Forman v. Ambler
Forman v. Ambler
Opinion of the Court
delivered the Opinion of the Court,
This appeal is prosecuted to reverse a judgment of eviction, obtained, in an action of ejectment, by Am-bier against Forman and others.
Ambler claimed, by deed, under the junior patent of Thomas Marshall, and relied for success on an alleged adversary possession for more than twenty years prior to the institution of the suit. ,
The appellants claim, by deed also,.under the senior grant of Triplet and Crutcher ; and insist that there was no such continuity of adversary possession as could have tolled their right of entry ; and that, moreover, the circuit court erred in giving instructions to the jury, and therefore erred in. overruling a motion for a new trial.
In revising the judgment, we shall consider the two general propositions thus presented by the motion for a new trial: that is, — first, did the proof authorize the verdict ? Second, did the circuit court err in any of its instructions ?
First. As to the adversary possession, the facts are, in some respects, not perfectly clear or satisfactory. But a careful survey and analysis of all the circumstances embodied in the bill of exceptions, tend to the conclusion that, whatever may be the actual state of the case, the jury had a right to infer, that Richard Wood- and another had, prior to 1790, leased the sixty acres of land now in controversy, from the patentee ; that they placed Philip Donaphan on the land, in the year 1790, as a subtenant; that Daniel Carrol bought the lease of Wood &c. and settled on the land in 1796, Donaphan still living in the cabin'which he had built when he first entered, and continuing to live therein as Carrol’s tenant for sometime after 1796 ; that Carrol continued to reside where he settled in 1796, until his death since 1803; that, in the fall of the year 1803, Samuel Hardy moved into Donaphan’s cabin, then vacant, and, shortly afterwards, leased the sixty acres from Thomas Marshall, junior, the son of the patentee, and who had authority to lease; that about six years prior to the expiration of his lease, (which was for ten years,) he sold his'term to one Phillips, who entered immediately, and, by agreement, was to occupy his place in all respects, under the lease from Marshall ; that Phillips removed from the state within about eight months after he had entered on the land ; that one Robinson, shortly afterwards, occupied it for
. Second. But we are disposed to think that the circuit court erred in instructing the jury, that, “ if they believed that Tiiomas Marshall and those claiming under him were in the possession of the land in controversy more than twenty years before they were divested of the possession by a legal entry, the plaintiff (could) maintain his ejectment, and recover, though the defendants claim under the eldest patent.”
We do not doubt, that this instruction, as understood by the court and the parties, is free from legal excep
As this court cannot know what effect the instruction had, and as it may have operated injuriously, we feel constrained to reverse the judgment of the circuit court, and remand the casé for another trial.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.