Mara v. Pierce

Dewey, J.

The case of Pomroy v. Stevens, 11 Met. 244, seems to be decisive of the present case. Under the Rev. Sts. c. 59, § 28, an unrecorded deed is only valid as against the grantor and “ persons having actual notice thereof.” But the mere evidence of open occupation, possession and cultivation of the land by farming it, by a party who has an unrecorded deed thereof, is not sufficient to warrant the inference that a third person has actual notice of such conveyance, if we give effect to the opinion delivered in the case of Pomroy v. Stevens.

There is nothing in the facts here, that would justify a different ruling of the court from that given in the case cited. It is true that was a claim of title in fee simple, and this is a claim of a freehold for life merely, but we perceive no difference in the two cases on that account. The question of actual notice is a question of fact, proper to be submitted to the jury under suitable instructions from the court; but if in point of law the evidence is entirely insufficient to authorize the jury to find actual notice the court would so instruct the jury and direct them to return a verdict accordingly.

Evidence like that produced in the present case might properly be submitted to the jury, accompanied with other evidence tending to show actual knowledge of the existence of the unrecorded deed; but here none other of that character was offered. *308It was the naked case of long continued occupation and improvement of the premises. That was not enough, and the defence therefore must fail as to that part of the demanded premises in which the tenant sets up title in himself. The case of Curtis v. Mundy, 3 Met. 405, arose upon a different state of facts.

As to one of the other parcels demanded in this writ, it was objected at the trial that the demandant had shown no other title than a deed from Jonathan D. Hathaway, the other two lots having, as was conceded, been conveyed to Hathaway by Judith Pierce.

Under the plea of nul disseisin and nothing more, it would certainly be incumbent on the demandant to show a title to the premises in himself, and a failure so to do would be a failure to support his action. In the present case, the tenant pleaded the general issue, accompanied with a specification that the defence would be a title in himself to one of the lots, to wit, the homestead, thus implying at least that he made no claim of title in himself to the others.

The demandant had introduced a deed from Jonathan 1) Hathaway of this lot to him. This was enough, if the defendant had not a title older than the date of that deed. Previous occupation under a claim of title would have been sufficient to show an older and better title in the tenant, and require the demandant to connect himself with some earlier title. The only question raised, as it would seem, as to this parcel, was upon the demandant’s prima facie case. The deed from Hathaway was sufficient for that purpose, and as the tenant did not rely in defence upon any title in himself, by possession or otherwise, the ruling seems to have been correct, that the demandant was entitled to a verdict for that parcel; however otherwise it might have been if the tenant had relied upon an older title in himself to the premises. Ward v. Fuller, 15 Pick. 189.

Judgment on the verdict.