Fitzhugh v. Croghan

25 Ky. 429, 2 J.J. Marsh. 429, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 122
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 22, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 25 Ky. 429 (Fitzhugh v. Croghan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitzhugh v. Croghan, 25 Ky. 429, 2 J.J. Marsh. 429, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 122 (Ky. Ct. App. 1829).

Opinion

Judge Robertson,

delivered the opinion of the Court

On the 5th of January, 1818, Croghan sold and conveyed, to Fitzburgh and Thruston, part of a town lot, in Louisville. He covenanted in his deed, that he was seised of the legal title to the lot, and had a right to sell it.

It appears that Croghan was in possession, when he conveyed the lot, and that he delivered the possession to Fitzhugh and Thruston, who have since retained without eviction, or disturbance.

Apprehending that Croghan’s title was defective, his vendees, (the appellants) on the 22d of Septena* berr, 1824, brought an action of covenant against him, averring, as a breach of his covenant, that he was not seised of the legal title, and had no right to sell and convey.

Croghan plead that he' was seised of the legal title to the lot, at the date of his deed, to the appellants. The case being tried on this issue, a verdict and judg* ment, were rendered for Croghan. To reverse which, this appeal is prosecuted.

The principal errors relied on by the appellants, are those which call in question Croghan’s title. There are others, less important, which question the legality of instructions given by the court, and of opinions, overruling motions to instruct the jury.

Before these are examined, however, a preliminary objection will be noticed. It is, that the plea is not responsive to the entire breach in the declartaion; the latter charging a want of legal title, and of right to convey; and the former averring seisin, only.

This objection is fallacious. If Croghan were seised of the le'gal title, he had a right to convey. A complete legal title, is the “juris el sesinte conjunction’ the title and possession united. This is the technical and legal import of the terms, wseised of the legal [430]*430title.” “Seisin,” means,“ra vi termini,” the whole legal title. A covenant of seisin is broken, if the covenan-have not the possession, the right of possesion, and the right, or legal title.

It would, therefore, be difficult to imagine a case, jn which a party could be “seised" and yet, not have the right to sell and convey the legal title. “Seisin” is a “nomen generalissemum,” which includes the right to sell: “Omne majus continet in se minus." 3 J

Croghan’s title is derived, as follows: . , , ,

, , , 1st. An act of the Virginia legislature of 1780, vesting the lots in Louisville, in certain persons, as trustees. III. Littell’s Laws, 540.

2d. A deed from a majority of persons, calling themselves trustees of Louisville, to Pitman, dated 4th September, 1783.

3d. A deed from Pitman to Woods, dated 8th February, 1810.

4th. A deed from .Woods to Lucket, dated 11th April, 1812.

5th. A deed from Lucket to Skidmore, dated 9th April, 1816. <

6th. A deed from Lucket, White, and Preston to Skidmore, dated 5th May, 1816.

7th. A deed from Skidmore to Croghan, 1st November, 1817.

The appellants object to the validity of the title, thus deduced; and urge the following reasons in support of their objection:

1st. That the persons, conveying as trutees had no authority to pass the legal title; and that their deed was never properly acknowledged or proved.

2d, That Pitman, by an endorsement on the deed from the trustees to him, assigned his right to the lot, to William Johnson, on the 6th September, 1785, from whom the legal title had passed to others, between whom and Croghan, there was no privity.

3dv That Lucket had a wife entitled to doweV, who had never relinquished.

[431]*431{ 4th. That Augustus D. and Juliet White bad an interest in the lot, adverse to the ritle of Croghan.

5th. That those claiming under Johnson, liad, by á long continued possession, acquired a right to thé possession of the lot, and that in consequence of that right, one of them had recovered judgment, in an ejectment against Croghan.

These objections were all disregarded by the jury and court below, and we think properly.

By the Virginia act of May, 1780, Louisville was established and one thousand acres of land, declared to be forfeited by the patentee, thereof, John Con-nelly, was vested in eight trustees, with power in any four of them, to lay out lots, and sell and convey them; and to fill vacancies that might occur in the board of trustees by death or removal of any of its members.

In May, 1783, another act passed, providing that, as John Campbell, and Joseph Simon, held a mortgage on the one thousand acres of land, which had been appropriated for the town of Louisville, as the escheated land of Connelly, “all further proceedings, respecting the sale of the said lots, and lands, shall be, and the same are hereby suspended, until the end of the next session, of the general assembly.”'

By another act of October, 1783, so much of the act of May, 1780. as might affect the rights of Campbell and Simon, was repealed.

Another act of October, 1784, recognizing the sales which had been made of lots, directed, that the proceeds of such sales, should be collected and appro* priated towards extinguishing the mortgage of Campbell and Simon; and declared “that the titles of the purchasers of lots in the town of Louisville, under the said act of May, 1780, shall be deemed valid, against the claim of the said John Campbell and Joseph Simon, and their heirs or assigns.”

The deed to Pitman, is dated September, 1783, and signed by three of the trustees, appointed by the act of 1780., and by James Patten, as a trustee, appointed by the board, to fill a vacancy; and attested by two witnesses.

[432]*432On the trial, the original deed was read, on proof of the death and hand writing of the subscribing witnesses; a copy, certified by the clerk, was also ■read, on which there was this endorsement, “at a court, held for Jefferson county, April Gth 1785, the above deed was acknowledged by the trustees of Louisville, to Buckner Pitman, and ordered to be. .recorded.”

On the original, was the following endorsement! “1784, April court, O. record, recorded and examined, Book. A. pa. 147.”

A resolution of the trustees of Louisville, appointing James Patten, a trustee, in June 1.783, was also read in evidence.

The plaintiffs offered in evidence, the order book of the county court, of Jefferson, for 1784-5, to shew that no order appeared in it, for the admission of the deed to record, at April court, 1784; but that there was such an order, at April court, 1785; but the court refused to admit the order book.

Three objections are urged against this deed, by the appellants:

1st. That Patten was not a trustee.

2d. That in 1783, the trustees had no power to convey.

3d. That as an original, the deed ought not to have been read to the jury; and passed no title, because it was not attested by three witnesses.

4th. That the deed was not regularly proved by three witnesses, nor acknowledged, and recorded Within eight months, and therefore, passed no title; and consequently, the copy was inadmissible.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Ky. 429, 2 J.J. Marsh. 429, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzhugh-v-croghan-kyctapp-1829.