Court Opinion

ID: 8109591
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 14:37:20.623097+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:38:44.567107
License: Public Domain

By the Court.
The practice requires of the plaintiff to trace his own to some common source of title, or show that his grantor has been in possession of the premises. The objection will avail the defendant unless supplied.
The plaintiff then proved the possession of Cuningham the elder, as owner.
The defendant offered a deed under a tax title in which the land is described as fifty-one acres in the northeast part of tract 1, &c.
By the Court. If the description is certain enough to enable a person to locate the land, it is sufficient. 2 O. R. 333. Fifty-one acres in the northeast part of tract 1, &c. is fifty-one acres in a square form in the northeast corner of the tract. The objection is overruled.
Newton, for the defendant,
objected: That the paper was no conveyance, being only a covenant, and if it affected the title, it could only do so in equity.
Wade, contra,
contended that the writing being of the same date of the deed to the company was to be taken as the condition of the grant.
Plaintiff then offered a deed from the president of the Harbor Company, dated 6th May, 1816, conditioned to re-convey, or that the land should revert if the harbor was not commenced in ten years; this was of the same date with the conveyance to the company— though without a subscribing witness. There was a covenant in the deed that if the company sold more than fifty acres they should pay the grantor ‡7 per acre.
Wright, J.
This is not a condition of the grant; it is a mere stipulation by covenant of the grantee, that if the work, (the harbor) to aid which it was conveyed, was not done, or commenced, in a certain time, to re-convey, or if the land was sold, to pay ‡7 per acre for it. The paper is rejected.
Verdict for the defendant.