LEVARI FACIAS.
PAYMENT, 2. JUDGMENT, 3.
and survey, is protected, after See JUDGMENT, 2. 21 years, by the statute of limi- tations as to all that he encloses or cultivates without enclosure, but not as to those parts which remain in wood and uninclosed; though he uses them for fuel, fences, &c.
This is the general rule, but it seems there may be exceptions; such as the owner's confessing himself out of possession of the woodland uninclosed; suffering
1. A return of a mulatto child under the 4th sect. of the act of 29th March, 1788, as "born about the 15th November, 1780," is a good return, where it suffi- ciently appears that the entry and oath of the registry were
See BILLS OF EXCHANGE, &c, 5.
1. Where a chose in action is transferred to a creditor by his debtor, the presumption is that it is not intended as payment, if not so expressed. Leas v. James.
1. Under the plea of payment with leave, the jury cannot find any sum due frm the plaintiff to the defendant. Anderson's executors v. Long.
2. Under the plea of payment to a scire facias on a mortgage, the mortgagee may give evidence to show a variety of circum- stances between the parties pre- vious to its being given, proving circumvention and deception on the mortgagee, and that a judgment in ejectment against the mortgagor, which was one of the inducements to his giving the mortgage, was obtained by surprise and improperly used by the mortgagee. Robinson v. Eldridge. 140 3. Parol evidence is admissible under the plea of payment to a suit on bond against a surety, to show, that he executed the bond under a declaration by the ob- ligee, that his signing was mere matter of form, and that he never should be called on for payment. Miller v. Henderson. 290 4. If the defendants plead pay- ment with leave, and go into an equitable defence, the plaintiff may, under the replication of non solvit, give evidence of other special matter to rebut the de- fendant's equity. McCutchen v. Nigh.
5. In a suit on a forfeited recog- nizance for a party's appearance at the next Court of Quarter Sessions, to answer a charge of fornication and bastardy, on the pleas of payment and nil debet, evidence is not admissible, that the party had married the mo-1. ther after the date of the recog- nizance.
No evidence is admissible under these pleas, but what tends to 2. show, either that the recogni- zance was not forfeited, or that it had been remitted by lawful authority.
Ii is error for the court to charge the jury on such pleas, that al- 3. though the party did not ap- pear, yet if he married the mo- ther, even with the fraudulent intention of deserting her after marriage, the defendant was entitled to a verdict, unless
privy to the fraud. Common- See BILLS OF EXCHANGE AND PRO- wealth v. Nowland.
1. An obligee called on by the surety of the obligor to sue the principal loses his resort against the principal by neglect; but evidence is not admissible of a call of that kind made on the ad- ministrators of the obligee by the guardian of one of his heirs. Geddis v. Hawk. 33
1. If the recognizance on appeal
from a judgment of a justice of the peace be for payment of the debt, instead of being in the na- ture of special bail, it is void, and no action lies on the recog-4. nizance.
1. The daughter of the testator took under his will an estate in fee in a portion of land, to be di- vided off to her by three per- sons; after the division she mar- ried, and, by a mistake of the scrivener, a release was execut- ed from the other children to the husband alone in fee simple, which purported to be in execu- tion of the will, and contained a covenant on their part, never to claim any right in the land; the wife died without issue: held, in ejectment by the releasors, that they were not barred of their right to the land. Leek v. Cow- ley. 176.
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On the issue of no rent in ar- rear, the tenure of the plaintiff cannot be inquired into nor is the charge of the court in that respect material.
In avowry for rent, if there is a ge- neral verdict for the defendant for a sum certain but no finding of the value of the goods dis- trained, the judgment is a judg- ment at common law, de retorno habendo. Williams v. Smith. 202 5. If the defendant in replevin makes cognizance as bailiff, and states that A. B. held the lands as tenant under a demise at a year- ly rent and rent accrued, and plaintiff replies non demisit and no arrear, the plaintiff may with previous notice of special mat- ter in evidence, that A. B. took the lands for a certain period, and paid rent in advance. Beau- mont v. Wood.
1. Where the court reversed a judgment on a scire facias post annum et diem, on which the de- fendants land was sold, and part of the money paid to the other jugdment creditors, and part to the plaintiff, the court refused to award restitution, but ordered the money received by the plain- tiff to be brought into court to await their further order; and took no order as to that portion paid to the judgment creditors, as they were not before the court. Kirk v. Eaton.
not in the actual, exclusive pos- session of land, whatever title 1. he may claim, against one who is in the actual, visible, notorious
The report of viewers vacating an old road and substituting a new one, must be accompanied
Where an administrator sues for a debt due to himself for goods of the intestate sold by him to the defendant, the defen- dant cannot set off a debt due from the intestate to him. Wol- fersberger v. Bucher.
2. If a sale of land be made by an executor under an authority giv- en by will, and the administra- tor cum testamento annexo, after the executor's death, brings eject- ment to compel payment of the residue of the purchase money, the vendee cannot in such suit give in evidence by way of set off or as an equitable defence that the administrator by means of a mill-dam existing at the time of the sale, and ever since had overflowed a valuable por- tion of the land. Cornell v. Green. The jury cannot, under any plea or notice, find a sum due from the plaintiff to the defendant, to be deducted from another debt due from the defendant to the plaintiff. Anderson's Executors v. Long. 65
Under the plea of set off, evi- dence is admissible to show, that since suit brought the plaintiff acknowledged, that a settlement had taken place after the action was instituted, and that he there- by became indebted to the de- fendant and gave him a note for the debt, and such note is also admissible. Marshall v. Sheri- dan. 268
See LIMITATIONS. DEED, 1.
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