Overfield v. Christie
Overfield v. Christie
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
1. By the' Act of Limitations, 26th March, 1785, no person can support an action to recover the possession of land, unless he, or the persons under whom he claims, have had possession within twenty-one years next before the commencement of the suit. . But in .order to protect those persons who derived titles from the State of Pennsylvania, against the unlawful possession of those who in contempt of the Government, pretended to derive title from the State of Connecticut, it was enacted, by the Act of 11th March, 1800, that the Act of 26th March, 1785, “ should be repealed, and have no effect within what was called the seventeen townships, in the county of Luzerne, nor in any case where title' is or has at any time been claimed- under what is called the Susquehanna Company, or in any way under the State of Connecticut, for any lands or possessions within this Commonwealth-.” The land for which this ejectment was brought, does not lie within the seventeen townships, so that the case could only be affected by the defendants claiming under the Susquehanna Company, or the State of Connecticut. But there is another Act of Assembly, passed the 25th March, 1813, to be taken into consideration, in order to form a judgment on this case, and from that Act it will appear, that whether the defendants derived title under Connecticut or not, was of no importance, as regarded the Act of Limitation»,. By this last mentioned Act, if is provided, that in two years from the passing thereof, the Act .of 11th March, 1800, should be repealed, and the Act of 26th March, 1785, (the general Limitation Act,) should, after the expiration of the
2. I cannot perceive the force of the second objection. If grants the possession to be adverse, and yet calls for something more—for some colour of title. To be sure if a man enters, without pretence of title of any kind, into land which he knows to be appropriated, there is considerable reason to suppose, that he does not mean to deny the title of the owner, but merely to occupy the land, with an intent to become a purchaser; especially if the owner lives at a distance. But this presumption may be rebutted by proof that he set the owner at defiance. Whether Abbott knew of the survey on Lefevre's application, when he first settled, does not appear. ;If he did not, he no doubt intended to hold for himself against the world. I think, however, that the Judge put
3. As fio privity between'trespassers. If one'enters and commits a trespass, and then goes off, and another comes after him, and commits a trespass, I grant that there is no privity between these persons, nor can the possession be said to be transferred and Continued from one to the other. But I cannot see that the present case falls within that principle. ■ Here has been a possession of four or five and twenty years, transferred in the two first instances, .for a valuable conside- . ration, and finally transferred from father to soh. Each' new posseásor. has been .substantially connected with his predecessor. -The law pays great regard-to á possession transmitted from father to son ; so great indeed, that where there was a. disseisin and a descent to the heir of the disseisor, the entry of the disseisee was, at common law, taken away. Lord Mansfield has told us, that of seisin and disseisin very little was known in his time, but the name. In Pennsylvania we certainly have not been in the habit of going deeply into that antiquated subject ; nor is it material' to inquire whether Abbot or those'who came after him acquired a seisin according’ to the strict import of the term. Our law permits all persons whether in or out of seisin or possession, .to transfer their claim, such as it is, good or bad, by .deed or will. And I have no manner of doubt, that one who enters as a trespasser, clears land, builds a house and lives in it, acquires something which he may transfer to-another^; and if the possession of the two added together, amounts to twénty-one years, and was adverse to him who had the legal titl_e, the Act of Limitations will be a bar to his recovery. It would be extraordinary indeed, if a possession acquired without force could not be transferred, when we hold that prior possession alone, is good title to- recover in ejectment,against all büt him who shews better title. But when possession has been tinued for a number of years, and has'passed from hand to? hand for valuable consideration, or by descent from parent to child1, it has something respectable in it. The argument df the plaintiff leads plainly to this consequence, that the Act of-Limitations can never take effect in favour of a defective title, unless one man lives twenty-one years ; because every one who enters under a defective title is a trespasser, and
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Overfield against Christie and another
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- 10 cases
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- Published