TMs is an action of ejectment, 'brought in the Chancery Court of Sequatchie County, by G-eorge Bruce and the heirs of William Wyatt, deceased. They deraign title (Bruce to one-fifth and the other complainants to four-fifths undivided interest) through several mesne conveyances back to grant Ro. 3379, issued to Lewis Scarlett in 1834 for 5,000 acres. The defendants claim under certain deeds and adverse possession connecting them with junior grants Ros. 7914, 7915, and 10215, aggregating 5,000 acres in one body — the first two issued to Thomas Montgomery in 1840, and the last to Jacob Woodlee in 1849.
In the two bodies of 5,000 acres each there is an inteflap of 1,759J acres. To recover possession of this interlap, complainants filed this bill. In the progress of the cause in the Court below they admitted the superior title of the defendants to 332J acres of the interlap, and decree was entered accordingly; but on final hearing complainants recovered the other 1,427 acres of the interlap— Bruce one-fifth and Wyatt’s heirs four-fifths undivided interest.
Both complainants-and defendants have appealed, the former from so much of decree as adjudged costs against them and as overruled certain exceptions to the deposition of Charles E. Maurice, and *414the latter from the general decree in favor of complainants as to the 1,427 acres of land.
The last deed in the chain of title produced by Wyatt’s heirs was executed by John E. Nar-cross to William Wyatt, October 25, 1839. It recognized no interest in George Bruce, the other complainant, but purported to convey substantially the whole of the 5,000 acres covered by the grant to Lewis Scarlett.
The defendants sought to establish an outstand-' ing title to all this land in Charles E. Maurice, by proving that William Wyatt sold and conveyed it to him on Januaiy 11, 1856. To make this proof, the deposition of said Maurice, with a copy of the deed attached as an exhibit, was offered as evidence on the hearing. Complainants filed ten exceptions to the deposition; five of them were overruled, five sustained, and the deposition and exhibit excluded.
All questions were saved by proper bill of exceptions, and the defendants assign error on the action of the Chancellor in excluding. the deposition. The exceptions sustained present three grounds of objection to the evidence: (1) That there was no proof that Maurice had not abandoned his title; (2) that defendants had not pleaded an outstanding title; (3) that the' evidence was inadmissible for reasons stated. None of these exceptions were well taken.
First. — As to abandoned title, it is sufficient to say that the law presumes a vendee of land to. *415claim Ms rights under Ms deed until the contrary is made to appear affirmatively. The burden of showing abandonment of title is on the party alleging it, and the fact must be shown by clear and satisfactory proof. The person in whom the record shows the title to have been regularly vested is not required to prove that he has not abandoned it. In this case there is no proof whatever of abandonment. Maurice received Ms deed, had it registered, and still holds and preserves it as evidence of his title. There is greater reason for supposing that complainants abandoned their claim of title before the commencement of this suit. Bruce took his deed in 1839, and is not shown to have asserted any claim under it until the filing of this bill in 1888. "William Wyatt took his deed in 1839, and held it, without more, until his death many years thereafter. He, like Bruce, took no possession and paid no taxes. Some of his children say that he claimed to own land in Tennessee up to his death, but more is not shown; and since his death, until the filing of this bill, his heirs are not shown to have asserted any claim to the land — to have exercised any of the privileges or borne any of the burdens of ownership.
Second. — It is true that defendants did not set up defense of outstanding title in their answer or by plea; but it is not necessary that outstanding title should be pleaded. Walker v. Fox, 1 Pickle, 154; Bleidorn v. Pilot Mountain C. § M. Company, *416ante, p. 166. It is a matter of evidence going-to defeat the indispensable averment by complainants of legal title in themselves. They must recover, if at all, on the strength of their own title, and not on the weakness of that of the defendants. If defendants can show outstanding title in a third person, they thereby disprove the case of complainants, which they may legitimately do on the hearing without pleading the fact at all.
In their answer the defendants denied that complainants were the owners of the legal title, averred their own title, and pleaded the statute of limitations. The controlling question was one of title. Complainants affirmed, defendants denied. The proof offered was responsive to the issue. We recognize the fact that the defense of outstanding title is not favored, as stated in Howard v. Massengale, 13 Lea, 585; yet it is a good defense when made out, and it need not be specially pleaded.
Third. — Three exceptions to the admissibility of the deed from William Wyatt to Maurice were sustained as follows: That its execution was not properly acknowledged by the vendor; that it was not proven by subscribing witnesses; and that the deed had not been registered in such a manner as to cure the defective probate. The deed seems to have been acknowledged by the maker before a Justice of the Peace of Pennsylvania, without more. Xo other certificate than that of the Justice is attached, and the execution is not proven *417by subscribing witnesses. ■ Hence, there appears to have been no proper probate or authentication of the deed under the registration laws of this State. Code (M. & V.), §§ 2853 and 2863.
But those objections go .only to the matter of proper preparation of the instrument for registration, and do not touch the question of its sufficiency to pass title from vendor to vendee as between themselves. It is well settled that a deed is effective, as between the parties and their heirs, without registration, or proof for registration, either by subscribing witnesses or by acknowledgment of the maker. Divestiture and revestiture of title, as between thtem, may be perfected by a proper deed merely signed and delivered. Code, § 2887; 10 Yer., 1; 6 Yer., 320; 2 Lea, 702; 3 Tenn. C Oh., 523; 4 Pickle, 595.
The registration of this deed for more than twenty years did not eure the defective probate, because the registration was made in Grundy County, and not in Sequatchie County, where the land lies. The statute perfects the defective pro-' bate only when the instrument is registered in the county where the land is situated. Code, §§ 2843 and 2898.
Therefore, the present deed is no better and no worse for having been registered so long a time. Yet, as has just been seen, the question of registration, or probate for registration, is entirely immaterial in this case.
The heirs of William Wyatt claim four-fifths of *418this land. His deed bound him and them without probate or registration. It would not have been so as to his creditors or as to innocent purchasers. Code, § 2890.
Thus it is made manifest that none of the five exceptions sustained by the Chancellor were well taken, and that all of them should have been overruled.
A question of more difficulty is' whether he should not have sustained the other five exceptions which were overruled. From his action in this behalf, complainants appealed. The point and substance of those exceptions is that the deposition of Maurice, and exhibit thereto, should be rejected, because only a copy, and not the original deed, is produced.
Under the facts already recited, and in the absence of formal authentication of this deed, defendants contend that it may be proven as an ancient paper, and so used as evidence in this ease. Complainants say that this cannot be done, because the original deed is not presented in Court. The general rule is that a private deed over thirty years oldj as is the one before us, may be admitted in evidence without proof of its execution; that, being an ancient document, its due execution is presumed, and the subscribing witnesses, though in fact living and present, need not be called to establish the fact — provided the instrument be found in the proper custody, and is free from suspicion as to its genuineness. 1 Gfreenleaf *419on Evi., Secs. 21, 144, and 570; 1 Wharton on Evi., Sec. 732; Applegate v. Lexington, etc., Mining Co., 117 U. S., 263.
Learned counsel for complainants insist, and it has frequently been held, that accompanying possession under the deed must also be shown before it can be admitted in evidence as an ancient instrument without proof of its execution; but this view is contrary to the weight of authority, and cannot be sustained on principle. 1 Wharton on Evi., Secs. 199 and 733; 1 G-reenleaf on Evi., Secs. 21 and 144, note 1.
In the discussion of the admissibility of ancient documents as evidence without proof of execution, the text-writers and Courts have generally, if not universally, referred to cases in which the original instrument itself, and not a copy, has been produced. Here only a copy .is offered, and the questioli is whether or not it may be used as evidence of the facts recited.
Maurice was a non-resident, and gave his deposition in Arkansas. He testified that he bought this land from William .Wyatt, paid him for it, and took his deed of conveyance on January 11, 1856; that he had the deed registered in Grundy County, February 5, 1856; received it back from the Register, and has ever since held and owned the deed, and has never parted with his title to the land. It is admitted that this deed covers the land sued for by the complainants in this cause. When his deposition was taken, Maurice had the *420original deed in his possession, but he refused to part with it or to permit its use as evidence. The defendants were powerless to compel its surrender! So they procured a certified copy from the Registei*’s books, and presented that to Maurice, and requested that it he compared with the original. He made the comparison with the original in his hands, and pronounced them 'the same, except as to erroneous spelling of some names in the copy, which he corrected, and which we see were entirely immaterial. The defendants found thé original in the proper custody. No suspicion attaches to it. JBeing unable to produce it in Court because the owner would not surrender it, they bring a copy, whose correctness is certified by the Register and sworn to by Maurice. The latter makes the copy, thus certified and proven, an exhibit to his deposition. Complainants, by their counsel, were present and cross-examined Maurice; yet they failed, by that means or in any other way, to cast any suspicion on the deed. They had an opportunity of inspecting the’ original, and no doubt did so, and if there had been any thing suspicious about it, we may fairly presume they would have shown it in some legitimate manner. The age of the paper is demonstrated by the fact of registration, though -not in the proper county, for thirty-two years before this suit was commenced.
The defendants seem to have done all in their power to procure the original deed, and, failing *421to obtain it, they bring a certified and proven copy. Manifestly, this is the best available evidence. As such it was competent, and shonld have been admitted. It is plenary in establishing outstanding title in Maurice, and defeats the action of the heirs of his vendor, William Wyatt.
Though embracing all the land claimed by those heirs, and that claimed by Bruce as well, the deed from Wyatt to Maurice does not defeat Bruce, who claims under an older and different deed. Gilbert conveyed an undivided one-fifth interest in the 5,000 acres to Bruce, April 4, 1889; and afterward, on September 11, 1839, Gilbert conveyed the whole of it to Uarcross, not noticing his previous deed to .Bruce. On October 25, 1839, Uarcross conveyed the same land to Wyatt, who conveyed it to Maurice, January 11, 1856. Rone of these conveyances divested Bruce of his title to an undivided one-fifth interest in the land. Hence, tfie deed from Wyatt to Maurice does not establish an outstanding title as against Bruce.
Prom an inspection of these and other .conveyances it is discovered that Gilbert, Bruce’s vendor, did not himself acquire title to- any part of the land until September 6, 1839, five months after his deed to Bruce; but the- fact .that Bruce did not acquire title when he received his deed is immaterial. Having made Bruce a deed with general covenants of warranty, Gilbert’s title, when acquired, inured to Bruce’s benefit, and his title was thereby perfected under his deed by relation. *422Rawle on Covenants for Title (4th Ed.), pp. 384, 390, 391, 392; Robertson v. Gaines, 2 Hum., 383; Henderson v. Overton, 2 Yer., 394-398; Gookin v. Graham, 5 Hum., 480; Birdwell v. Cain, 1 Cold., 303; Susong v. Williams, 1 Heis., 630.
The defendants excepted to the evidence of Bruce’s title in the Court below, on the ground (as stated in the exception) that a copy of his deed was produced without accounting for the absence of the original. The overruling of that exception and the admission of the evidence tendered are here assigned as error. The assignment is not well made. It does not appear from the record that a copy was in fact used. On the contrary, the instrument copied into the transcript seems to have been the original deed itself.
Let the decree be affirmed as to Bruce, and reversed and the bill dismissed as to William Wyatt’s heirs, the other complainants.
Wyatt’s heirs will pay two-thirds and the defendants one-third of all costs.