In Doe ex dem. Davis v. McKinney and McKinney, 5 Ala. 719, the first question raised upon the record was fully considered, as well independently of, as in reference to the third section of the act “ for the relief of tenants in possession against dormant titles.” We there said that “ the terms of this enactment are certainly broad enough, if literally interpreted, to extend to all cases, and it would really seem that no inconvenience would result from allowing it thus to operate. By making himself a defendant, the landlord cannot urge as a defence any matter which the law did not previously recognize as available to defeat a recovery by the plaintiff. The provision of the act cited does not affect the parties’ rights; it relates only to the remedy. As then it was not allowable for the defendant in an execution to defeat the purchaser by showing that he held under another, so, neither can the landlord when let in to defend, set up a title consistent with the possession sought to be recovered. It is immaterial to him whether the plaintiff recovers the possession or not; for as soon as he comes in, he will be liable to all the burthens and incur all the responsibilities which rested upon the defendant as a tenant. In fact, the recovery of the purchaser, so far as the landlord is concerned, effects nothing more than the substitution of one tenant for another.” It was added that if it was an error to permit the landlord to defend, it was one that could work harm to no one, and consequently was not fatal to the judgment.
The case cited very conclusively shows, that in the admission of Ives to defend the suit upon the ground that he was the landlord of Coe, there is no error for which the judgment is reversible. It may not be out of place to remark that, a landlord should be cautious in making himself a defendant in conjunction with, or instead of his tenant, where the latter holds under a lease for an unexpired term, lest upon a general verdict against him, he might be estopped from asserting his title at the expiration of the lease.
Under our registry act, it has been held that the copy of a, *243deed recorded pursuant to the directions is not admissible without first satisfactorily accounting for the absence of the original; that the register is itself but a copy, and cannot be read as evidence without showing why the higher proof is not produced. [3 Stew. Rep. 271; 5 Ala. Rep. 459.] These decisions were induced by the failure of the legislature to declare that a copy from the record should be evidence. In some of the States, the legislative acts upon the subject, either expressly or by implication, provide for the admission of copies, and the exposition they have received from their courts are of course different. [1 Conn. Rep. 387; 6 Ohio Rep. 32; 4 Bibb’s Rep. 42. But see 6 H. & Johns. R. 141; 2 Penn. Rep. 617; 13 Mass. Rep. 472; 11 Wheat. Rep. 78; 1 Dev. &. Bat. Rep. 40.]
If the defendant can be presumed to be in possession of all the deeds by which the lands in question had been conveyed from the patentee to N. and E. N. Coe, then the notice to produce them would warrant the admission of secondary proof of their contents. But can it be intended that the ven-dee of lands has the possession of any other deeds by which it may have been conveyed by previous proprietors than that under which he claims ? However this may be, in a case like the present, where both parties claim under purchases at sheriff’s sales in virtue of executions against the same defendants, can it be intended that the latter have delivered over the evidences of the title they once claimed ? And if so, to which of the parties ? Whatever answer the first question may receive, it is certainly more difficult to answer the second or the third.
In Tillery v. Simmons, 1 Overt. Rep. 209, it was held that a purchaser of land at a sheriff’s sale is not bound to produce the original grant. So one who has bought land with a general warranty, or a purchaser at a sheriff’s sale, it has been decided is not presumed to have the custody of any other deed than that from his immediate bargainor. [2 Murp. R. 270.]
If the deeds which the defendant was called on to produce cannot be intended to be in his possession, the notice to him and a failure to comply cannot justify the admission of secondary evidence of, .their contents: and if they were held by *244some third person not a party to the suit, within the jurisdiction of the court, their production should have been coerced by a subpoena duces tecum, if compellable, under the circumstances.
But, has the plaintiff been prejudiced by the exclusion of the copies ? He proved the possession of the Coes at the time of his purchase, and this, prima facie, in connection with his deed from the sheriff, &c. entitled him to recover ; the defendant then showed that he was also a purchaser under a previous execution against the same parties, and that E. N. Coe was their tenant. The title of the Coes, as contended for by the plaintiffs, was conceded by the defendants, and the pretensions of the parties to success in the action made to depend upon the superiority of their respective titles acquired under the sheriffs’ sales. This view shows that no injury has resulted to the plaintiff from the rejection of his secondary evidence.
There was no effort on the part of the defendant to set up an outstanding title in a third person, but he merely attempted to show the superiority of his own title, and that E. N. Coe was his tenant; the charge asked was then properly refused.
If Ives was properly admitted to defend instead of his tenant, it was certainly competent for him to show that he had the superior legal title. By this we do not understand that he might merely prove that he had a fee simple or less estate, but also that he must prove a present right to the possession, by the determination of the tenancy or from some other-cause. In this view of the case, there is no error in the refusal to give the second charge prayed, and in the instructions given. It follows from what has been said, that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.