delivered the opinion of the Court.
The counsel for the tenant contends that the replication is bad ;y but, if not, that the declaration is; that at all events, the first fault in the pleadings is on the part of the demandant; and that on the demurrer, judgment ought to be rendered for the tenant. Let us first examino ths declaration. It is drawn with extreme carelessness.
The land demanded is one acre and one third of an acre. It is stated to be the northwest part of a larger tract or piece of land, which has but one side line given. Courses and distances furnish no sort' pf description of it; but the land demanded lies in Dover, adjoining”
If the replication had been such as is usually given to a plea of .general nontenure, that is, a replication affirming that the defendant, at the commencement of the action, was tenant of the freehold of the premises demanded, it should not have concluded with a verifi- . cation, but to the country, as is the fact in the present case; so are the forms. Is the replication, then, in substance, one which traverses the matter of the plea ? It states that, at the time of the commencement of the action^ the tenant was in possession of the demanded premises, claiming them as his own. What more is necessary to constitute a man tenant of the freehold ? According to our law, as it now stands, if a defendant in a real action pleads the general issue, it is no admission that he is in possession of ,the premises demanded ; but prior to the passing of the statute alluded to, it had been decided in several cases, by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, that if in such an action the defendant pleaded the general issue, it was an admission that he was tenant of the freehold; that is, that he was in possession, claim
Judgment for the plaintiff.
