Court Opinion

ID: 3646783
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:02:44.016701+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:07:44.621303
License: Public Domain

We think the judge erred in confining the jury to the question, whether or not the lands in controversy were embraced in the deed of gift from F. Mills, senior, to F. Mills, junior. If the land sought to be recovered by the plaintiff, was embraced in the report of the commissioners, which report had been confirmed, and final judgment rendered thereon, then, we think the lessor of the plaintiff, who had been a party to that judgment, was concluded, bound, and estopped to controvert any thing contained in it. The legislature, by the act of 1789, (Rev. c. 309,) gave to tenants in common of real estate the petition for partition, in the place of the ancient writ of partition. The final judgment at common law in a writ of partition, runs thus, ideo consideratum est quod partitio praedicta firmaet stabilis in perpetuum teneatur. Thomas's Coke, 700. And it was conclusive on the parties, and all claiming under them. (Ibidem, note 55.) In Clapp v. Bronagham, 9 Cowan's Rep. 569, the Court say that the judgment in partition, it is true, does not change the possession, but it establishes the title, and, in an ejectment, must be conclusive. The judgment of the Court, adjudging a share to belong to one of the parties, and allotting it to him to hold in severalty, must be sufficient to authorize him to recover it as to all the parties to the record; the judgment is, as to them, an estoppel. The act of 1789 gives the same force to a final judgment in a petition for partition of real estate. It declares, that the division when made, shall be good and effectual in law to bind the parties, their heirs and assigns.
PER CURIAM.                              Judgment reversed. *Page 435