107 Pa. 293 | Pa. | 1884
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court, October 27th, 1884.
It is true, the Act of 13th June, 1883, P. L. 89, gives the purchaser of unseated lands at a tax sale a writ of estrepment against the owner or person acting under him, to stay waste prior to a redemption of the land. This Act, however, does not give the purchaser a right' to commit waste. It merely restrains the owner for the time being.
The timber in controversy here was not only cut before the passage of this Act, but it was cut before the execution of the surplus bond. The fact that it was afterwards given did not make the title of the purchaser retroactive in the enjoyment of the product of the land: nor did the other facts that the owner failed to redeem and afterwards collected the bond, cause the title of the purchaser as against the owner, to relate back of the giving of the same.' As previous thereto he had no title, ex nihilo, nihil fit.
As the title which a purchaser takes at an administrator’s
It follows the learned judge committed no error in granting the compulsory non-suit and in refusing to take it off.
Judgment affirmed.