*48The opinion of the court was delivered by
Kennedy, J.Seven errors have been assigned.by the plaintiffin error, none of which, excepting the sixth, are considered sustainable by this court. Indeed, the sixth is the only one that was pressed and relied on by his counsel, at the time of argument here.
The sixth error is, that the court below, in their charge to the jury, directed them that they ought not to presume an abandonment by Hutchinson of his settlement right to the land in dispute.
From 1811, the time when the wife and son of David Hutchinson were on the land and left it last, until the commencement of this action of ejectment, a period of eighteen years, neither he, although he continued to live seventeen yeai;s of that time; nor his heirs, after his death, ever made the least effort, that we have heard of, to recover or take the possession of the land again. The only excuse or apology that has been offered for this delay and lying by is, that he wished, as he said, when he left the land last, in 1811, “ to try his right at law to it,” and that no person took actual possession of it afterwards, to afford him the opportunity of bringing an action of ejectment, until Brentlinger, the plaintiffin error, came on it. But, it must be recollected, that that was in 1826 or 1827, at least one, if not two years before Hutchinson's death, which was ample time for him to have brought his suit in, if he had intended it. Again, if he had really been desirous to have tried his right at law, and seeing that no one took possession of, or occupied the land in any way, it would have been more safe, as well as more wise, for him to have returned to the land with his family, or, otherwise, to have got a tenant to have done so, and to have entered upon and held the possession of it, until it was taken from him by process of law. If he had done so, his adversary, if disposed to contest his right, must, in that case, have become the plaintiff, and made Hutchinson the defendant, which, as every one knows, is a very material advantage gained in action of ejectment. And if being thus in possession of the land, his adversary had declined bringing a suit for the recovery of it, he, of course, would have held it without the vexation, trouble and costs necessarily attending upon a suit at law. This would surely have been the utmost that he could have wished. I must, therefore, consider the circumstances of the land lying vacant and unoccupied for so great a length of time as fifteen or sixteen years, instead of making in favour of the plaintiff below, or furnishing the least excuse for lying by, and not resuming the possession of it, and again making it the place of his abode, as one of the strongest reasons that could be well imagined, for inferring an intentional abandonment on the part of David Hutchinson.
The definition of a settlement upon land, is given.in the act of assembly of the 30th of December 1786, which has been considered nothing more than declaratory of what was the common usage and law in relation to it before that time, as well as since. Clark v. Hutchinson, 3 Yeates 269. It is thereby declared, “ that by a settle*49ment, shall be understood an actual personal resident settlement, with a manifest intention of making it a place of abode, and the means of supporting a family, and continued from time to time, unless interrupted by the enemy, or by going into the military service of the country during the war.” Again, by the act of the 22d of September 1794, it is enacted that, “ from and after the passing of this act, no application shall be received at the land office, for any lands within this commonwealth, except for such lands whereon a settlement has been made, or hereafter shall be made, grain raised, and a person or persons residing thereon.” It appears from these acts of the legislature, as well as every other relating to" the same subject, that continuity of possession, and personal residence of and upon the land, are made the very essence of a settlement. By the first act it must have been continued from time to time, unless interrupted by the enemy, or going into the military service of the country during the war; showing that nothing but the force of a public enemy, or a demand for his service in the defence of his country against such enemy, would excuse, or be received as such from a settler, for quitting his possession. And by the second act it is apparent that this continuity of possession and personal residence was considered of so much importance, that no application for a warrant was to be received at the land office, unless the applicant,, or some one or more under him were actually residing on the land at the time of the application. Thus demonstrating, most clearly, that no previous settlement, however long continued, or however extensive and valuable the improvements upon the land might be, would, unless the personal residence were kept up and continued, avail, and entitle the settler to a warrant for the land.
The late Chief Justice Tilghman, in delivering his opinion in the case of Cluggage v. Duncan, 1 Serg. & Rawle 120, 121, says, “ abandonment is not in all cases a matter of fact. It may be a conclusion of law from facts. Where a man makes a settlement and leaves it for a great length of time, it does not signify for him to say, that he keeps up his claim. The law declares that such verbal claims have no avail against the act of relinquishing. the possession. And in'such case I consider it as the right of the judge to declare the conclusion of law.” And in a later case, Watson v. Gilday, 11 Serg. & Rawle 340, where Mr Justice Duncan delivered the opinion of this court. He says, “ a man may abandon his settlement, and that abandonment may be of such a cast as that the court will decide it as a matter of law, independent of the statutory provisions of limitation as to seven years, because continuity of actual residence and possession, is the very vital principle of this right, and is a part of its legal definition. Hence it is determined that settlements must not have the smallest cast of abandonment. The abandonment, then, is not constructive, but absolute; a dereliction of the possession, which amounts to a surrender of the pre-emption right, unless this dereliction is accounted for by some extraordinary occurrence,as being dispossessed by force, and an immediate prosecution of the right, or pro*50secution within some reasonable time, or being driven off by the public enemy.”
By the fifth section of the limitation act passed the 26th of March 1786, persons who had claims to land founded upon settlement, improvement or occupation, without other title, were debarred from bringing actions for the recovery of them, unless they or those under whom they claimed had had the quiet and peaceable possession of the same within seven years next before bringing their actions. This section of this act was considered so just and reasonable, that it was, for a considerable time after its passage, applied by the courts of the state to cases where settlers had left and deserted the possession of the lands held by their settlements, subsequently to the date of its passage. It has however of late, from its terms, been held to extend only to cases of abandonment before that time. It is certainly true that it is retrospective in its terms: but then it shows what was at that time considered by the legislature the utmost indulgence that ought to be allowed to a settler who had quitted his settlement and improvement, to resume the possession of it again.
One thing however is demonstrated most clearly by this section, taken in connection with the third section of the act, that the legislature intended that settlement-rights should not be placed on the same footing with titles held under locations or warrants and surveys returned into the surveyor-general’s office, because the third section allowed to all such, who were not in possession at that time, and where adverse possession of the land had been taken and was held by others fifteen years, to. bring suits for the purpose of recovering the possession thereof whereas no time was allowed to those who claimed merely by settlement right, unless where they had been driven off by force or terror of the savages or other persons, &c. and in that case they were only allowed jive years for regaining their possession. It is impossible for us to close our eyes against all the various provisions and directions of the legislature at different times on the subject of settlement-rights to land: first, in defining what shall constitute a settlement, and how the residence and possession shall be kept up and continued in order to make it available; and in the next place treating it as a privilege that is granted without consideration, and if the possession be relinquished without good cause for any length of time, a forfeiture may be declared without time given for redemption. I am not now to be understood as speaking of settlements made upon land lying north and west of the rivers Ohio and Alleghany and Conewango creek, because I look upon settlements made there as part of the consideration stipulated to be given to the state for the land under the act of the 3d of April 1792, and are to be of a certain extent and of certain duration.
It has been said that settlement rights are of more value and more to be regarded in law now than formerly: that is true; but since the legislature have acted upon the matter and defined what they shall be, and how they shall be kept up and continued, no estimation *51can be put on them that is not authorised by what they have been pleased to declare and direct. Whatever these rights were immediately after the act-of the 22d of September 1794, they must be now nothing more or less. Since that, the legislature has made no change whatever in respect to their nature and character. In 1795 in the Lessee of Howard v. Pollock, 1 Yeates 512, they were classed among the imperfect rights. In the same year in the case of the Lessee of Smithy. Brown, Chief Justice McKean, who pronounced the opinion of the court, says, “there are three kinds of rights: jus proprietatis, jus possessions and jus vagum or an imperfect right; settlements may be ranked among the latter species., It is a right to pre-emption; a claim to favour. And as late as 1824, in Smithy. Oliver, 11 Serg. & Rawle 266, the present chief justice of this court calls a settlement right a “ mere equity:” and therefore it was decided in that case, that one could not be seised of an improvement right for the use of another;
Upon the principle of continuity of possession and residence, which is so expressly required by our acts of assembly on the subject, it has been decided that the same “man cannot be an actual settler on two tracts of land:” and that the title of the settler does not depend on the extent of his improvements, but on the animo residendi and the possession continued. See Lessee of M'Laughlin v. Maybury, 4 Yeates 537, 538. It is obvious a man can have but one place of abode at the same time. To constitute a settlement right to land, the settler, as we have seen, is required by the acts of the legislature to make the land the place of his abode and to continue it; the moment therefore that he changes and fixes his abode elsewhere, unless driven to do so by force or he enters into the military service of his countryin defence of its liberty and rights, the former ceases to be his place of abode and his right to it by settlement would seem to cease also, upon a literal construction of these acts.
In Star v. Bradford, 2 Penns. Rep. 384, where a descriptive location was obtained by one in 1769 who had a survey made on it, and a warrant by another in 1784 who had a survey made and returned but no return was made of the survey on the location until 1788; it was held and decided as a question of law by this court, without taking into the account the time that the land office was closed during the revolutionary war, that the neglect on the part of the owner of the location in not having a return made earlier of his survey, was an abandonment in law of his right under it and was therefore postponed to the right under the warrant. Mr Justice Rogers who delivered the opinion of the court in that case seemed to think that the time allowed for making a return of the survey in such case ought not to exceed seven years upon principle of analogy to the fifth section of the limitation act of the 26th of March 1786 ; and that as often as the question of abandonment arises for mere lapse of time, where there is no dispute as to length of it, it is a question of law to be decided by the court without regard to the inten*52tion of the party. In this sentiment or rule I most fully concur; and agree also that the limitation of time should not be permitted to exceed seven years. It is surely of great importance to the community, as well as individuals, that the rule on this subject should be fixed, uniform and known. I would also say that wherever the question of abandonment is made upon a lapse of time less than seven years, accompanied by circumstances from which it might be inferred that the party intended to abandon, that it was a mixed question of. fact and law to be submitted to the decision of the jury. It is certainly the law that a party may abandon at any time, within seven days if he chooses, and wherever he has relinquished the possession of the land within less than seven years, it would become a matter of contention then to be settled by the jury.
In giving this indulgence to an actual settler, I am far from being perfectly satisfied that it may not be in opposition to the will and intention of the legislature, as it has been manifested in their acts on this subject; but still I think it would be sufficient to give repose and quiet to the public, and at the same time afford ample security to the rights of individuals. The most formidable objection which I see against extending the indulgence to seven years is, that it may often prevent the state from disposing of the land to others who are willing and desirous to pay the state for it, and might savour of the idea of enabling one person to hold two or more tracts of land by settlement right, by shifting and changing his possession and residence from one to another once in every seven years, until he went around the whole, which I am strongly inclined to believe was never intended.
In the case under consideration, however, not only seven, but at least seventeen or eighteen years elapsed from the time that Hutchinson lost, left, and relinquished the possession of the land, before he, or those claiming under him, made any attempt to recover it. And in the absence of all colourable excuse for this long delay, I have no hesitation in saying that there was an abandonment in law of his right by settlement, and that the court below ought to have told the jury so, instead of directing them that an abandonment ought not to be presumed.
The judgment of the court below is reversed.