Schauber v. Jackson

The Chancellor.

This court having decided that the construction of the will of William Appel is properly before them on the bill of exceptions, the first question for consid- ■ eration is, whether by that will the real estate was devised to the executors or descended to the heir at law, until they di*33vested his estate by the execution of the power to sell and distribute the proceeds.

Being perfectly satisfied with the reasoning of the chief justice in the court below on this point, and which is supported by the decision of the former judges of the supreme court, in Jackson v. Burr, (9 Johns. Rep. 104,) I shall not attempt to review the authorities at large on this question.

This case is not properly likened to those which frequently arise upon the construction of wills, on the question whether a fee is devised or only an estate for life. In most of those cases, there can be very little doubt of the intention of the testator to devise the inheritance ; but that intention is frequently frustrated by the carelesness or ignorance of those who prepare testamentary papers, in omitting the ordinary words which are considered necessary in law to create a perpetuity. In all such cases, the anxiety of courts to carry into effect the intention of the testator, induces them .to seize hold of any expression or provision in the will which may be considered evidence of an intention to convey a fee. Thus the words forever, all my estate, all my right, all my property, and others of similar import, have been considered sufficient to carry the whole interest of the testator to the devisee; and for the same reason, a charge upon the person in respect of the estate, as the payment of debts or legacies, has been considered sufficient to carry the fee by implication. But notwithstanding this strong leaning of the courts in favor of the devisee, and the reasonable presumption that the testator intended to give an estate of inheritance, cases have frequently occurred where there was not sufficient in the wifi to take the case out of the rule of law, that all the estate which is not legally and sufficiently devised to some other person must go to the heir, whatever may have been the intention of the testator. Thus in Denn, ex dem. Gaskin, v. Gaskin, (Cowper's Rep. 657,) where the testator gave his heir at law a disinheriting legacy, and then devised his lands to his nephews, but without any words of perpetuity, it was held that they only took a life estate, and that the fee descended to the heir. And Lord Mansfield and Mr. Justice Ashurst declared that although the intention to disinherit the *34heir was ever so apparent, he must of course inherit unless the estate was given to somebody else.

In some cases, also, of executors and trustees, a devise in fee by implication has been allowed, where the general objects of the will could not otherwise be carried into effect, and where it was evident that the testator intended they should have such estate. (Oates v. Cook, 3 Burr. 1684. Jackson v. Martin, 18 Johns. Rep. 31.) But there cannot be the same reasons to induce the court to seek out some particular expression in the will for the purpose of giving the estate to the executors by implication, where the intention of the testator, as to the final disposition of his estate, can be carried into effect under a power of sale, as well as under the devise to the executors; and the first is recommended as the better method of disposing of the estate by will.

In this case there was no direct devise of any part of the legal estate to the executors ; they had a naked power to sell the estate and distribute the proceeds. It was not necessary to have the title to the estate to enable them fully to carry into effect the intentions of the testator. If the legal estate descended to the heir, it would be divested the moment they executed their trust. The testator undoubtedly intended that his oldest son should have no advantage over his other children by right of primogeniture; and he effectually provided for this by authorizing and directing a sale of the property by the executors, and an equal division of the proceeds of the sale ; hut probably he thought it was also necessary, agreeable to the common notion, to give to the heir at law a disinheriting legacy. This was not necessary; and there being no good devise of the legal estate, either to the children or to the executors, it could not prevent the descent of the estate upon the heir at law, who, in such cases, holds the same in trust for those entitled to the proceeds thereof under the will until the execution of the power of sale.

The next question is as to the evidence of the pedigree of the lessors of the plaintiff below. The evidence on this subject was the will of William Appel the patentee, made in 1729, and proved in 1733, in which he describes his son Simon as his heir at law, and gives him a disinheriting lega*35by, and also names John, Mary Magdalena and Engéltje, as his children, and Jacobus Berry, as the son of his deceased daughter Helena ; the records of the Dutch church, which prove the baptism of Simon, son of William Appel, in 1695; of Magdalena, daughter of Simon Appel, in 1719 ; of Gertrude, another daughter of Simon, in 1721; and the marriage of Magdalena Appel to Abraham Peltz, in 1743: the testimony of Elsie Van Dusen, who knew Magdalena Appel before her marriage, and who proved Mrs. Bogert, one of the lessors of the plaintiff, to be her grand-daugliter, and William Green, another lessor, to be the son of her sister Gertrude ; and the will of Magdalena Peltz, by which all her estate is devised to Peggy Bogert. The recitals in the arbitration bond of 1767, the conveyance of the east half of the patent to Hagedorn, and the mortgage to Reneaudet and others, were also in evidence; and the signatures of William Appel to the will and mortgage were submitted to the jury for their inspection. To rebut this evidence, the defendant Was permitted, under a previous decision of the supreme court in the same cause, to show the situation of the lands ; the time they had been possessed and improved; the reputation in the neighborhood as to the ownership of them; the manner in which they were described in conveyances of adjoining lands ; and the opportunities the lessors had to litigate their title, or take possession of the land, if they were the real heirs at law of the patentee. On this testimony the question of pedigree was submitted to the jury, to decide upon as a matter of fact; and they were told they might take into consideration, in deciding that question, the several matters given in evidence by the defendant to rebut the plaintiff’s evidence of pedigree. I am satisfied, bn a review of this subject, that there was sufficient evidence of pedigree not only to warrant the jury in finding a verdict for the plaintiff, but also to have induced the court to set aside the verdict, as against the weight of evidence, if they had found otherwise.

The only remaining question, and the most important one in this case, is whether there was any evidence which would have warranted the jury in finding that the patentee, or his executors, or heirs, had divested themselves of the title to *36the lands acquired under the patent. The patentee must have died in 1738, or previous thereto. There is very little' probability that he ever sold or conveyed the lands, unless ^le mortgage given by him thereon, in 1733, can be considered such a conveyance. There is no doubt that deeds, patents, judgment^,- and even acts of parliament, may be presumed to suppqrt the long and uninterrupted possession or enjoyment of a right or claim of right. But I am not aware of any case in which a conveyance has been presumed, to defeat the claim of a person showing a good paper title, un- . less there had been an adverse possession or enjoyment under claim of right and in accordance with the fact presumed. In Kean v. Dearden, (8 East’s Rep. 263,) Lord Ellen-borough,' C. J., in relation to a presumption of a re-convey-once, says, “ Presumptions of this sort, when fit to be made, are always made in favor of the possession of those who are rightfully entitled to it. The rule of presumption is ut res rite acta est, and is applied whenever the possession of the party is rightful, to invest that possession with a legal title.” And in the same case, Le Blanc, J. says, “ Such a presumption may be made where it is necessary to clothe a rightful possession with a legal title; but the court must first see that there is nothing but the form of a conveyance wanting.” In Eldridge v. Knott & others, (Cowp. 214,) it was held that the mere neglect to enforce the payment of quit-rents against the tenant, for any time short of the 50 years fixed by the statute of limitations, was not sufficient to support a presumption of Srrelease or extinguishment of the rent. There are two'kinds of presumption in favor of a grant or conveyance of real estate. The one is in favor of those who are entitled to a conveyance from trustees or others, in conformity to the trust, or in pursuance of some contract or agreement to give such conveyance. In such cases, a jury, after a certain lapse of time, may presume the execution of the trust, or a conveyance of the title in pursuance of such agreement; and a person in possession, without right, will not be permitted to defend himself on the ground of an outstanding title. The other is in favor of a person who is in possession of property, or in the enjoyment of some privilege or easement un*37der claim of right; in which case, under certain circumstences, and after a great lapse of time, a conveyance of the land, or a grant of the privilege, or easement will he presumed, on the principle of quieting the title or possession. This presumption is founded upon the supposition that a man will enjoy what he is entitled to, and will not permit others to interfere with his rights without objecting ; and it may always he rebutted by showing that the possession held, or privilege exercised, was perfectly consistent with the right or interest of the party who afterwards sets up an adverse claim. (Daniel v. North, 11 East’s Rep. 372.) But this presumption in favor of a grant, and against written evidence of title, can never arise from the mere neglect of the owner to assert his rights, and where there has been no adverse title or enjoyment by those in whose favor the grant or conveyance is to foe presumed ; and for the obvious reason, that the presumption against the person showing title, which arises from the delay in asserting his title, is equally balanced by the like presumption, arising from the same delay on the part of the supposed grantee»

In this case, the presumption that the executor conveyed in pursuance of the power contained in the will, is rebutted by the fact that the executor took upon himself the execution of the will more than forty years before the attainder of Dubois and Delancey, and died at least twelve years before that event, and yet no person ever exercised any acts of own* ership over the property, or made any claim under a convey* anee from the executor during that period of time. If any legal presumption of title in Dubois and Delancey could be raised from the public report that they were the owners, and from the description of boundaries in deeds of adjoining lands about the time of their attainder, that presumption is rebut* ted by the circumstance that the state never made any claim to the land, although it lay within a few miles of Albany, and almost under the eyes of the commissioners of forfeiture ; and therefore the reasonable presumption on the other side is, that the commissioners investigated the subject, as their duty required, and found there was no such title. And the presumption that William Appel, or his heirs at law, have *38parted with their title, which arises from the neglect to as» sert it for nearly ninety years, is rebutted by the fact that during all that time no person has been in possession, or claimed title to the land under the supposed grantee, or otherwise.

I am inclined to think the mortgage given by the patentee shortly before his death has been the cause of the obscurity in which this subject is involved; and if it had not been found in the possession of a descendant of one of the mortgagees, I might have supposed that Dubois and Delancey had obtained that mortgage by assignment, which would have accounted for the rumor of their title. This deed of June, 1733, to Reneaudet and others was in fact a mortgage, because the grantor was entitled to redeem by paying the mortgage money and interest within one year from its date ; yet it contained all the usual requisites of an ordinary conveyance, such as covenants of seisin and of warranty, andi for quiet enjoyment, clearly and absolutely acquitted and discharged, if default should be made in payment of the mortgage money, and for further assurance. When John Appel took upon himself the execution of the will, the time of payment had expired, and the amount of the mortgage money and interest then due was probably the full value of the land at that period, in its wild and uncultivated state. These circumstances may account for the neglect of the heirs to assert their title to the land at that time, and of the executor to sell it under the power contained in the will. The subsequent death of those who were acquainted with the true state of the title, and the loss and destruction of papers during the turmoil of the revolution, may account for the neglect of the heirs to assert their title since.

Whether that mortgage ever was paid, it is not material now to inquire. A stranger, in possession without right, is not permitted to set it up as an outstanding title ; and there having been no possession under the mortgage, or admission of the indebtedness for so long a period, it may now be considered as extinguished.

• 1 am not at liberty to express any opinion as to the real state of the facts in this case, which is not founded on the *39testimony adduced at the trial. Knowing that many of the settlers on this tract have spent the best part of their lives there, and made valuable improvements, under a belief that no owner would ever come to assert his title to the land, I cannot but regret the result to them, if my views of the law of this case should be concurred in by a majority of the court. But I must not allow my sympathy for either party to bias my judgment in any case, and particularly when deciding important legal principles, the effects of which may be extensive in their operation. I am satisfied there was no evidence which could legally authorize the jury to presume a conveyance from the patentee or his legal representatives to ■the defendant, or any person under whom he claimed, or even to a stranger. I am therefore of opinion that the judgment of the supreme court should be affirmed.

Oliver, Senator. The recovery in this cause by the plaintiff below, if sustainable, must rest upon the title set up in the lessor Peggy Bogert, as devisee of Magdalena Peltz, one of the daughters of Simon Appel, the heir at law of William Appel the patentee, and in the lessor William Green, as heir at law of Gertrude, the other daughter of Simon Appel, which said Magdalena and Gertrude, the plaintiff below alleges, were the only children of Simon Appel; for the evidence in the case does not make out any pretence of title in any of the other lessors.

It appears that the patent in which the premises in question are comprehended, was granted in 1708 to William Appel, in trust as to one half for the heirs of Harmanus Hagerdorn ; and that in 1713, the patent was divided by a northerly line from its southboundary at the Mohawk river, through the middle to its north bounds, and the east half released by Appel to the heirs of Hagerdorn, and the west half retained by himself in severalty ; that the east half has ever since been held and occupied by or under the Hagerdorn title; and that no act of ownership on the west half has been exercised by William Appel or his heirs since the division, except the following, to wit: In 1733, Appel executed a mortgage thereof to Bancker and Rutgers, to secure the payment of *40£108 10s., with lawful interest in one year; but it is not -r -i shewn that the mortgagees ever in any manner enforced the mortgage, or that the mortgage money has been paid ; ob the contrary, it is proved that the mortgage was found not many years since, among the family papers of one of the mortgagees. It further appears, that in 1729, William Appel duly made and published bis last will, by which he gave and bequeathed to his son, Simon Appel, a pecuniary legacy of twenty shillings for his birth right, and declared his intent thereby utterly to debar him of any other or further pretence or claim whatsoever to his real estate as heir at law; and to his son Johannes he gave and bequeathed a pecuniary legacy of £25, to he raised out of his real and personal estates $ and after several specific bequests out of his personal property, he authorized, empowered and directed his executors to grant, bargain, sell and dispose of all his real and personal estates, (except so much of the latter as he had specifically bequeathed,) within such time, and in such manner, either at public vendue or otherwise, as the executors should deem necessary and convenient; and ordered that the monies arising from such sale should be applied by his executors as follows, to wit: first to the payment of the pecuniary legacies, and then the one fifth part of the overplus to be paid to each of his sons, Simon and Johannes, and to each of his daughters, Mary, Magdalena and Engeltje, and the remaining fifth part retained by his executors for his grandson, Jacobus Berry, the son of his deceased daughter Helena, until he should attain the age of twenty-one years; and he appointed his son Johannes and his daughter Engeltje the executors of his said will. It further appears that Engeltje, on the 9th of August, 1738, renounced the executorship, and Johannes, at the same time, procured the will to be proved, and sued nut letters testamentary; that Magdalena Peltz, after the death of her husband in May, 1795, duly devised all her real and personal estate to the lessor, Peggy Bogert, the wife of Gerrit Bogert; and that Magdalena Peltz’s father died prior to the revolutionary war; that she, during that war, resided in the city of Albany, and often spoke of her property to Elsie Van Dusen, one of the witnesses fay *41the plaintiff in the court below, and told the witness that all the property she had was two houses in the city of New-York, from which she received rent. It also appears, that the Appel patent is situate in the county of Saratoga, at a distance of about sixteen miles from the city of Albany; and that Gerrit Bogert, the husband of the lessor, Peggy Bogert, was a lawyer by profession, and practiced as such several years in the city of Albany, until his death in March, 1820; that the lessor, William Green, has resided in the county of Saratoga upwards of twenty years previous to the trial of this cause, and was then about 84 years old ; and that his mother died during his infancy. It further appears, that William Appel the patentee had, in 1708, seven children, and that there were two William Appels, the one a vintner and the other a victualler ; and that the one had a wife named Magdalena, and the other had a wife named Remerigh. It does also appear by a deed read in evidence by the plaintiff below, dated in December, 1766, that Oliver Delancey and Peter Dubois claimed and conveyed in fee to John Glen, a triangular piece of land which had been conveyed by the trustees of Schenectady to William Appel, situate along the west bounds of Appel’s patent, and extending nearly across the west half thereof at the Mohawk river ; and it appears that Magdalena Peltz, in 1767, entered into an arbitration bond with one Nicholas Killman, the condition of which recites, that John Appel had mortgaged to Killman a dwelling house and lot in New-York, to secure the payment of £50 with interest ; that Killman had brought an action of ejectment for the house, in which Magdalena Peltz had procured herself to be made defendant, insisting in behalf of herself and others claiming under the will of William Appel, (except the said John Appel,) that by virtue of the said will, the mortgaged premises belonged, in the whole or in part, to the said Magdalena Peltz, and those for whom she insisted as aforesaid, either by lawful or equitable right; and that the said John Appel obtained the said premises by purchase, with money belonging to himself, and the said Magdalena Peltz and others claiming under the will of the said William Appel. It further appears, from the evidence on the part of *42the defendant in the court below, that the west half of Appel’s patent has been laid out into separate farms, and the farms generally have been so held and enjoyed by different occupants betwen 40 and 50 years, and are in a high state of cultivation; and that the west half, after the revolutionary war, was commonly called and reputed in the neighborhood, the lands of Oliver Delancey and Peter Dubois, and is described in several conveyances of land situate in the east half of the said patent, bounded on the west half as the lands of Oliver Delancey and Peter Dubois ; that the defendant’s father entered into possession of the premises in question upwards of 50 years ago, and died in possession about 20 years prior to the trial, and was succeeded by his son, the defendant in the court below, who has continued in possession ever since ; and that the father and son have made large, permanent and valuable improvements thereon; that the father, about forty years ago and upwards, made diligent but unsuccessful inquiries to discover the owner or owners of the west half of the said patent, with the declared intent of purchasing the premises which he occupied.

By the confiscation law, passed in 1779, Oliver Delancey and Peter Dubois were convicted of treason for adhering to the enemy, and their estates forfeited, and they forever banished from this state.

Upon this evidence, the circuit judge charged the jury that the defendant had not proved sufficient to raise a legal presumption that the patentee, or his legal representatives, had aliened the west half of Appel’s patent to Oliver Delancey and Peter Dubois, or any other person, so as to divest the title of the lessors as heirs at law of the patentee, if they were such ; and that in his opinion there was evidence sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict.

To this charge the defendant’s counsel below took a bill of exceptions, and the jury found a verdict in accordance with the charge. The supreme court have sustained the charge of the circuit judge, and the cause is brought up by a writ of error to this court, to have the judgment of the supreme court reversed. *43The counsel for the plaintiff in error contended that the circuit judge erred in his charge to the jury : 1. Because it was not sufficiently proved that the lessors of the plaintiff below, or any of them, were the heirs at law of William Appel the patentee ; 2. Because by the will of William Appel, who the said lessors allege was the patentee, his real estate vested by implication of law in his executors, from whom the lessors have deduced no title to the premises in question; 3. Because the circuit judge did not submit it to the jury, upon the facts and circumstances proved at the trial, to presume that William Appel in his life time, or his executors under the power contained in his will, had sold and conveyed his title to the premises.

I shall consider each of these points thus presented, in the order above stated.

1. I deem it manifest from the evidence detailed in the bill of exceptions, that there were two William Appels in the city of New-York, the one a victualler and the other a vintner; and that the one married a wife named Remerigh, and the wife of the other was named Magdalena ; and the patentee had seven children, and the other' had only five children. The plaintiff below, by his own evidence, shews that the latter was the William Appel whose heirs his lessors claim to be; and he has produced no proof that the children of their ancestor were reduced by deaths from seven to five, which is the number recognized in his will, or that he was both a victualler and a vintner, or that he was twice married, once to a woman named Remerigh, and once to a woman named Magdalena. This evidence, in ‘ a case of so stale a claim as the lessors set up, and one so utterly irreconcileable with their long silence, and the declaration of Magdalena Peltz, (through whom they endeavored to make out a title,) to Elsie Van Dusen during the revolution- . ary war, that all her property consisted of two houses in the' city of New-York, and with the inattention of Gerrit Bogert, a practising lawyer in the city of Albany, and the husband of the lessor Peggy Bogert, the sole devisee of Magdalena Peltz, to the lands in question, situate not more than sixteen miles from his residence, from 1795 till his death in *441820, is not sufficient, in my opinion, to establish the title by ¿escent from the patentee which the lessors set up.

2. That by the will of William Appel, produced by the plaintiff below, the real estate of the testator passed by implication of law to his executors. I do not mean to impugn the doctrine that a naked power given to executors to sell lands does not vest the legal estate in them. But I consider the power conferred by the will in question, to be coupled with an interest in the executors, as well as a trust to be executed by them ; for they were not merely to sell and divide the proceeds of the sale among other persons, but they were to share in the division thereof, and to retain one fifth in trust for the benefit of the testator’s grandson, until he attained the age of twenty-one years. Hence, the moment the will was proved, and letters testamentary sued out, the executors became responsible as trustees for the income of the real estate until sold, and the avails thereof when sold ; and for the purpose of clothing them with adequate powers to fulfil their trust, they took the legal estate in trust, by implication of law under the will. This doctrnie is fully supported. (Viner, tit Implication, 341. Oates v. Cook, 3 Burr. Rep. 1684. 5 Barn. & Ald. 252. 1 Ves. sen. 485. Denn v. Garkin, Cowp. 657. 1 Caines, 84. 1 Taunt, 279. 4 Burr. 1963.) Indeed it is in my judgment the only sound doctrine applicable to this case, and accords with the undisputed rule of law, that wills are to be construed conformably to the intent of the testator. Here his intent is clearly and pointedly expressed, that his heir at law, as such, should be debarred from any claim or pretence to his real estate ; and for th|t purpose a disinheriting legacy was bequeathed to him, to be paid by the executors. How, then, could the legal estate pass by descent to the heir, without directly violating the plain meaning and directions of the will1? Was it necessary that it should so pass, in order to carry into effect any of the provisions of the will 1 Surely not; for vesting the legal estate by implication of law in the executors, places the entire control in the hands of persons to whom it was the declared intent of the testator to confide the disposal thereof, to the use and purposes directed by his will, without infringing the *45legal or equitable rights of any person beneficially interested therein. But the construction adopted by the supreme court seems to me directly to contravene the plain language and obvious meaning of the testator, and produces this manifest absurd result : the will constitutes the executors trustees to pay out of the proceeds of the sale of the real estate the pecuniary legacies, and one fifth of the overplus to each of the testator’s children, (including the executors and heir at law,) and the other fifth to his grandson when he should attain the age of twenty-one years; and the law makes the heir the depository of the legal estate, for the fulfilment of the trusts which are wholly confided to the executors. (1 East, 200.) Is it possible that there exists any artificial unbending rule of law, which constrains this court to sanction such an absurdity 1 I have not been able to find any such rule, and am clearly of opinion that the lessors of the plaintiff below have no pretence of title to" the premises in question by descent from William Appel the testator, and that the circuit judge should so have charged the jury.

3. The facts and circumstances proved in this case, appear to me very strong to warrant the legal presumption that if William Appel, the testator before mentioned, was the patentee of Apple’s patent, he in his life time, or his executors after his death, have parted with and released his title to other persons. The facts and circumstances to which I allude are, 1. That no original muniments of the title thereto have been produced, nor has the non-production thereof been in any manner accounted for by the lessors of the plaintiff in the court below, who claim the title by descent from the patentee. This omission on their part is a just ground of presumption that their claim is not well founded. 2. That no act of ownership by the patentee, or the lessors, or any of their ancestors, is proved during the period of about ninety years ; but on the contrary, it is proved that Magdalena Peltz, one of the two co-heiresses of Simon Appel, the heir at law of William Appel, through whom the lessors claim by descent, in the revolutionary war disclaimed owning any *46real property, except two houses in the city of New-York t and that Gerrit Bogert, a practising lawyer in the city of AI--bony, at the distance of less than sixteen miles from Appel’s patent, and the husband of the lessor Peggy Bogert, the general devisee of Mrs. Peltz, never asserted his wife’s claim from the time her title accrued, in 1795, until his death in 1820, when the west half of the patent was actually possessed and cultivated by strangers. The nature and character of man is to seek to enjoy the property to which he has a valid title; and hence arises the legal presumption from his not doing so for a great length of time, that he has no existing title to the property which he thus leaves' in the enjoyment of others. This presumption is fortified in the case of a professional man, whom the law deems more cognizant of his legal rights than other men. 3. That the east half of the patent has been held and occupied by and under the Hagerdorns, the cestuis que trust mentioned in the patent, since the division in 1713. If, therefore, the lessors of the plaintiff in the court below acquired a title by descent from the patentee, it is a fair inference that the original patent passed and ‘ descended to them with the land ; and as this disclosed the interest' of the Hagerdorns, it is incredible that the heirs of Appel, if his title-continued, would not long since have availed-' themselves- of the means of information which the Hagerdorns possessed, to ascertain the situation of the west half of the patent, and to avow their title to it to the occupants, who were making anxious inquiries for the owners in order to; purchase from them. 4. That the west half of the patent has been generally reputed and recognized about sixty years since in the neighborhood, and by the owners of the east half, to belong to Oliver Delancey and Peter Dubois, whose estates have been forfeited by an act of attainder, passed lit 1779, and they banished from this state. This general reputation and recognition, taken in connection with the non-claim of the heirs of Appel during the period last mentioned, until the commencement of this suit, in 1820, establishes the presumption that the title had passed out of Appel and his heirs. 5. That the will of Appel made it the duty of his executors, as well as their interest and the interest of all his *47children, including the heir at law, to sell the lands in questian; for it constituted the executors trustees to sell, with directions to pay out of the proceeds of the sale a disinheriting legacy to the heir, and a pecuniary legacy to one of fhe executors, and to distribute the overplus, to wit, one fifth part thereof, to each of the testator’s children who were living, and to retain the other fifth in trust for the son of his deceased daughter, until he should attain the age of twenty-one years. Hence both duty and interest conspired to induce to an early sale, in order to distribution of the avails among the children and grandson. Thus circumstanced, the law presumes, and every motive which usually stimulates to human action enforces the presumption, that the executors have fulfilled their trust. Nor is there any evidence before the court to weaken this presumption; but on the contrary, there is a total absence of proof of even a murmur from any quarter against the executors for the non-execution of their trust powers ; and besides, the recital in the arbitration bond between Mrs. Peltz and Killman asserts that Johannes Appel, the executor, had money which belonged to the cestuis que trust, which he could have obtained only from the sale of the trust estate, inasmuch as it is not pretended that the testator left any money.

These facts and circumstances which I have detailed, in my view of this case, warrant a conclusive legal presumption that the patentee’s title has long since been sold and conveyed, either by himself or his executors, pursuant to the powers contained in his will. (7 Wheaton, 109. 6 id. 481. 12 Ves.jun. 265. 10 Johns. R. 378.) And it must be remembered, that though this presumption might have been rebutted by evidence explanatory of those facts and circumstances, and accounting for the non-claim of the lessors of the plaintiff during so long a time, yet no such explanation has been attempted on their part.

But the supreme court, in their opinion, assume certain positions which it may be proper for me breifly and respectfully to consider.

The first is, that the plaintiff in error does not hold under any claim of title, and therefore the doctrine of presumption *48is not available to him. Neither the authorities referred to by the supreme court, or their reasoning, in my judgment, sustain the position : the former do not apply to a case like present, and the latter is in direct collision with the well settled rule of law, that a plaintiff in ejectment must recover upon the strength of his own title. (1 Burr. 119, 126. Runnington on Eject. 234, 291. 4 Johns. R. 483. 10 Johns. R. 368.) According to this rule, the defendant cannot be ousted of his possession unless the adverse party proves a subsisting, paramount, legal or possessory title to the premises ; but if the defendant shews facts and circumstances from which the law authorizes a jury to presume that the plaintiff’s title has been released, where is his subsisting paramount title ? Or suppose the plaintiff produces and proves a prim a fade regular paper title, and the defendant shews conclusively that the whole claim of title is a forgery, is this unavailable to him, because he is a naked possessor 1 Is not his possession good against all the world except the legal owner 1 Has it ever been questioned that a defendant in ejectment, though a naked possessor, (and especially one whose possession has endured 50 years without any adverse claim, and has been followed by progressive and valuable improvements,) may defend himself by shewing that the plaintiff has sold and conveyed his right to the premises to a third person, before the commencement of the action 1 I apprehend not. What then is the difference in principle, whether the defendant proves directly such conveyance, or proves facts and circumstances from which a jury are authorized, and of course required by law to presume it.

It has been said that the doctrine of presumption is admitted only in favor of possessors claiming right; but I ask, where is this distinction to be found, and on what principle of law is it sustainable 1 Has not the possessor the best title as between him and a plaintiff in ejectment who does not shew a subsisting paramount title 1 and if he has, is he to be ousted of his possession because the plaintiff once had a paramount title, with which he has long since parted 1

The next position of the supreme court is, that the presumption against the lessors of the plaintiff is not avail*49able, because the plaintiff in error has not shewn to whom the Appel title has been sold and conveyed. Can this be sound law ] The rule of presumption is admitted, because, from the lapse of time, no direct evidence of the conveyance is deemed to be obtainable ; for otherwise, it is wholly inadmissible. But here is strong presumptive evidence of a conveyance to Delancey and Dubois, without any color of evidence to rebut it, except the absence of proof of any act of ownership by them over the lands in Appel’s patent, since their conveyance in 1776 to John Glen. How stands this supposed chasm in the evidence on the part of the plaintiff in error] It appears that the west half of Appel’s patent remained in a wild state until about 50 years before the trial. The revolutionary troubles commenced in a few years after the date of the above conveyance. In the war which those troubles produced, Delancey and Dubois adhered to the enemy, and in 1779 were attainted by a legislative act, and banished from the state. This accounts fully for the absence of proof of any acts of ownership on their part during the turmoil of the revolution ; and prior to their attainder and banishment, no such acts were to be looked for in those times, because it was not their interest to avow their ownership, inasmuch as that might have tended to produce what afterwards happened, the forfeiture of their estates ; and after their attainder' and banishment, they had no motive for intermeddling with the premises.

The last position of the supreme court seems to be, that from the lapse of time and the absence of proof of ownership by any grantees of Appel’s executors, it may be presumed that the right of such grantees (if any there have been) is extinguished. This position, I apprehend, is wholly untenable ; for the executors were authorized and required to sell and convey in fee, and if they have so sold and conveyed, I cannot imagine how the title could be extinguished so as to produce a reversion to the heirs of Appel. The doctrine of extinguishment, when applied to a mortgage or lease, is perfectly intelligible; for when the mortgage is satisfied or lease surrendered, the fee reverts by operation of law, in the one ease to the mortgagor or his heirs, and in the other to the les*50sor or his heirs. But though the estate of an absolute grantee in fee may revert for lack of heirs capable of inheriting, it can revert only to the state by xvay of escheat. If the estate of the patentee was conveyed by his executors, his heirs can never regain it except by a new purchase. Is there any evidence of such purchase, or from which it can be presumed in this case 1 Certainly not; for all the facts and circumstances which establish the presumption of a sale and conveyance of the estate from Appel and his heirs, rebut the presumption of any valid title in the lessors of the plaintiff below; and besides, the lessors’ own evidence rebuts it, inasmuch as they set up a title by descent from the original patentee.

The result of my opinion upon the whole case is, that the circuit judge erred in charging the jury that there was not sufficient evidence before them to prove or warrant the presumption that the heirs of Appel had been divested of their title by any kind of alienation, and that the evidence was sufficient to entitle the lessors of the plaintiff to a verdict; and therefore I am for reversing the judgment of the supreme court.

Stebbins, Senator. The lands in controversy in this cause are situated in the county of Saratoga, and are part of a tract granted by letters patent to William Appel in 1708. The father of Schauber, the defendant below, entered upon the premises when in a wild state, about half a century since, without any claim of title, and frequently acknowledged that the owner was unknown to him, and applied to others for information in regard to the title, for the avowed purpose of purchasing. Not being able to find in whom the title was vested, he continued clearing and cultivating the land, building upon and improving it until his death, and then transmitted his possession to his son, the defendant below. The plaintiffs below claimed title as the descendants and heirs of William Appel, the patentee, through his eldest son and heir, Simon Appel.

The cause comes up upon a bill of exceptions taken at the circuit, by which it appears that the question of pedigree was *51submitted to the jury, and that exceptions were taken to the competency of the testimony and the charge of the judge upon that point.

The defendant, to shew that the plaintiffs were not entitled to claim the premises by descent from William Appel, introduced his will, bearing date in 1729, by which he bequeathed to his son Simon twenty shillings for his birth-right, to be raised and levied out of his estate, wherewith he utterly excludes, debars and precludes him from having or claiming any other or further pretensions, claims and demands whatsoever, as being his heir at law, or by any other pretence whatsoever. He then bequeathes certain articles of personal property to other children, and £25 to his son Johannes, to be raised out of monies arising from the sale of his real and personal estate. He then authorizes, empowers, orders and directs his executors to sell and dispose of his whole real and personal estate, as well in New-York as elsewhere, (except the personal estate before bequeathed,) either at public or private sale, and declares their conveyances valid and effectual to convey all his estate. He directs the monies arising from such sale to be applied, first, to pay the legacies, and the balance to be divided, one fifth to each of his sons Simon and Johannes, one fifth to each of his daughters Magdalena and Engeltje, and one fifth to his grandson Jacobus Berry, the share of the grandson to be retained until his maturity or marriage in the hands of the executors, and in case of his death, to be divided among the four children above named. He then appoints hi's son Johannes and daughter Engeltje executors of his will.- On the 9th of August, 1738, Engeltje filed her renunciation as executrix, and the will was proven and letters testamentary granted to Johannes.

According to the English law in force at the time of the death of William Appel, the patentee, his eldest son Simon, under whom the plaintiffs below claimed, would have been entitled to the estate in question as heir of his father, unless the descent was broken by or under the provisions of this will. But although the plaintiffs below may have established their heirship through Simon Appel, by competent testi*52many, they were not entitled to recover, if by the will the estate was devised to any other person than Simon, or if it had been conveyed to any other person by the executors, pursuant to the power contained in the will, provided the defendant was in a situation to avail himself of such defence.

The bill of exceptions sets out the testimony at length, and states that the judge declared his opinion that the evidence was not sufficient to prove or authorize the jury to presume that William Appel, the patentee, or his heirs or representatives, had aliened the premises in question to any person, so as to divest the title of the lessors as heirs, provided they were such; hut that the evidence was proper to be considered by the jury in determining whether the lessors were such heirs, and that in his opinion, the evidence was sufficient to warrant the jury in finding a verdict for the plaintiff, but that was a matter of fact proper for their consideration. The defendant excepted to this opinion, and the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, upon which the supreme court have rendered judgment.

In entering upon the investigation of the merits of this cause, a serious • embarrassment arises from the manner in which the bill of exceptions is framed. Instead of confining an exception to a single point of law, as is its legitimate office, the loose practice seems latterly to have grown up, of spreading the whole testimony upon the record, then representing the judge as using some general expression in his charge going to the whole merits of the cause, and excepting to that opinion. This practice has lately met the severe animadversion of Ch. J. Marshall, in 11 Wheaton, 276. He says, “ To bring all the testimony offered at the trial of a cause at common law, instead of facts, into this court, by bill of exceptions, or otherwise, is a practice which, to say the least, is extremely inconvenient. Its tendency is to convert this court from a tribunal for the decision of points of law into one for the investigation of facts, and for weighing evidence. If counsel may spread the whole testimony upon the record, and then, by a general exception to the charge, enable himself to take advantage not only of a mis-direction5 but of any omission to notice any question which may be sup*53posed by this court to have arisen in the case, such a course would obviously transfer to the supreme court the appropriate duties of a circuit court, and cannot be countenanced.”

Two of the prominent points raised in the cause before us in this court are, whether, by the will of William Appel, the estate was devised to his executors, and whether the evidence was sufficient to warrant the presumption of a conveyance by the executors after the testator’s death.

The embarrassments presented by the bill of exceptions are in determining whether the first point was raised at all at the circuit, whether the latter was submitted to the jury or not, and in weighing the testimony upon which it is founded.

The first point “ may be supposed to have arisen,” because it was material; but the bill does not inform us otherwise, than that the judge ruled the testimony insufficient to prove that William Appel aliened in his life-time, and sufficient, in his opinion, to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict. The second point was undoubtedly the one most strenuously urged ; but ^depended upon the weight of evidence, and the bill does not distinctly complain that the judge refused to submit the evidence to the jury. I should infer, however, from the charge, that that question was not submitted to the jury as a question of fact, and the charge is excepted to in general terms.

Although, on the ground of mis-direction, the exception may be considered as raising the point, most certainly the rules of convenience and correct practice should require exceptions to be more pointed and precise.

In the supreme court, both questions have been considered as arising upon the bill of exceptions, and discussed; and, perhaps, they should be here, especially considering that this is by no means the first case in which this looseness of practice, in this respect, has been tolerated. The first enquiry, then, is, in whom did the real estate of William Appel vest at the time of his death 1 In my judgment, it vested in his executors by implication, and in trust for the children among whom the proceeds of it were directed to be divided. The argument that the executors took a fee in the estate because they had a power of sale coupled with an interest in the pro*54ceeds, appears to me to be fully met by the case of Hunt v. Runsmore, (8 Wheaton, 203,) where it is held,, that a power coupled with an interest must be a power engrafted upon an estate, not an interest arising out of the execution of the power.

There are many cases in which, where an estate is conveyed coupled with a power, such an estate is held to pass as is necessary for the execution of the power. (1 Ves. sen. 485.) But the question here is, whether any estate is conveyed. There is none in express terms; but if there is an estate by implication, then, indeed, the executors have a power coupled with an interest, but neither the power of itself, nor an interest in its execution, raise an estate by implication. The power does not, because if it did, all powers-would draw an estate after them, and the distinction between naked powers and those coupled with an interest would be done away. An interest in the proceeds produced by the execution of the power does not, because the implication is not a necessary one. Such an interest is perfectly consistent with .the residence of the estate in any other person, until the execution of the power, and needs not the estate to uphold it.

It appears to me, therefore, that where the question is, whether any estate is conveyed, the doctrine of naked powers and powers coupled with an interest, is inapplicable, and does not apply until that question is settled; and the enquiry. . arises, what is the nature of the estate 1

In all questions arising upon the construction of wills, the intention of the testator, as evidenced by. the language of the instrument, is conceded to be the enquiry, and when ascertained,. is to be carried into effect, if not repugnant to the rules of law.

In this case, the intention of the testator most manifestly, was, that the estate should not descend to the heir, for he excludes him. in the strongest language applicable both to the land itself and the rents and profits. His intention is equally manifest that the estate should be sold by his executors, and the proceeds divided among all his children. To say the least, therefore, it was consistent with his intention that the estate should vest in the executors until sale; and I take'the *55rule of law to be, that where the testator clearly evinces an intention to postpone the heir, an estate is raised by implication, if consistent with the provisions of the will and the apparent intent of the testator, and especially where such an implication is necessary, to'conform to the express provisions of the will. It is no more than implying what the testator. left to be implied from his general intention as expressed, and the implication is raised for the purpose of giving effect to that intention.

It is conceded that there must be express words or necessary implication to disinherit an heir. (2 Vern. 572.) And Lord Eldon remarks, in 1 Ves. & Beame, 466, “ with regard to that expression, necessary implication, that in construing a will, conjecture must not be taken for implication ; but necessary implication means not natural necessity, but so strong a probability of intention, that an intention contrary to that which is imputed to the testator cannot be supposed.” Lord Mansfield also held, in Roe v. Sommerset, (5 Burr. 2608,) “that a strong probable implication is sufficient; it needs not be a necessary one.”

With these explanations of the terms, necessary implication, the doctrine would seem to me to be applicable to a case where the intention of the testator was. much more doubtful than in the case before us ; and the cases, I think, shew that it has been so applied.

In the case of Horton v. Horton, (Cro. Jac. 74,) the devise was to the heir after the death of the testator’s wife, and it was held, that the wife took an estate for life by implication. The reason assigned is, that unless the wife took the life estate the heir must, it being devised to no other person ; but as it was clearly the intention of the testator, although not so expressed in terms, that the heir should not take until after the death of the wife, the wife was held to take a life estate, that being the implied intent of the testator. The case intimates, that had the devise been to a stranger after the death of the wife, the wife would not have taken a life estate, because the heir might take it, there being no intention to exclude him expressed. The same doctrine is found in Cro, *56Eliz. 15 ; 1 P. Wms. 474 ; 1 Vern. 22 ; Cruise, tit. Devise, ch. 10, s. 19, &c.

In the case of Roe v. Sommerset, (5 Burr. 2608,) the testator held a leasehold estate for 99 years, if he or his daughter Betty, or one John Búrdale, should live so long ; and he devised the estate to his daughter Mary, after the death of his daughter Betty. It was held that Betty took a life estate by implication. So, where the testator devised to one of four daughters, co-heiresses, after the death of his wife, the wife was held to take a life estate by implication. (2 Vern. 723.)

The two last mentioned cases are certainly not as strong as the preceding ones ; for in neither is the devise to the person who would take as heir. The presumption of the testator’s intent to postpone the heir is therefore not so strong.

In the first case, Lord Mansfield says, the presumption is a probable one, and that is sufficient; in the last, the presumption is raised from the circumstance that the devise is to one of four co-heiresses.

The principle of all these cases I take to be, that where the intention is manifest to postpone the heir, the law raises an estate by implication.; and in the case before us we have the express declaration of the testator that the heir should, in no event, take the estate.

It is said, however, that he has not given it to any other person. It is true, he has not in express terms; if he had, it would most certainly not be a case of implication, for the doctrine rests upon a want of sufficient words to constitute a technical devise.

In none of the cases above mentioned is there any devise in terms to the persons who were held to take by implication; and the only evidence of the intention of the testator that they should take is, that he postpones the heir until their death.

In this case, we have more. We have the express directions of the testator that the executors should sell the estate, divide the proceeds and retain the share of the grandson until his arrival at age. Can there be a doubt that he intended they should take the estate for that purpose, when he expressly excludes the hen-1 The case of Markham v. Cooke, *57(3 Burr. 1684,) I think a strong one upon this point. The testator gave annuities to several persons, some for life and some in fee, to be paid by his trustee. He then appoints John Cooke his trustee and executor, and bequeaths him £1 10s. per annum, for repairs of his farm. Held, that the trustee took a fee in the land by implication, on the ground that such was the intention of the testator. I discover no feature in that case that is wanting in the one before us.

There was no devise in terms of the land to any person; but the intention of the testator was that the annuities should be paid out of the lands by his executor, as in this case, that the children should share the proceeds of the land. The case of Gillard v. Gillard, (5 Barn. & Ald. 785,) is very similar. Richard Gillard, the testator, gives several legacies, and one to John, his heir, to be paid by his executors, and charges his real estate with the payment. He then appoints Richard Gillard sole executor of all his lands forever, and leasehold property, &c. It was held that the executor took the fee.

Some cases have been cited as similar in principle to this, where it has been held that the heir was not disinherited. I think, however, they are clearly distinguishable, upon the principles above stated. One is the case of Howell v. Barnes, (Cro. Car. 382,) which was a devise to A. for life, and after her death, ordering the executors to sell and divide the proceeds. It was held, that the executors had only a bare authority and not an "estate. The intention to disinherit the heir is wanting in this case, which, we have seen, is always necessary to -raise an estate by implication. Another case is Denn v. Garkin, (Cowper, 657.) That was a devise of a freehold estate to three nephews without words of inheritance ; a legacy of 10s. to the heir at law, and after some other legacies, the residue of personal estate to the nephews. The nephews only took a life estate in the lands. Here also the intention to disinherit the heir was wanting. It could only be inferred from a vulgar notion that a small legacy was evidence of such an intention, which Lord Mansfield held insufficient. There is another case which I believe was not cited in 2 Vern. 572. It was a de*58vise to trustees to sell and divide the proceeds as the testator should by writing appoint, and for want of appointment the proceeds to go to his nephews. The testatar made an appointment, but not to the value of the land, and the heir was held entitled to the surplus. The court say, “ There must be express words or necessary implication to disinherit the heir.” In this case, there was neither. The appointment might have been in favor of the heir, and the contingency upon which the nephews were to take did not occur. In the case of Jackson v. Burr, (9 John. 104,) there was neither a devise to the executors, nor, as I read the will, any authority for them to sell, much less does there appear to be any intention to disinherit the heirs. The estate, of consequence, descended. I concede that in the case before us, had the will stopped after declaring that Simon, the heir, should not take the estate, he would, nevertheless, have taken, because it would have been given to no other person. I grant, also, that had this clause been omitted, he would have taken, because there is- no devise in express terms to the executors, and there would have been no intention manifested to postpone the heir, nor any inconsistency in his taking the estate until the executors should sell. But as the testator has said that his heir shall not take, and that his executors shall sell for the benefit of all his children, I think it is necessarily implied that the executors do take until the execution of their power as trustees for those beneficially interested in its execution. If this conclusion is correct, the plaintiffs below were not entitled to recover in the character in which they sued, as the heirs at law of Simon Appel, the heir of the patentee.

• The next enquiry is as to the question of presumption. The judge declared his opinion that the evidence in the cause was not sufficient in law to prove or authorize the presumption that the premises in question had beemconveyed by William Appelin his life time, or by his heirs or representatives after his death. The plaintiff in error now insists that the judge erred in this conclusion, or, at least, that the question should have been submitted to the jury.

*59The doctrine of presumptions is one about which there is much said in the books, and much that is unsatisfactory.

Starkie, in his treatise upon evidence, says, (p. 24,) “ The ground of all presumptions is the necessary or usual connec- • tian between facts and circumstances, the knowledge of which connection results from experience and reflection. A presumption may be defined to be an inference as to the existence of a- fact not actually known, arising from its necessary or usual connection with others which are known.”

In The Mayor of Kingston v. Horner, (Cowp. 102,) Lord Mansfield, speaking of presumptions arising from length of time, says, “ All evidence is according to the subject matter to which it is applied. There is a difference between length of time which operates as a bar tó a claim, and that which is only used by way of evidence : a jury is concluded in the one case, but in the other it is left to their consideration to be credited or not, and to draw their inferences one way or the other according to circumstances.”

Whether a fact which is unknown is to be presumed from its usual éonnection with other facts which are known, would seem to be properly, in all cases, a question for the jury; for the probability of the existence of the unknown fact depends upon the nature and strength of the facts and circumstances known, and the strength of the presumption is measured by the weight and credit given to the facts shewn. A jury is the appropriate tribunal to weigh and appreciate such facts, and deduce inferences from them.

The modern practice of sparing jurors the exercise of their sound discretion upon the facts of a case, taking their formal verdict subject to the opinion of the court, and then presenting the whole facts to the court by means of a case or bill of exceptions, to be passed upon by the court instead of the jury, has necessarily led to adjudications upon matters of fact as questions of law ; and questions of fact which were formerly determined by the jury alone, have now become questions of law, and the jury is said to be concluded by them. As, for instance, in the case of a bond upon which no payment or acknowledgment has been made within 20 years, the court will presume it paid, and the jury are concluded by *60the presumption. Certain facts also have been held to raise a legal presumption of fraud by which a jury was concluded, and similar conclusive presumptions are raised in other cases, because the same state of facts has been adjudged in other cases to warrant such presumption.

But I discover nothing in the facts of this case which should preclude the jury from presuming the conveyance insisted on, if, in their judgment, the facts shewn were sufficient to warrant such an inference. The presumption is not urged as a rule of law binding upon the jury, but by way of evidence, to which the jury may give such credit as it deserves.

In The Mayor of Kingston v. Horner, it was left to the jury to presume a grant from the crown within the time of legal memory.

In Doe v. Prosser, (Cowp. 217,) one tenant in common having been in possession 36 years, it was left to the jury to presume an ouster of the co-tenant.

In Vandyke v. Van Buren & Vosburg, (1 Caines, 84,) a conveyance was presumed in a case where it might have been claimed in favor of the person in possession. So in the case of Jackson v. M’Call, a conveyance was presumed to quiet the possession, not, as the court say, because they thought a grant was really made.

In Jackson v. Woolsey, which was a verdict subject to the opinion of the court, a conveyance by commissioners of partition was presumed.

In the case of England v. Slades, (4 Term R. 682,) one Syburn had taken a lease from George Pyn and underlet to the defendant, and after the expiration of the term, brought an ejectment. George Pyn, the landlord, had died after devising the premises to trustees in trust for John Pyn, to be conveyed to him when he should become of age. The plaintiff claimed under a lease from John Pyn, the cestui que trust, but shewed no conveyance from the trustees. He was non-suited at nisi prius; but the court set it aside, remarking that there was no reason why a conveyance should not be presumed in pursuance of the trust, as it was what the trustees were bound to do, and a court of equity would enforce.

*61It is true, the defendant was in without title, and the plaintiff was equally without legal title, except by the aid of a presumption which was raised without any possession to strengthen it. The presumption, too, was of a conveyance supposed to have been made within 20 years.

The case of Nase v. Peck, (3 Johns. Cas. 128,) was a writ of right. The demandant claimed under an ancient possession. The tenant had been in possession 38 years, and relied upon that and evidence of a patent granted to a third person prior to either of the possessions. The judge directed the jury to find for the tenant on the ground of outstanding title; but the court say the question was, which had the better right 1 and that it ought to have been left to the jury to presume a conveyance to the demandant under the patent.

These are but a sample of the cases, and I think they shew that the question as to whether a fact shall be presumed or not, is ordinarily a question for the jury.

The facts shewn in this case, from which it was urged that a conveyance of the premises might be presumed from William Appel’s executors so as to defeat the claim of his heir, are, that the heirs do not produce the original letters patent; that by the will of William Appel, his executors were expressly ordered to sell; that all the children were interested, as well as the executors themselves, in having a sale made ; that in 1767, a bond was executed between Magdalena Peltz, under whom the plaintiff claimed, and one Killman, submitting to arbitration certain claims which she set up in behalf of herself and the other persons interested in the will of William Appel, and reciting that she insisted that a certain mortgage was purchased by John or Johannes Appel, with the monies held in trust by him under that will; that until after the revolution, the premises in question were reputed to belong to Delancey and Dubois, who were attainted and left the country; that in 1766, Delancey and Dubois conveyed a tract of land to John Glen covering a part of the Appel patent ; that during the war, Magdalena Peltz, who then resided in Albany, frequently stated that she owned two houses in New-York, and no other property.

*62How far these facts and circumstances should go to convince a jury that William Appel or his executors actually did convey the premises so as to break the course of descent, it is unnecessary to say; but I think they go far to establish-such a conclusion, and that the jury should have considered and drawn their ^inferences from them. It is urged, however, that the defendant was not in a situation to entitle him to shew an outstanding title against the plaintiff.

■ Notwithstanding the general rule that a-plaintiff in ejectment must recover upon the strength of his own title, without regard to the weakness of that of his adversary, there are some cases where it has been held that the defendant shall not controvert the plaintiff’s title by shewing a better in some third person, as where he entered under the permission of the plaintiff, or as an intruder upon the possession of the plaintiff without such permission, and without claim of title;. or where the plaintiff claims under judgment and execution against the defendant. These are all cases where there are strong reasons why the defendant should be estopped from setting up an outstanding title, and I believe they are all the cases in which he is estopped.

This case is said to belong, to the second class; and the case of Jackson v. Harder, (4 Johns. R. 202,) is pressed as-an authority. That, however, was a case in which the defendant intruded upon the actual possession of the plaintiff In this case, neither the plaintiffs nor any person under whom they claim, ever were in actual possession.

Where a person intrudes without claim of right upon the actual possession of another, there is reason in compelling him to restore that possession before he shall be permitted to shew title in a third person; but I apprehend the reason does not apply in a case of that constructive possession which the law implies, as always following title. Besides, if the title were shewn to be out of the plaintiff, the constructive possession would follow it.

In my judgment, the defendant was not precluded from shewing that the title was out of the lessors of the plaintiff, notwithstanding he might be unable to trace it to himself; *63and that he ought to have been permitted to urge the facts and circumstances of the case to the jury, as the ground of a presumption that the premises had been conveyed by the executors of William Appel, under the power contained in his will.

If this conclusion is correct, or if the view taken of the first point is correct, that the estate of William Appel vested in his executors at the time of his death, according to the true construction of his will, then the judgment of the supreme court is erroneous, and ought to be reversed.

On the question whether the judgment of the supreme court should be affirmed or reversed, the opinion of the members of the court was as follows : For affirmance, the Chancellor, Senators Allen, Dayan, Hart, M’Carty, Sanford, Todd, Tysen, Wheeler and Woodward.

For affirmance, 10.

For reversal, Senators Benton, Elsworth, Hager, Laice, M’Martin, Oliver, Schenck, Smith, Stebbins, Throop, Warren and Wilkeson.

For reversal, 12.

The Chancellor proposed that the court should definitely express the grounds upon which the judgment of this court was pronounced ; whether the court were of the opinion that by the will of William Appel an estate was given by implication to the executors, or whether they were of opinion that the facts and circumstances of the case ought to have been submitted to the jury, so as to have authorized them to presume a conveyance from William Appel the patentee, or his executors. Several members observing that their opinion had been formed only on consideration of the latter proposition, the question as to the legal construction of the will was not put. The other question, however, was put, viz.: Ought the facts and circumstances of the case to have been submitted to the jury, so as to have authorized them to presume a conveyance from William Appel or his executors, if, in the judgment of the jury, such facts and circumstances were sufficient to warrant such inference ? which was decided in the affirmative : Ayes sixteen, noes seven.

*64Whereupon, it was ordered and adjudged, that the judgment of the supreme court in this cause be reversed, and that the plaintiff in error recover his costs, &c.; that the re-cord be remitted, and that a venire facias de nova be awarded.