
    Short against Wilson and others.
    A., by his deed, dated January 16th, 1798 conveyed a lot of land to B., (re citing a contract of purchase between A. andl M., dated August 23d, 1797, by which M. covenanted to pay one fourth of the purchase . money on the 23d of August, 1799, he.; and agreed that, if be failed in performance, A. was to be discharged from making a conveyance,) in trust, to convey the premises to M., or his appointee, when he should have made the payments and performed the covenants stipulated in his contract.
    A., by B., his attorney, covenanted, the 22d of September, 1799, to convey part of the lot to S., who paid part of the purchase to B., and the residue to A., who conveyed the premises to S., by deed, dated Uth of November, 3801.“
    M. having failed to perform his contract, B , by a deed, (dated the 29th of September, 1813, and executed by virtue of a power from A., dated the 16th of December, 1799,) reciting that A. had assigned the contract of 3VÍ. to C.„ In trust, for the executors of G., conveyed the premises in question to C. It was held, that S. had a good title, under his deed, notwithstanding the previous contract with IVT., and the deed to B.; as M. having failed to perform his contract, the trust in B. was at an end, and resulted to A,, and B. had no authority to execute a deed afterwards, without a new power,
    . That A. and B. having, subsequently to the deed of trust, made the agreement with'S., which had been carrier Into effect, it was a revocation of the trust, as it regarded S., and that the subsequent deed to C. was inoperative on the ground of the adverse possession of S. ■
    An action on the cas®, the nature of w§ste, lies against the assignee of a Iessee0 ,
    THIS was an action of trespass on the case, which was tried at the Ontario circuit, in June, 1814, before Mr. J. VanNess, and a verdict taken for the plaintiff, subject to the opinion of the court.
    The declaration contained four counts, in the three first of , which, the plaintiff alleged an injury to his reversion in 100 .acres of land, in lot No. S3., in township No. H., in the town of Phelps, by digging; and carrying away gypsum: the fourth was a count in trover. T¿e defendant pleaded the genera! issue, and several special pleas, denying the title,, and alleging a title out of the plaintiff.
    The original title to the land urns’1 in Oliver Phelps, under whom both parties claimed; and the plaintiff produced a déed; from Phelps, for the premises mentioned in the declaration, dated the 14th of November, 1801, and acknowledged and recorded the 23d of July, 1803, with a'release of dower from the wife of Phelps endorsed thereon, and acknowledged the 15th of Juñe, 1804. Phelps, by his attorney* P. B. Porter, had previously .agreed, by articles of agreement, dated .the 22d of September, 1799, to convey thepremises to the plaintiff. On the articles was endorsed a receipt by Augustus Porter, for part of the consideration money, and a receipt ia full,, from Phelps, for the residue» The plaintiff began to occupy the--lot 14 or 15 years ago, and hired one Nicholas Span to clear some part of it, who.went info possession in the spring of 1802, under a lease from the plaintiff and continued in possession until December, 1813, when he assigned his right to: the defendants. The lease contained no permission to dig gypsum S and it was. proved that the defendants had dug'gypsum, with á knowledge of the plaintiff’s'claim, and after having been forbid by him,
    The defendants gave in evidence a deed from Oliver Phelps to Augustus and Peter B. Porter, dated July 16th, 1799, and recorded on the 14th of March, 1800,- of several lots, in which the premises in question, stated to have been soldto Abraham Van Duzen and Adam Miller, were included, in trust, to convey the. said, lots to the respective purchasers thereof, or their appointees, when they should have fulfilled the conditions, and made the payments, stipulated in certain agreements or covenants theretofore made between them, the said purchasers, and Phelps.
    
    
      Adam- Miller having failed in the performance of his agreement, Augustus and Peter B. Porter, by deed, dated September 29tli, 1813, reciting, among other things, that Phelps had assigned MilleAs agreement to Breaks, the party of the second part,, in trust for the executors of Nathaniel Gorham-, deceased, and di» rected the land to be held for the benefit of the party,of the second part, and conveyed the premises in questipn to Peter C. Brooks, excepting fifty acres out of the northwest corner thereof, sold by Phelps to Abraham Van Duzen. . The last-mention,.ed deed wqs executed by Augustus and Peter B, Porter,My 
      virtue of a power Of attorney from- Phelps to them, dated Demmber 16 th, 1799.
    The power of attorney recited, that whereas Phelps had Covenanted by indenture with Rebecca Gorham, Nathaniel Gorham, and John Call, and as it was his intention to appoint an agent to transfer and deliver for him such security as was in the said indenture covenanted, and for the purposes, and in the manner, therein stipulated, he, therefore, appointed Peter J3, and Augustus Porter, his attorneys, to transfer and deliver to the said administrators, or to any person whom they might appoint, bonds and notes of the description in said indenture, together with the mortgages or other collateral securities given to secure the same, to the amount of 12,500 dollars, in the posséssion of the said attorneys; and if it should be necessary, in order to complete the said sü'rn, he empowered them to convey, by sufficient warranty deeds, all such lots of land as had been sold to settlers, for which they had given their bonds or notes, they holding articles of agreement for the conveyance of such lands, in case such bonds or notes should be assigned to the said administrators, or any person by them appointed; and revoking any conveyance in trust for said settlers made to Péter B. and Augustus Porter, of lands to which said bonds or notes'may relate. To the power was annexed a list or schedule of sundry lands therein stated to have been assigned by Phelps to Peter C. Brooks, among which was Adam Miller’s bond, dated August 23d, 1797, for 3,334 dollars and 12 cents. . The assignment to Brooks was in trust for the heirs or administrators of Nathaniel Gorham, The agreement between Phelps and Miller, for the conveyance of the premises in question, and other lands, was, also, dated the 23d of August, 1797, and was assigned in the ñamé of Phelps, by his said attorneys, to Brooks, in trust for the same persons, with directions to P. B. and A* Porter, to hold the land mentioned in the agreement, in trust, for Brooks.
    
    By the agreement, Miller was to complete all his payments by the 23d of August, 1802, according to the condition of his bond, anda deed to be'given on or before the 1 st.of September, 1802 ; and it was expressly provided that, if Miller failed to perform any, or either of the covenants, op his part, Phelps was, in such cas'e, to be fully discharged and acquitted from making the conveyance.-
    In 1799 Miller took possession of the premises-agreed to be conveyed to him, and after six or eight years, being prosecuted by Peter C. Brooks, on the bond above mentioned, and being UBaj)ie..t0..pay thg ainaunt due thereon, for which a judgment. had been obtained, he abandoned the whole of the land mentioned in the articles. Miller had made no improvements on that, part of the lot claimed by the plaintiff, not had he made the payments according to his covenant. On the 13th of August, 1814, Brooks con vey ed the premises in question to the defendants, Wilson and M.‘Neil; the defendants having been. permitted, in - December, 1813, to go on the lands and improve them.
    
      Henry, for the plaintiff.
    
      Van Vediten, contra.
   Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The premises in question are one hundred acres of lánd, át the southwest corner of lot No. S3, township No. 11, in the town of Phelpsi It was admitted, on the trial, that the title, waa once duly vested in Oliver Phelps, from whom the .plaintiff derived his title, by-, deed, bearing date the. 14th of November, 1801. A previous contract for the land had, however, been made by the plaintiff with Peter B. Porter, as attorney for Oliver Phelps. The articles of agreement bear date the 22d of September, 1799. The power-of attorney to Porter was n'ot produced, but the .case furnishes abundant -evidence that Phelps ratified the act, and adopted it as his own ; for he-received part of the consideration money, and executed a deed pursuant to the contract. There would, therefore, be no doubt of the plaintiff’s title to the lot, if it were not for the previous contract, made with Adam Miller, bearing date the 23d of August, 1797, and the deed, in trust, given by Phelps to Peter B. and Augustus Porter, bearing'date the 16th of January, 1799. A little examination, however, will show, that neither of these instrutoents will form any objection to the plaintiff’s title to the land. By the contract with Miller, the deed was to be given in 1-802; the consideration money to be paid by instalments, all payable before the deed was to be given; and the contract expressly -provides, that if Miller should fail in the performance of any of the covenants on his part, then Oliver Phelps was to be- fully discharged and acquitted from making the conveyance. By these articles, the first payment fell due the 23d of August, 1799; . Miller failed in performing his contract; this appears from nil* merous parts of the ease, and is expressly; so recited in the deed from P. B. and A. Porter to Brooks, under which the defendants claim. Miller having failed in the performance of his contract, Phelps had, undoubtedly, a right to avail himself of the forfeiture, according to the provisions in the articles of agreement. There can be no stronger evidence of his intending so to do, than the sale made of the same land a short time thereafter, (22d of September, 1799,) to the plaintiff in this cause.

• The deed, in trust, given by Phelps to P» B. and A. Porter, would form no impediment to the contract made with the plaintiff,for it was made through the agency, and with the assent, of all parties to the deed intrust, both principal and attorneys, the cestuy que trust and trustees. Peter B. Porter made and signed the contract,"Augustus received part of the consideration money, and Phelps the residue; and he also consummated- the title, by giving the deed pursuant to the contract. Here, then, was a revocation of the trust, so far as it related to this land, with the' assent and 'concurrence of the trustees, and cestuy que trust. Besides, the trustees had not, under their deed, any authority to execute the trust. This deed refers, generally, to the contracts that had been made by Phelps $ and the trustees were only directed to give deeds to such purchasers' as should fulfil the conditions and payments, in their respective articles of agreement stipulated, according to the tenor and effect of such articles. Miller did not fulfil his contract, and the trust, so far as it respected him, was at an end, and resulted to Phelps; (1 Cruise's Dig. 475. 2 Fonb. B. 2. ch. 5. s. 1.;) and the trustees had no authority to give a deed without some new' power or direction from the cestuy que trust. . Such, also, must have been the understanding of all parties at that time; for no deed was executed under these articles until September, 1813, when it was given to Peter C. Brooks. Nor can the power of attorney, given by Phelps to P. B% and A. Porter, on the 16th of December, 1799, in any manner impeach the plaintiff’s title ; that was a' power to transfer certain lands, and articles of agreement, to secure to Rebecca Gorham, and others, the sum of 12,500 dollars, and the bond and articles of agreement with Miller were assigned to Brooks, in trust, to be paid to the heirs or' administrators of Mathaniel Gorham, when collected. This power is dated after the contract made with the plaintiff 'for the land in question, and could not prejudice his rights. Miller's bond and articles were assigned, among considerable other property, in trust, for the heirs or administrators of Gorham,; and nothing appears to j)ave been done under the assignment for seven or eight, years afterwards, when Miller was prosecuted upon the bond, and; being unable to ,pay, abandoned his whole contract, which was for much more land than what is how in question ; the assign- . ment, therefore, to- Brooks, was hot absolutely inconsistent with the sale of the one hundred acres to the plaintiff. It may be operative and effectual as to, the residue of the land included in Miller’s contract. The defendants must fait on the issue, which alleges the title to be in-JSroofo, for when the deed was given to■■ him, there was clearly an adverse, possession in Spon, who held under the plaintiff. I am, therefore, satisfied that the legal title to the land: in question is in the plaintiff, and his claim to recover is fortified and strengthened by the equity of the case being, also, with him.

If the plaintiff has made out ,a legal title in himself, there can ' be no objection to his maintaining this action. ’ Spon was in pos» ' session as his. tenant, under a lease; and the defendants, pre-; .vious to the time when the waste is alleged to have been committed, took from Spoñ ah assignment of his lease; neither this lease, nor the assignment, is particularly set out in the case, but no objection appears to havé been made, upon the' trial, to the-competency or sufficiency of the proof of. them., We must, therefore, consider the ¡defendants as the assignees of the .plaintiff’s tenant, and, of course, liable to this action. (2 Sound. 252., note.) We are, accordingly, of opinion, that, the plaintiff is entitled to judgment.  