10 Watts 289 | Pa. | 1840
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The principal error relied on in this case, is in the charge of the court, but we think the complaint of the defendant is without foundation.- AThe entry of John Ormsby must be taken to have been adverse to the title of Lamb and Checkly, in the absence of any sort of evidence that he entered for them, or held under them. He acted, in all respects, as the sole owner and claimant of the inheritance, making leases, receiving rents, paying taxes, and preserving and improving the property. He had no title or colour of title that we know of. He was merely a trespasser, but such an occupant as by our law gains a complete title by disseisin, after an uninterrupted enjoyment for twenty-one years. Pipher v. Lodge, 4 Serg. & Rawle 310, and 16 Serg. & Rawle 214. On his death, his son, Oliver Ormsby, entered and held, not in his own right, but jure representationis, as one of the sons and
It cannot'be pretended here, that Oliver Ormsby ever thus ousted the other heirs. On the contrary, he recognized his duty to them by holding the possession, taking care of it, receiving the rent's, making leases, paying taxes, and other expenses, and charging the estate in his accounts with their proportion of his disbursements. It would require much stronger facts than any here shown, to establish, that he at any time divested the rights of the other heirs, and to enable him to claim the whole for himself, or to admit an outstanding title in a third person as against them. There is nothing to warrant the idea, that he ousted the other heirs; and as to the title of Lamb and Checkly, he never yielded up the possession to them, or attorned to them as their tenant, or had any intercourse or communication with them, nor had he, or any of the other heirs, any knowledge of them. All that is shown is, that at different times, he stated to these persons, that there was an outstanding title of some kind, which might, at a future day, be asserted for the land. This could not affect the possession taken and held by his father, John Ormsby, and cast upon his children by descent, which Oliver continued and carried on by his possession: and in fact, in legal operation as against their rights, amounted to nothing. The court was, we think, right in saying, that the statute would run in favour of the heirs, if Oliver Ormsby continued the possession, re
In regard to the bill of exceptions, we see no error in the rejection of the depositions by the court. The question-was not of identity, that is, whether the persons now suing are the same as those who executed the powers of attorney: but whether certain persons claiming as heirs, and executing conveyances to the defendant, on which he sets up a title, must not be proved by evidence of some sort or other, to be such heirs, before the conveyances, can be read: and it is clear they must.
Judgment affirmed.