defendant in the same attitude if he were in combination with him. We are left in the dark as to these matters, and we can do no otherwise than to reverse this judgment for the reasons given, and let the parties try their case again, if they choose, in the light of this decision, and under any new facts they may possess.
Judgment reversed, and venire de novo awarded.