Martindale's Lessee v. Troop

3 Md. 244
CourtGeneral Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1793
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Md. 244 (Martindale's Lessee v. Troop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering General Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martindale's Lessee v. Troop, 3 Md. 244 (Va. Super. Ct. 1793).

Opinion

The Court

(all the judges present) were of opinion, the statute of limitations did not run against the issue in tail, and gave judgment on the special verdict for the plaintiff.

The following argument on this case is extracted from an anonymous publication, printed in the year 1794.

As the determination of the general court arises from the construction of the statute of 21 Jac. I. c. 16. it will be proper to exhibit that clause in the statute upon which the present question turns.

Sect. 1. “No person or persons shall at any time hereafter make any entry into any lands, tenements or here* ditaments, but within twenty years next after his or their right or title, which shall hereafter first descend or accrue to the same ; and in default thereof, such persons so not entering, and their heirs, shall be utterly excluded and disabled from such entry after to be made.”

It tends much to the elucidation of a subject to have precise ideas of terms and expressions. Most of those in the law are artificial and technical. It is, therefore, necessary to be known, that the words “ right or title,” in the statute, mean a right or title of entry. (2 Salk. 422. pl. 7.) A very obvious reason for which is, that the statute of 21 Jac. I. c. 16. operates by way of bar to the remedy. Every plaintiff, before he can support an ejectment, must have a right of entry. (Sunn. Eject. 10.) If the statute, therefore, bars him from his right of entry, it bars him also from his remedy, which is now usually an action of ejectment.

But it will be necessary to explain clearly what is meant by a right of entry.

[249]*249A right of entry necessarily supposes an ouster of possession. (3 Bl. Comm. 167.)

_ Ouster of possession is by five several ways, to wit, by abatement, intrusion, disseisin, discontinuance and de« forcement.

An abatement is the entry of a stranger before the heir or devisee. Intrusion is the entry of a stranger before the reversioner or remainderman. Disseisin is where a stranger actually turns the right owner out of possession. Discontinuance is by the alienation of a tenant in tail; and deforcement is where the entry of a stranger was originally lawful, but his detainer is unlawful.

To these several species of injury by ouster, two remedies are annexed; first, by actual entry of the right owner, or, which has the same effect, continual claim; and, secondly, by action, (3 Bl. Comm. 174.)

“ This remedy by entry takes place in three only of the five species of ouster, viz. abatement, intrusion and disseisin: for as in these the original entry of the wrongdoer was unlawful, they may therefore be remedied by the mere entry of him who hath right. But upon a discontinuance or deforcement, the owner of the estate cannot enter, but is driven to his action; for herein the original entry being lawful, and thereby an apparent right of possession being gained, the law will not suffer that right to be overthrown by the mere act or entry of the claimant.” (3 Bl. Comm. 175.)

But this remedy by actual entry must be pursued in a peaceable and easy manner, and not with force or strong hand; or else upon complaint made to a justice of the peace, restitution of possession will be awarded under the statutes of forcible entry; besides the remedy by actual entry, even in those cases where it would-be lawful, can seldom be effectual, and the preservation of the public peace requires that such modes of remedy should be discouraged. Hence, therefore, modern writers, when they [250]*250speak of a right of. entry, do not mean so much a right of actual entry, as a right of recovering possession by action.

This is confirmed by a very modern author. (2 Woodd. Lect. 170.) “ There may exist a right of possession to lands in one who is not the actual possessor of them ; and such is properly called a right of entry. By the old law, there were several ways of disseising a man of his freehold. If it happened by most of these kinds, and no discontinuance was wrought, the disseisee might, during the life of the disseisor, in a peaceable manner, reenter, and recover his possession without a suit at law. From the refinements of modern civilization, and a useful regard to agriculture, it is not now allowable to ' enter and expel husbandmen from their farms, even without force. Still, however, a person in the circumstances I have described, is said to retain a right of entry; the principal present use of which distinction is to ascertain his right of bringing an action of ejectment, which otherwise he could not maintain.”

Taking it as granted, then, that the expressions right of entry and right of action, are synonymous; and that the statute operates as a bar to the action or remedy, the question is, whether the statute in such case will bar a tenant in tail as"well as a tenant in fee-simple.

There can be no doubt but that if the law has annexed inseparable incidents to any particular action, whoever brings that action must bring it subject to those incidents. There can be no instance found in the books where a tenant in tail making use of the action of ejectment, is not subject to all the rules which the law has attached to that action in cases of a tenant in fee-simple. Every tenant in tail, therefore, when a plaintiif in ejectment, as well as every tenant in fee-simple, must have a right of entry when he commences his action.

It will be proper here to state, in a short manner, the modes of acquiring an estate tail.

[251]*251The only methods of acquiring an estate in lands, are two, to wit, by descent or purchase.

“ Descent, or hereditary succession, is the title whereby a man, on the death of his ancestor, acquires his estate by right of representation as his heir at law. An estate so descending to the heir, is in law called the inheritance.” (2 Bl. Comm. 201.)

“ The word purchase, in legal signification, includes every kind of title to such estate, except only hereditary transmission.” (2 Woodd. Lect. 250.)

A tenant- in tail may derive his right or title, either by descent or purchase, as the case may be. (2 Bl. Comm. 201. 241.)

If he takes by purchase, it is meant here to be contended, that he being the first tenant in tail to whom the right of entry “ first accrues,” he is equally within the statute as a tenant in fee-simple.

Again. If he takes the estate tail by descent, it is meant to be proved also, that if he is the first heir in tail to whom the right of entry first descends, he is equally within the statute.

Also, (and which is the principal point in question,) that the heirs of such first tenant, or first heir, are bound by the default of such first tenant’s or first heir’s not entering.

Let us examine, in the first place, then, how far such first tenant or heir in tail, without including his heirs or issue, may be deprived of his right of entry by the twenty years’ exclusive adverse possession of another, accounting the twenty years from the time such right of entry first accrues.

“ An ejectment is a possessory remedy, and only competent where the lessor of the plaintiff may enter.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Md. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martindales-lessee-v-troop-vagensess-1793.