Den ex dem. Walker v. Turner
Den ex dem. Walker v. Turner
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an ejectment brought in. May, 1818, in the Circuit Court fyr the District, of Tennessee, by the plaintiff-in error, to recover possession of a lot of ground in the town of Nashville, distinguished in the plan of the town,., as lot No. 85. Upon the trial of the cause, the plaintiff gave in evidence, a deed for flit* lot. in controversy, from the commissioners of the toivn of Nashville to the lessor of the plaintiff bearing date the 6th off August, 1790, and then proved the defendant to be in possession of the same at the time the suit was brought.
The defendant then gave in evidence a record of the; County.Court , of Davidson, in the State of Tennessee, by which it appears, that upon the complaint of Roger B. Sappington, administrator of- Mark B. Sappington, deceased, to a Justice of the Peace for the said county; supported by,his oath, ‘ that George Walker (the lessor of
These proceedings, being carried into the Coun.ty Court of Davidson, the cause was there docketted,. and the defendant having appeared by attorney, a stay of six months, under the law, was. entered on the docket, At. the sessions of the Court, in October, 1804, the defendant entered special bail, and reprieved the property attached. The record then exhibits the following entry, viz. “ On which attachment the said administrator nb- . tained judgment before J. A. Parker, [who issued the attachment,] a Justice of. the Peace, on the 26th of April, 1804; which proceedings being brought up. to Dayidson County Court, April sessions, 1804, and a stay of further •proceedings ordered to the present sessions, (October, 1804,), at which sessions bail was entered, in order to
The defendant then gave in evidence á deed, dated the 22d of July, 1809, from the Sheriff of Davidson county to Roger B. Sappington, for the lot in question, purchased by him at public auction, under process of the Court of said county,. for non-payment of the taxes due upon the said lot. The defendant also gave in evidence, a deed from the, said Roger B. Sappington to Lemuel P. Turner, deceased, to whom the defendant was prdved to be heir and devisee. He further proved, that shortly after the deed by the Sheriff' to. Roger B. Sappington, he (the grantee) exercised acts of ownership on the lot in question, by cutting trees, quarrying stones, &c. which he continued to do until |he sold the lot to Turner, but that he never resided on the lot, or had any continued possession thereof, except as above stated.
The next evidence given by the defendant, was a deed, dated the day of January, 1806, from the Sheriff of Davidson county to Roger B. Sap-pington,. which, after reciting all the proceedings before mentioned, before the magistrate of Davidson county, and the Court of that county, in the suit of Sappington against Walker, the, writ of
The defendant then proved, that in the year 1811 or 1812, Lemuel P. Turner commenced building a stone fence on this lot, which he was one or two years engaged in completing; that he commenced building a. house on the lot,, which he incessantly persevered in till it was finished, after which he removed into it, in 1812 or 1813.
Upon the above evidence, set forth in a bill of exceptions to the opinion of the Court, the charge to the jury was, that the deed from the Sheriff of Davidson county to R. B. Sappington, under the judgment of Sappington’s. administrator, against Walker,, was sufficient, if the jury.believed the facts to be as above, stated,, to vest the title of said Walker . .to .said lot in Sappington the purchaser at the execution sale; that the tribunal that adjudicated, and from whom toé execution issued, had jurisdiction .of the subject- matter, and that the parties,' too, were in Court.; that the deeds aforesaid were of such a colour or appearance of title as, connected with seyen years peaceable and continued possession, by the persons claiming under them» and the .grant to Walker, would protect the possession under-the statute of limitations. The fáct as to possession was left to the jury; The Judge further stated, that a. pspty, to he.protected by the statute,.-must have an adverse continued possession of the land in dispute, either by actually residing on it, or by
This charge, presents, for the. consideration of the Court, the following questions:
1. Whether the deed, from the Sheriff of Davidson county to Sappington, did vest in the latter a title, to the land in question ?
2. Whether, under the circumstances stated in the bill of exceptions, the possession of the.defendant was protected by the statute ef limitations of the State of Tennessee ?
3. Whether the Court below was right in the statement made to the jury, as to what, constitutes a possession to be protected by the act of limitations.
1. Whether the Sheriff’s deed conveyed to' Sappingtoft a title to the land in controversy, depends upon the Question, whether the sale was madq under the judgment of a tribunal having jurisdiction of the cause in which it was rendered. The judgment was rendered by a Justice of the Peace, upon an attachment issued by him against á non-resident, and returnable before himself; and the order for selling thé property attached, was made by the County Court, ,It does not, however, appear by the return made upon the attachment, that the lot in dispute, or any other property of Walker, was attached ; nor does it even appear, otherwise "than by a recital in the deed from the Sheriff to Sappington, that any process issued from the County Court, which' authorized the Sheriff to sell this lot. Evidence , was given by
But passing by this objection to the validity of the sale, the Court will inquire, whether the same was sanctioned by the judgment of a tribunal having competent jurisdiction of the case in which it was rendered. It is, in the first place, by no means tobe admitted, that at the time these proceedings were instituted, a Justice of the Peace was authorized, by the laws of Tennessee, to issue an attachment against the estate of a non-resident debt- or, returnable before himself, and determinable by him. By the 19th, 20th, and 21st sections of. the act of 1794, a Justice of the Peace is empowered to issue an attachment, against the estate of a debtor who has removed, or is removing himself privately out of. the county, or who so absconds and conceals himself, that the ordinary process of law cannot be served upon him ; and álso, against the estate of a non-resident; but in all these cases, the attachment is to be returned
2. The next question is, whether, únder the circumstances stated in the , bilL of exceptions, the possession of the defendant was protected by the statute of limitations of the State of Tennessee ? This statute, which passed iri the yepr 1797, enacts, “ that in all cases wherever any person or -persons shall have had seven years peaceable possession of any land, by virtue of.a grant, or deed of conveyance, founded upon a grant, and no legal claim, by suit in law be set up to said land, within the above said term, that then, and in that case, the person, &c. &c. holding possession as aforesaid, shall be entitled to hold, possession, iri preference to all other claimants, of such quantity of land as shall be specified in his, her, or their said grant.
In the case of Patton's lessee v. Easton, (1 Wheat. Rep. 476.) a construction of the above act was given by this Court, in which it was decided, that a possession of seven years is a bar, only when it is held under a grant, or under, a deed founded on a grant; and that, as the defendant, in that case, showed no title under the trustees of the town of Nashville,.nor under any other grant, his seven years possession was insufficient to protect his title, or to bar that of the plaintiff, under a conveyance from the trustees.
That was a stronger case for the defendant than the present; for in that the defendant gave in evidence a deed, for a valuable consideration, from Josiah Love to William T Lewis, at a time when the possession of the lane in controversy was vacant. That Lewis, immediately after the conveyance, took possession of the land, made valuable improvements thereon, and continued so possessed for about seventeen years, when he sold and conveyed the same to the defendant, who took and continued the possession until the ejectment was brought. Here, then, was an entry upon land in. the actual possession of no person, under a bona fide deed, and -a long continued possession under that title, which could not avail the defendant, because he could not trace a connected title up to a grant. In the present case, it appears, from the defendant’s own showing, that Sappington, under whom he claims, had no title. If the defendant claims under a grant, or under mesae conveyances,
The Court is, therefore, of opinion, that the Court below erred in stating to the jury that the deed to-Sappington, under the judgment of Sap-pington’s administrator against Walker, was sufficient to vest the title of Walker in Sappington;
Judgment reversed, and a venire facias de novo awarded.
Judgment. This cause came on to be heard, &c. Qh consideration whereof, his Court, is of . opinion, that the said Circuit Court <n ed in stating to the jury that the deed to R. B. Sappington, under the . judgment of said M. B. Sappington’s administrator against said Walker, was sufficient to vest.the title'of said Walker in said Sappington, and that the deeds referred to, were of such a co-lour or appearance of title, as, connected with 'seven years peaceable and continued possession, by the person claiming under them, and the grant
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