delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action in warranty. Thte petitioner purchased two thousand and some arpents of land from Pintado and Teyssett. They sold under a Spanish title, and the government of the United States have confirmed the vendee’s claim to a portion less than one-half of that acquired, by them, from their vendors.
The question is, whether this failure, hitherto of the general government, to confirm the whole title, amounts to an eviction of the plaintiff, and gives him a right of action 1
This question has been several times before the court, and decided in the negative. In the greater number of' instances, the title has been in a private person. But in that of Guidrey vs. Greene, the right to a portion of the property purchased, was shown to be, as in this case, in the United States. We held that the plaintiff could not recover,' as he had not been evicted.
We feel in this instance, as we did in that, the inconvenience which the purchaser labors under; but we do not see now, as we could not see then, how, under the law, relief *490could be afforded. This case arose under the old code. An examination of its several provisions, we think, clearly shows that it is eviction, and not the danger of eviction, which furnishes ground for an action of warranty. The buyer, according to the law at the time of the contract, which is the ^aw °f conh'act, could not refuse payment, unless suit was commenced against him; and consequently cannot maintain an action to recover back that which he has paid. Civil Cocle> 354> arts- 49~50- Ihid> 360, art: 85.
The claim, which the United States may hereafter advance/ to this land, and enforce, cannot be satisfactorily distinguished,' as to its influence on the rights of the parties before us, from that of a title outstanding in a private individual. It is true,' they may proceed without suit, and perhaps prescription does not run against them. But in the material and important fact, namely that they have not evicted the vendee, and that it is not certain they ever will evict him, the cases are parallel. Had this suit been instituted before there was any decision by the land commissioners on the title, we suppose a doubt cannot exist that it could not have been maintained. Is the case so materially changed by what has been done in relation to that title, as to enable us to say the vendee has lost (he land 1 We think not. The vendee’s chance of yet obtaining it is no doubt weakened, but destroyed it cannot be said to be. We have had too many proofs of a change of policy in the government of the United States, in relation to the public lands; too many instances of their liberality, to enable us to say what disposition they may ultimately make of claims, such as that .the plaintiff held under. At all events, while he remains in possession, he cannot be said to be evicted, and * eviction, and not the right in others to evict, which can furnish ground to maintain this action,
It was contended, the defendants sold nothing. They sold tiactof land embraced within certain limits, for which they had an inchoate title under the Spanish government. Had , . , . ® , that government remained m possesion of the country, it is probable they would have obtained a grant for it. Be that, *491however, as it may, the sale was not void because the United States refused to confirm it. Sales, under incomplete titles, have been common in Louisiana for the last fifty years, and, perhaps, for a longer time. They have always been considered to pass the land, subject, like all other alienations, to the influence of higher or better titles, if any such exist. This case offers nothing which makes it an exception to the general ■j ’
The survey of that portion of the tract which the United „ . 7 . */v, r , , . States confirmed, did not evict the plaintiff. It left him, on the contrary, in whatever possession he theretofore held the remainder of the premises.
. It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed, with costs.