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1817.

"the lessors of the plaintiff, or those under whom they claim, FEBRUARY, "or a right to the possession must be shewn by the death and "seisin, in the manner prescribed by the Act of Assembly, Moody & others " of some person under whom they claim:" which instruction the Court refused to give to the Jury; whereupon the defendant filed a Bill of Exceptions.

The defendant also moved the Court to instruct the Jury, "that, if a subsisting legal Title to the Lot in question is "shewn to be out-standing in a third person or persons, and no

privity is shewn between the defendant and the lessors of "the plaintiff, or those, under whom they claim; and it shall 66 appear that the defendant was not an intruder or trespasser "upon the possession of the lessors of the plaintiff, or those, "under whom they claim; that such out-standing title is a bar "to the action." The Court also refusing to give this instruction, the defendant again excepted.

The Counsel for the defendant having offered to prove, as a bar to the plaintiff's Title, a legal Title out-standing in a stranger, the plaintiff by his Counsel moved the Court to instruct the Jury, "that such out-standing Title, in order to be "a bar as aforesaid, must be proved to be a present, subsisting, "operative title; otherwise, that the presumption is that such "Title in a stranger has been extinguished:" and the Court accordingly gave the instruction required; to which opinion also the defendant excepted.

The Jury found a Verdict, and Judgment was entered for the plaintiff, which, on Appeal, was reversed by the Superior Court of Law; that Court being of opinion "that the County "Court erred in refusing to give to the Jury the instruction re"quired as mentioned in the first bill of exceptions." Judg ment was therefore pronounced that the Verdict be set aside, and the cause remanded for a new trial, with directions to the said Court to give said instruction to the Jury to be then empanneled.

From which Judgment the lessors of the plaintiff appealed to this Court.

John Robertson for the Appellants, contended that there was no error in the Judgment of the County Court of Henrico. If in any case the instruction required would be improper, this

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FEBRUARY, Court must sanction the refusal to give it.

1817.

Moody & others

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Twenty years adverse possession is not necessary, where the defendant is a trespasser or intruder without colour of title. Allen v. Rivington, 2 Saund. 111; Jackson v. Hazen, 2 Johnş. N. Y. Rẹp. 22; and Jackson v. Harden, 4 Johns. N. Y. Rep. 202, are express authorities to this effect. Priority of possession alone, as against such defendants, is sufficient. And, in support of the opinion of the County Court, it is fair to suppose that the defendant in this case was a mere intruder without colour of Title.

But if this cannot be supposed, yet it is not incumbent on the plaintiff to prove an uninterrupted adverse possession of twenty years. Because, to require this is to require proof of a negative, a negative which it would hardly be possible to establish even indirectly; unless actual possession could be shewn during every minute for the space of twenty years. Besides, if an interruption of the possession was necessarily a bar to the plaintiff's recovery, that fact might and ought to be established by the defendant.

So far from its being necessary for the plaintiff to shew an uninterrupted possession, it is clear that his possession may have been interrupted, and yet his claim is in no degree prejudiced. For example; the plaintiff relies upon a possession of twenty years, and it appears that, during this period, he was forcibly or fraudulently dispossessed, by a stranger without colour of title, and kept out of possession one or more years, but regained the possession by his own act, or by act of law under a Writ of forcible entry and detainer, or otherwise. This would be an interruption of his possession, and yet surely no reason why he should not recover against a subsequent wrong doer. On the contrary, the restitution of possession would confirm his title, or at least place him in statu quo. (a.) The entry of one, having no right to enter, could be of no 179 181; 4 avail to the wrong doer or to any other person, nor, consequently, in any degree weaken the title of the person dispossessed, unless the latter permitted it to work this effect by long acquiescence.

(a) 3 Bl. Com.

Johns. 211.

There is nothing in the other Bills of Exceptions, it is believed, deserving a comment.

1817.

William Hay, jr. contra. All presumption of any title, FEBRUARY, in the lessors of the plaintiff, other than what could be derived from a mere prior possession, afterwards relinquished, is Moody & others excluded by the terms of the instruction requested; as also the supposition of trespass upon their actual possession.

Mere priority of possession, in such a case, is not a sufficient title. If so, the plaintiff might prevail upon a prior possession of a single day, against any length of possession in the defendant, short of twenty years. Allen v. Rivington, 2 Saund. 111, cited by the opposing Counsel, was a case of trespass by the defendant upon actual possession of the lessor of the plaintiff. Possession by the lessor and ouster by the defendant were found by the Jury

and although, as stated,

confessed by the common rule, yet they must be proved on

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the trial: (a) when found by the Jury then, it is not because (a) Runnington they were confessed, but because they were proved.

Jackson on Eject. 23.

It

v. Hazen, 2 Johns. 22, is open to the same observation.
was a tortious entry of the defendant upon the lessor's actual
possession. In Jackson v. Harden, 4 Johns. 202, the prior pos-
session of the lessor was under colour of title.

The mere priority of the possession then is not sufficient. Yet, as a person may, upon a mere possessory right, recover under some circumstances; if it be not the priority, what is the quality in the possession, which is the foundation of the right? Such a length and kind of possession as would bar the right of entry, or in the words of the instruction asked, twenty years uninterrupted adverse possession.

The uncertainty, which would prevail without such a rule, is an argument in favour of it. If twenty be not the number, what number of years shall it be? one, two, five, or ten?

(b) Roe on dem.

The Rule contended for may be fairly deduced from the principles of the action. The plaintiff must recover on the strength of his own title. (b) It is an answer to the action therefore to shew a right of entry in another. Where posses- of Haldane and Urry v. Harvey, sion then is the only title, it must be such as will toll the en-4 Burr. 2487. try of the owner; and this is twenty years continued adverse possession; otherwise, there will be a subsisting right of entry in the owner, which may be set up in bar to the action.

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FEBRUARY, 1817.

Again, the plaintiff must recover upon the right of posses sion. (a) It is implied in the term, "right," that it should be Moody & others exclusive. It cannot be in two. If then the owner's entry be

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not tolled, it must be in him; and the plaintiff cannot recover upon any possession, which is not sufficient to toll such (a) Per Lord entry; for he would not have the right of possession. Mansfield, in

119.

The rule contended for results clearly from another princiTaylor er di miss Alk yns v. ple of the action; that, notwithstanding the confession by the Horde, 1 Burr. common rule, an ouster must be proved at trial; by which is not meant "a putting out by the shoulders," (to use Lord Mansfield's words,) but an actual entry upon the possession of another. The confession is intended to facilitate the proceedings, but not to give the lessor a right in a case, in which he has none. (b) A person cannot be ousted of that, which he has not. Where the premises are vacant (as this case supposes) when the defendant enters, the injury is of course to the right of possession, as there is no actual possession to be disturbed; and that right is in the owner.

(b) Runnington.

23.

Stokes v. Berry, 1 Salk. 421. is an authority of weight in support of the rule, I contend for. It will be said, perhaps, that this authority decides such a possession to be sufficient; but not that no other would suffice. The decision is expressly founded upon the continuity of possession for twenty years. Why mention this with such emphasis, if a possession short of that time is sufficient. Why the reference to the Act of Limitations? At any rate, the case decides the kind and length of possession required to toll an entry, which, under the cir cumstances of the case, it has been attempted to prove, must be shewn in the lessor.

This rule also claims support from Birch v. Alexander, 1 Wash. 34, by analogy from the length and kind of possession required in a Writ of right. The Court must be taken to assert the proposition that sixty years uninterrupted adverse possession is necessary in that proceeding, where possession alone is relied on. The same criticism may be made upon that case as upon Stokes v. Berry. If the Court had not thought it necessary, why catch at a shadow? Why not give the better answer that it was not necessary?

The case of Landlord and Tenant, relied upon by the opposing Counsel, by no means conflicts with these principles.

1817.

A recovery in such case is permitted from the privity between FEBRUARY, them; the defendant holding over being estopped from disputBut, in our case, all privity is Moody & others excluded by the terms of the instruction.

ing the title of his landlord.

3 Bl. Com., also cited by the Counsel, is an authority in our favour: the possession which is prima facie evidence of title is the actual possession, which is in the defendant.

But, it is said, if trespass could be maintained, why not Ejectment? Because title is necessary in the one case, and not in the other, as explained by Lord KENYON in Graham v. Peat, 1 East. 242.

Again, it is said that the instruction asked cannot be correct, because it requires the plaintiff to prove not only twenty years adverse possession, but uninterrupted adverse possession; that this is calling upon him to prove a negative, and would not be necessary against the owner; and that the action could be maintained if the possession had been expressly found to have been interrupted.

This argument is founded upon a misapprehension. word uninterrupted is used, not in relation to the peace or quietness, but the continuity of the possession. As applied to the adverse character of the possession, it can have no other meaning; and it would be doing violence to give it any other, when applied to any other quality of the possession. It is, therefore, not a negative which they are called upon to prove, but an affirmative proposition, viz. twenty years continued adverse possession. And this sense of the word is fully fixed by the authorities of Stokes v. Berry and Birch v. Alexander, in which it occurs. Now the continuity is implied in the very terms twenty years adverse possession; and the use of the word uninterrupted can at most subject us to the charge of tautology, but not of error in law.

Robertson in reply. It is said that, if prior possession alone be sufficient to authorize a recovery in Ejectment, the possession of one day would be good against that of nineteen years. But does not the same consequence follow, if Mr. Hay's rule be adopted, requiring proof of twenty years possession? Under the operation of this rule, a quiet possession of nineteen years

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