GRIER, Circuit Justice.
The reason why' after-purchased lands do not pass by a will, even though the testator has expressed clearly his wish or intention that they should, is not because such a purchase is a revocation of the will, but because a will is in the nature of a conveyance or an appointment of a particular estate, and consequently the testator must have the power to dispose at the time the will is executed. Hence a devise of land, though it operates in future, can pass only such interest Or estate as the testator had at the time, and continued to have till his decease. Like a grant-of all a man’s estate and interest without warranty or covenant of title, it is no estoppel against the grantor or his heirs.
Thus, if a man having an equitable estate in land, devise it, and afterwards purchase the legal title, the latter will descend to his heir; but equity will hold him as a trustee for the devisee of the equitable or usufructuary estate. On the contrary, if the testator have but the legal estate at the time he makes his will, and afterwards purchases the equitable estate, the devisee of the legal estate will be held as trustee for the heir to whom the after-purchased equitable estate descends. There is no extinguishment of the after-purchased-title for the sake of enlarging the. devise, and the heir is not stopped from averring that the devisee took just such estate or title as the testator had at the date of the execution of his will. Nor can the distinction taken by the counsel of the city between title and estate avail to establish a difference in the present case. A man who has neither possession nor right, has no estate in the land. He who has nothing can convey nothing. It is true that a void deed, which conveys no estate, may be used by one in possession as colour of title and evidence of the extent of his claim, while his whole estate in the land is no more than a naked or tortious possession. It is true also, that by the ancient feudal doctrine of dis-seisin, a person who has ousted the owner is treated as tenant of the freehold. A disseisin was considered not only as a dispossession of the freeholder, but also as a substitution of the disseisor as tenant to the lord, as one of the pares curiae. But, though some of the consequences of actual disseisin continue to be law in England, yet Lord Mansfield admits that in his day very little was known of seisin or disseisin but the name. In Pennsylvania, where property is allodial, it is still less known or applied, except in its analogies as connected with the statute of limitations and adverse possessions. In England, till lately, the disseisee could not dispose of the land by will or otherwise, and descent cast takes away his right of entry. But such has never been the law in Pennsylvania. Overfield v. Christie, 7 Serg. & R. 177; Humes v. McFarlane, 4 Serg. & R. 435; and McCall v. Neely, 3 Watts, 71. One in possession without right, or merely by disseisin, is considered as “having a something which may be transferred,” a naked possession which may ripen into a title by the statute of limitations. But until it has done so, neither his heir nor alienee is in possession by title, tolling the entry of the disseisee or owner. By the feudal law of disseisin, the heir of the disseisor, or his [440]*440alienee by feoffment, with livery of seisin, is in actual possession with title, and the dis-seisee having lost the right of entry, has but a bare right Whether a release by such a disseisee after devise, would be construed to operate by way of enlargement of the dev-isees’s estate or extinguishment of that of the disseisee, we need not inquire. No case has been brought to our notice containing such a doctrine. But a release from disseisee to dis-seisor, is in fact the creation of a new estate, being equivalent to an entry and feoffment, and could not be construed to operate by way of extinguishment.
But it is unnecessary to trouble ourselves with these antiquated and obscure doctrines; for, admitting all the consequences claimed from them, they have no application to this case.
1st Because neither the trustees, nor Gi-rard, under their quit claim deed, had any actual seisin: they had neither possession nor right of possession. The title and estate of the bank was divested by the commissioner’s sales, under the Nicholson lien; and the purchasers had the title and the actual possession, or if the land remains vacant, the law cast on them the possession. The trustees were not disseisors, nor was Girard enfeoffed by them with livery of seisin. And though a deed of bargain and sale may be equivalent to such a feoffment, yet where the bargainor had neither possession nor title, no seisin by right or by wrong, his deed could confer no seisin or estate whatsoever on the bargainor.
2nd. The acts of Girard, relied on as giving title, giving the testimony Its utmost effect, did not amount to an ouster or disseisin of the owners whether in actual or legal possession. A mere entry upon another is no disseisin, unless it be accompanied with expulsion. An estate by disseisin is got by wrong and injury; and the rightful owner must be expelled either by violence or some act which the law regards as equivalent in its effects. Doe v. Thompson, 5 Cow. 371.
Girard had, therefore, no seisin, no estate, or freehold by right or by wrong, on which a release could operate by way of enlargement, confirmation or extinguishment. His vendor having neither possession nor right could convey nothing to him by his deed. At the time the codicil was executed Girard had no estate which he could convey by grant or devise. The conveyance, subsequent to the codicil, conferred a new and independent title — gave him seisin and right to, or estate in, the land. Then for the first time he became owner of the lands, and had power to convey them.
The proposition which the counsel for the devisees must substantiate, under the facts in this case, must be this: That a man who has purchased a pretended title to land where his vendor had neither possession nor right, and who afterwards purchases from the true owner, and thus becomes seised and possessed, is estopped to deny that he claims by the pretended and worthless title; that this estoppel descends to his heir, and that the good title becomes merged in the bad one, and that in order to assist the devisee, as against the heir at law, equity will construe the good conveyance by which alone the grantee has any seisin, estate or title, to be a mere extinguishment of an outstanding claim or cloud on the title. This doctrine cannot be supported by analogy of authority in ancient or modern law.
The case cited from Brooke gives no countenance tosuch doctrine. For where an abator or disseisor aliens in mortmain by license of the king and lord paramount, and disseisee releases the right to the abbot, it must be observed that the abbot being alienee by livery of seisin of the disseisor, is in possession of the freehold by title. And the entry and feoffment being by license are sufficient to pass the freehold to the abbot as against the king and lord paramount, and all the world except him who hath the right. But his right of entry being tolled, his release, which is of the bare right, will be construed to operate only as extinguishment of his right, and not to the destruction of the estate so as to countervail entry and feoffment by license. Hence the distinction taken “where the abbot himself is disseisor and the king or lord releases, and confirms to him, and then the disseisee releases the abbot.
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GRIER, Circuit Justice.
The reason why' after-purchased lands do not pass by a will, even though the testator has expressed clearly his wish or intention that they should, is not because such a purchase is a revocation of the will, but because a will is in the nature of a conveyance or an appointment of a particular estate, and consequently the testator must have the power to dispose at the time the will is executed. Hence a devise of land, though it operates in future, can pass only such interest Or estate as the testator had at the time, and continued to have till his decease. Like a grant-of all a man’s estate and interest without warranty or covenant of title, it is no estoppel against the grantor or his heirs.
Thus, if a man having an equitable estate in land, devise it, and afterwards purchase the legal title, the latter will descend to his heir; but equity will hold him as a trustee for the devisee of the equitable or usufructuary estate. On the contrary, if the testator have but the legal estate at the time he makes his will, and afterwards purchases the equitable estate, the devisee of the legal estate will be held as trustee for the heir to whom the after-purchased equitable estate descends. There is no extinguishment of the after-purchased-title for the sake of enlarging the. devise, and the heir is not stopped from averring that the devisee took just such estate or title as the testator had at the date of the execution of his will. Nor can the distinction taken by the counsel of the city between title and estate avail to establish a difference in the present case. A man who has neither possession nor right, has no estate in the land. He who has nothing can convey nothing. It is true that a void deed, which conveys no estate, may be used by one in possession as colour of title and evidence of the extent of his claim, while his whole estate in the land is no more than a naked or tortious possession. It is true also, that by the ancient feudal doctrine of dis-seisin, a person who has ousted the owner is treated as tenant of the freehold. A disseisin was considered not only as a dispossession of the freeholder, but also as a substitution of the disseisor as tenant to the lord, as one of the pares curiae. But, though some of the consequences of actual disseisin continue to be law in England, yet Lord Mansfield admits that in his day very little was known of seisin or disseisin but the name. In Pennsylvania, where property is allodial, it is still less known or applied, except in its analogies as connected with the statute of limitations and adverse possessions. In England, till lately, the disseisee could not dispose of the land by will or otherwise, and descent cast takes away his right of entry. But such has never been the law in Pennsylvania. Overfield v. Christie, 7 Serg. & R. 177; Humes v. McFarlane, 4 Serg. & R. 435; and McCall v. Neely, 3 Watts, 71. One in possession without right, or merely by disseisin, is considered as “having a something which may be transferred,” a naked possession which may ripen into a title by the statute of limitations. But until it has done so, neither his heir nor alienee is in possession by title, tolling the entry of the disseisee or owner. By the feudal law of disseisin, the heir of the disseisor, or his [440]*440alienee by feoffment, with livery of seisin, is in actual possession with title, and the dis-seisee having lost the right of entry, has but a bare right Whether a release by such a disseisee after devise, would be construed to operate by way of enlargement of the dev-isees’s estate or extinguishment of that of the disseisee, we need not inquire. No case has been brought to our notice containing such a doctrine. But a release from disseisee to dis-seisor, is in fact the creation of a new estate, being equivalent to an entry and feoffment, and could not be construed to operate by way of extinguishment.
But it is unnecessary to trouble ourselves with these antiquated and obscure doctrines; for, admitting all the consequences claimed from them, they have no application to this case.
1st Because neither the trustees, nor Gi-rard, under their quit claim deed, had any actual seisin: they had neither possession nor right of possession. The title and estate of the bank was divested by the commissioner’s sales, under the Nicholson lien; and the purchasers had the title and the actual possession, or if the land remains vacant, the law cast on them the possession. The trustees were not disseisors, nor was Girard enfeoffed by them with livery of seisin. And though a deed of bargain and sale may be equivalent to such a feoffment, yet where the bargainor had neither possession nor title, no seisin by right or by wrong, his deed could confer no seisin or estate whatsoever on the bargainor.
2nd. The acts of Girard, relied on as giving title, giving the testimony Its utmost effect, did not amount to an ouster or disseisin of the owners whether in actual or legal possession. A mere entry upon another is no disseisin, unless it be accompanied with expulsion. An estate by disseisin is got by wrong and injury; and the rightful owner must be expelled either by violence or some act which the law regards as equivalent in its effects. Doe v. Thompson, 5 Cow. 371.
Girard had, therefore, no seisin, no estate, or freehold by right or by wrong, on which a release could operate by way of enlargement, confirmation or extinguishment. His vendor having neither possession nor right could convey nothing to him by his deed. At the time the codicil was executed Girard had no estate which he could convey by grant or devise. The conveyance, subsequent to the codicil, conferred a new and independent title — gave him seisin and right to, or estate in, the land. Then for the first time he became owner of the lands, and had power to convey them.
The proposition which the counsel for the devisees must substantiate, under the facts in this case, must be this: That a man who has purchased a pretended title to land where his vendor had neither possession nor right, and who afterwards purchases from the true owner, and thus becomes seised and possessed, is estopped to deny that he claims by the pretended and worthless title; that this estoppel descends to his heir, and that the good title becomes merged in the bad one, and that in order to assist the devisee, as against the heir at law, equity will construe the good conveyance by which alone the grantee has any seisin, estate or title, to be a mere extinguishment of an outstanding claim or cloud on the title. This doctrine cannot be supported by analogy of authority in ancient or modern law.
The case cited from Brooke gives no countenance tosuch doctrine. For where an abator or disseisor aliens in mortmain by license of the king and lord paramount, and disseisee releases the right to the abbot, it must be observed that the abbot being alienee by livery of seisin of the disseisor, is in possession of the freehold by title. And the entry and feoffment being by license are sufficient to pass the freehold to the abbot as against the king and lord paramount, and all the world except him who hath the right. But his right of entry being tolled, his release, which is of the bare right, will be construed to operate only as extinguishment of his right, and not to the destruction of the estate so as to countervail entry and feoffment by license. Hence the distinction taken “where the abbot himself is disseisor and the king or lord releases, and confirms to him, and then the disseisee releases the abbot. In such case, it seems that the king or lord can enter, for this countervails entry and feoffment, and then there is a new mortmain.” In this case the abbot being himself disseisor is not in by title or livery of seisin; the entry of the disseisee is not tolled; his release operates as a feoffment with livery of seisin and confers a new freehold or estate on the dis-seisee, which being without license is forfeited as mortmain.
It needs no argument to show that these cases, sought out from the lumber garrets of obsolete feudal laws, will afford no analogy or authority for the proposition which the defendants are compelled to establish; in order to success. The principles laid down by the supreme court of Pennsylvania in their construction of this devise, Girard v. City of Philadelphia, 4 Rawle, 335, overrule the positions advanced by defendants and leave their case without a foundation on which to rest It is there decided, that “the question whether after-purcha'sed lands pass by a previous devise, does not depend on the intention of the testator: that a will is a species of conveyance, and operates only as regards the disposing power and capacity of the testator at the time of its execution, insomuch as to require his power over the estate to be perfect at the time: that the act of disposition must be complete in every respect at the performance of it: that a testator, like any other grantor, cannot give what he has not; and finally, that a subsequent purchase giving the land to the testator, is repugnant to the import of the devise which would give it to the devisee, and therefore [441]*441not to be intended to have been in subservi■ence to the will.”
These principles rule this case. Girard, by the purchase and completion of this title, defeated and put an end to the uncertain possessor’s estate, or right held by him at the time of his devise. No case can be found where the pinchase of a fee simple estate after a devise, has been held in subservience to the object of the will, because at the üme of mating it, the testator had some worthless or pretended claim to it. The law fa-vours the heir at law, and has devised no fictitious extinguishment or estoppel to bar his claim as against the pretended or doubtful claims of the devisee.
Judgment for plaintiff.