Court Opinion

ID: 5513517
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 04:26:21.656008+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:34:13.551440
License: Public Domain

*248
By the Court,

Sutherland, J.
The evidence establishes the fact that the defendant entered into possession of the premises in question, as tenant., under Earnhardt Nellis, and continued to hold under and acknowledge that title down to the fall of 1828. Nothing is better settled, as a general rule, than that a tenant cannot deny the title of his landlord ; and the acknowledgment by a defendant that he went into possession under the title of the lessor of the plaintiff, is sufficient to enable the plaintiff to recover. Jackson v. Dobbin, 3 Johns. R. 223, 225, note a. Jackson v. Leeson, 3 id. 499. 4 id. 210. Jackson, ex dem. Bowne, v. Hinman, 10 id. 292. Jackson v. De Watts, 7 id. 157, notes a. and b. and cases there collected.
The defendant introduced a patent from the stale to John. D. Nellis for the premises in question, bearing date the 18th day of February, 1829, and a lease from John D. Nellis to himself for the same premises, for one year, dated the 1st April, 1828. This evidence was given before the acknowledgment of the defendant that he entered upon and held the premises under Earnhardt Nellis had been proved. It was competent evidence, therefore, at the time it was given, and was not and could not have been objected to. But its legal effect, when taken in connection with all the other evidence in the case, is now to be decided. A title in the state has no peculiar attributes which enure to the benefit of a defendant under circumstances in which be could not ax’ail himself of an outstanding title in an individual. A defendant is estopped from contesting the title under which he entered, in any manner, as against his original landlord, or any other person who has acquired or succeeded to his title. He can no more show that the premises belonged to the state, than he can that they belonged to himself; he must first restore the possession which he obtained from his landlord, and then, as plaintiff, he may avail himself of any title which he has been or may be able to acquire.
But it was contended, upon the argument, that notwithstanding the admission of the defendant that he entered under Earnhardt Nellis, it was fairly to be inferred from the whole evidence that Earnhardt Nellis, in putting him into *249possession, acted as the agent of his father John D. Nellis, who at that time, it is said, had an imperfect title to the lot in question, which was subsequently consummated by the patent obtained by him from the state. The only evidence upon this subject is, that John D. Nellis was the tailier of Earnhardt Nellis, and owned many lots of land in Lenox, of which Earnhardt had had the agency and charge for several years. The witness did not say that he ever understood that John D. Nellis .owned the lot in question, or that in relation to that lot Earnhardt ever acted as his agent; and no such inference could legalljr be drawn from his testimony, were there no other evidence upon this subject in the case. But it will be recollected that Earnhardt Nellis, in October, 1824, conveyed this lot with warranty to Hiding, which effectually repels the idea that he acted in relation to it as the agent of his father.
It is also contended that the title of John D. Nellis was not to be affected by the confessions of the defendant, inasmuch as he held under the lease from him of the 1st of April, 1828. If the defendant originally entered under the title of Earnhardt Nellis, as I have endeavored to shew he did, then the taking of a lease from John D. Nellis was a fraudulent attornment, by which the lessor of the plaintiff cannot be prejudiced. It was an absolute nullity, and did not create the relation of landlord and tenant between the parties to it. It does not clearly appear when the defendant first entered upon this lot; but in the spring of 1828, he stated that he was about renewing his contract with Earnhardt Nellis for the place where he then lived. It may fairly be inferred from this circumstance that he had occupied the lot for at least the preceding year. It is also to be observed that this declaration was made in the spring of 1828, and may have been before the 1st of April, when the lease from John D. Nellis bears dale, if that were a circumstance of any importance in the case.
It is not necessary for us to express any opinion as to the effect of the patent for the lot to John D. Nellis. Whatever *250may be its operation and effect between other parties, the defentiant cannot avail himself of it in this action. The plain-tiff is therefore entitled to judgment.