By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
[I.] Ought the Cbur't to have withdrawn from the Jury the copy deed from the Jones’ to the trustees of the academy?
We think not. It had gone to‘the Jury by the consent of defendant’s Counsel. What induced them to give that consent does not appear. It may have been from the fact that the original 'deed; if insisted on, could have Been produced.
Besides, the plaintiff had acted upon the consent of the deifendant, that the copy deed should be read in evidence; and ¡¡perhaps Mr. Wadsworth, who had possession of the original ■deed and who had been in attendance on the Court, prepared do produce it, it may be if found necessary, had left, so as to ■make it impossible to supply the -primary proof, should the ¡secondary be withdrawn.
[2.J Were the plaintiffs entitled to recover possession of the premises under the testimony ? Even upon the view taIken of the case by the defendant’s Counsel, they would be entitled to recover one-half of the land. His position is, that ¡the paramount title was out of the trustees, having reverted -ito-Wm.-R. and John B. Jones, the feoffors of the trustees,,on ■account ¡of a forfeiture of’tbe condition upon which they held: ¡that is, that it should be used for school purposes. Now ad- ' ¡íüitting this to be true, still, as John B. Jones is one' of the ’ ¡grantors of the trustees and lessors of the, plaintiff, the ver(dietimust be for half of the land.
ph] But what áre the facts ? Norris went into' possession . ■ either as a squatter or as the tenant of the trustees. For, although the testimony do.es not disclose how he go,t in, the ¡prpof is, that he went in while the possession of the trustees '-.•continued; If he went in as their tenant, he cannot dispute his landlord’s title. If, as a squatter, he held in subordination to the title of the true owner, which at the time, was the • trustees. In' any evént, they were entitled, therefore, to eject ' ¡him. ■ ■