Willison v. Watkins

28 U.S. 43, 7 L. Ed. 596, 3 Pet. 43, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 527
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 20, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by126 cases

This text of 28 U.S. 43 (Willison v. Watkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willison v. Watkins, 28 U.S. 43, 7 L. Ed. 596, 3 Pet. 43, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 527 (1830).

Opinion

Mr Justice Baldwin

delivered the. Opinion of the Court.

This wás an action of trespass tqtry titles, brought in. 1822, in the circuit court of the' United States for the district of South Carolina, by Watkins against Willison* for a. tract of land containing six hundred acres, on the Savannah river. This land was originally granted to James Parsons, who conveyed to Ralph Phillips, .whose estate was confiscated by an act of assembly of South Carolina, and vested in five commissioners appointed by the legislature of that átate. The five commissioners acted in execution of the'law, but before, any conveyance was made of . the land in question, one of them had died, and two of the others had ceased to,act,-or resigned. in 1783. The' two remaining commissioners, in 1788, conveyed -this land to' Daniel Bordeaux and R, Newman, who in the same year executed to the treasurer of the state, a bond and mortgage to secure the payment, of the purchase money, .which, pursuant to an act of assembly passed for that purpose in 1801, Was transferred and delivered to Ralph S. Phillips, the son of Ralph Phillips, to be disposed of as he should think proper; and by the same law the confiscation act, so far as respected Ralph Phillips, was repealed. A suit was brought on this bond in the name of the treasurer of the state *46 in 1803, against Daniel Bordeaux, and prosecuted to final judgment against his administrators in 1817, when an execution issued, on which the land was sold and conveyed by deed, from the sheriff to Anderson Watkins, the plaintiff in the circuit court, who claims by virtue of the sheriffs deed, and as standing in the relation of landlord to the defendant.

Samuel Willison, the father of the defendant, entered into possession of the premises in question in 1789, and cultivated them till his death in 1802; from which time his widow and children possessed them, till her death in 1815; since which time the children have retained possession by their tenants, till the commencement of this suit.

In 1802, Ralph S. Phillips, who was then the assignee of the bond and mortgage, made a demand of the possession from the widow, who refused to give it up, and set up a title in herself. He brought an action of trespass against her to try titles in January 1803, in which he was nonsuited in November 1805; and in March 1808 he brought another action of the same nature against her, in which no proceedings were had after 1812, which, by the law and practice of South Carolina, operates as a discontinuance of the action.

In 1792 Bordeaux, the mortgagor, executed to Willison a power of attorney authorising him to take possession of the land, and sue trespassers. Willison was then a tenant of Bordeaux.

In 1793 they were in treaty for the sale of the land; Bordeaux wanting to sell, and Willison to purchase. But during the life time of Willison, Bordeaux was apprised that he claimed to' hold the land by an adverse title. The defendant exhibited no title other than what is derived from the possession of his father and the family.

The first question which arose at the trial, was on the admission in evidence of the deed from the two commissioners to Bordeaux and Newman; the defendant alleging, that no title passed by it, because it was not signed by the other two commissioners. The circuit court overruled the objection ; the deed was read, and this becomes the subject of the first error assigned in this court.

As the court have been unable to procure the confis *47 cation act of South Carolina, we are unwilling to express any opinion on this exception without examining its provisions, which are very imperfectly set out in the record; and as the merits.of the case can be decided on another exception, we do not think it necessary to postpone our judgment.

The remaining exception is, that the circuit court erred in charging the jury, that the claim of the-plaintiff was not barred by the act of limitations of South Carolina, which protects a possession of fivé years from an adverse title.

It appears from the record, that the defendant and his family have been in possession of this land 'for thirty-three years next before this suit was brought; but whether that possession has beep adverse to the title of the. plaintiff during the whole of that time, or süch part Of it as will bring him within the protection of this law, becomes a very important inquiry.

The plaintiff contended, at the trial, that, by becoming the tenant of Bordeaux, Willison the elder and his heirs, so long as they remain in possession, are prevented from setting up any title in themselves, or denying that of Bordeaux; without first surrendering to him the possession, and: then, bringing their suit. That the possession of the tenant being the possession of the landlord, he' could do no act by which it could become adverse,-so that the statute of limitations would begin to run in his favour, or operate to bar his claim, by any lapse of time, however long.

The defendant, on the other hand, contended, that from the tipie of the disclaimer of the tenancy by Willison, and the setting up of a title adverse to Bordeaux and with his knowledge, his possession became adverse, and that he coúíd avail himself of the act of limitations if no suit Was brought within five years thereafter.

It is an undoubted, principle of law fully recognised by this court, that a tenant cannot dispute the title of his landlord, either-by setting up a title in himself, or a third person^ during the existence of the lease or.tenancy,. The principle of estoppel applies to the relation between them, and operates in its full force to prevent the tenant from violating that contract bv which he obtained and holds possession. 7 Wheat. 535. *48 He cannot change ,the character of, the tenure by his own act merely, so as to enable himself to hold against his landlord',. who reposes under the security of the tenancy, believing thepossession of the tenant to be his own, held under his title, and ready to be surrendered by its termination, by the lapse of time, or demand of possession. The same principle applies to mortgagor and mortgagee, trustee and cestui que trust, and generally to all cases where, one man obtains possession of real estate belonging to another, by a recognition of his title. On all these subjects the law is too well settled to require illustration or reasoning, or to admit of a doubt. Rut we do not think, that in any of these relations, it has been adopted to the extent contended for in this case, which presents a disclaimer by a tenant with the knowledge of his landlord, and an unbroken possession afterwards for süeh a length of time that the act of limitations has run out four tithes before he has done any act to assert his right to the land. New stronger cases than this can occur, and if the plaintiff can recover without any other evidence of title than a tenancy existing thirty years before suit brought, it must be conceded that no length of time, no disclaimer of tenancy-by the tenant, and no implied acquiescence of the landlord; can protect a possession originally acquired under such a tenure.

If there is any case which could clearly illustrate the sound policy of acts of repose and quieting titles and possessions by the limitation of actions, it is in this.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 U.S. 43, 7 L. Ed. 596, 3 Pet. 43, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willison-v-watkins-scotus-1830.