
    Aaron Porter versus Charity Perkins and Mark Tucker.
    Since the statute of frauds, partition by paroi is void, and the law will not presume a deed of partition to have been made by tenants in common, merely from their several possession.
    A release, when neither of the parties to it have any possession, actual or legal, in the land released, passes nothing.
    Ejectment for a parcel of land in Biddeford. The defendants pleaded not guilty to a part which they describe, and a disclaimer as to the residue, and on both pleas issues to the country were joined.
    The cause came before the Court on certain facts stated by the parties to the following effect :
    On the fifth of July, 1783, John Tyng, by deed of bargain and sale, conveyed a large tract of land in Biddeford, including the de manded premises, to Ezekiel Bradstreet and Benjamin Nason, jun., in fee; who, on the seventh of the same July, mortgaged the same land to said Tyng, to secure the payment of the purchase money, collateral lo a bond of the same date.
    Immediately after these conveyances, and before the twenty-eighth of August, 1783, the said Bradstreet and Nason made partition of the land, and each entered upon, and improved his moiety ; and the demanded premises are part of the moiety possessed by Bradstreet. The evidence of this partition was contained in several [ * 234 ] depositions * used at the trial, which proved a several possession, and the declaration of the tenants, that they had divided the land; but there was no evidence that a deed of partition was ever executed by them.
    On the twenty-eighth of August, 1783, Bradstreet conveyed the demanded premises to J. Allen, in fee, with general warranty, upon which Allen entered and remained seised until the fifteenth of July, 1788, when he released the same to the plaintiff, with a covenant of warranty against all persons claiming under him. The plaintiff entered under this release, and continued in possession until the spring of the year 1801, when he was disseised by Stephen and Edward Perkins, under whom the defendants claim.
    On the eighth of February, 1785, Bradstreet released to Nason his right and interest in all the land, which he with Nason purchased of Tyng, with warranty against all persons claiming under the releasor.
    On the fourteenth of August, 1800, Nason conveyed to J. Sullivan all his right and interest in the land purchased of Tyng by himself and Bradstreet, “ so far as he had any right therein,” warranting against claims under him;. and on the next day Sullivan conveyed all his right and interest in the estate conveyed as aforesaid, to John Pitts.
    
    In October, 1796, the said Tyng recovered judgment against Nason, on the bond aforesaid, for 9,954 dollars and 46 cents, which the said Pitts, as executor of the said Tyng, discharged by his release dated August 15th, 1800.
    On the twentieth of July, 1801, the said Pitts, by deed of that date, conveyed a tract of land, including the demanded premises, to Stephen and Edward Perkins, with general warranty. These grantees entered into the demanded premises, and occupied the same until the twenty-ninth of June, 1803, when they conveyed to the defendant Mark Tucker that part of the demanded premises described in the first plea of the defendants.
    [ * 235 ] * If, upon these facts, the Court should be of opinion, that the plaintiff is entitled to recover, then judgment to be rendered for him to recover possession and costs: if otherwise, judgment to be rendered for the defendants for costs.
   The cause was submitted without argument, and the opinion of the Court delivered to the following effect by

Parsons, C. J.

This case comes before the Court on a case stated by the parties, whence two questions arise.

The first question is, whether from the facts disclosed in the depositions referred to, it is a presumption of law that a regular pai tition by deed was executed by Bradstreet and Nason, the tenants in common.

It appears that twenty-seven years ago, there was by these tenants a several possession in fact, and that they declared that they had made partition, not expressing whether by paroi or by deed; and there is no fact disclosed, from which it appears that a deed of partition was ever executed.

Since the statute of frauds, partition by paroi is void. But a several possession may be the consequence of a paroi partition. We cannot therefore infer, from the severance of the possession by the tenants in common, that a partition by deed was executed. Whether a deed of partition was or was not executed, is a question of fact, and not of law; and it is improperly submitted to us as a question of law. The fact ought to have been stated by the parties, or left to the decision of a jury on evidence. From the evidence disclosed, there does not appear sufficient for us to discharge the case, and send the cause to a jury, for them to infer that a partition by deed had been executed. The severance in possession commenced about twenty-seven years since, and yet two years after Bradstreet, one of the tenants, released all his right to Nason, the other tenant; and this i» a., the evidence, whence an inference could be made that, the partition was by deed.

* The other question is, as the plaintiff has clearly [ * 236 ] proved a seisin either by right or by wrong, whether the title the defendants have shown, authorized them lawfully to enter. For if they entered unjustly, the plaintiff must recover on his seisin in fact.

It appears that Bradstreet conveyed to Allen, in August, 1783, who thereupon entered, claiming a fee simple, and continued in possession under that claim until July, 1788, when he conveyed the premises in fee to the plaintiff, who thereupon entered, claiming the fee, and continued in possession under that claim until after June, 1803, when the defendants entered upon h'm. The plaintiff is therefore seised, so as to support a writ of entry against any person entering without a legal right of entry. •

The title of the defendants is thus stated; Bradstreet, in February 1785, while Allen was in the quiet possession, claiming a fee under his deed of 1783, released all his right, to Nason. In August, 1800, Nason, who had never entered on Allen or the plaintiff, conveyed the premises to J. Sullivan. The next day J. Sullivan conveyed all his right to J. Pitts. In July, 1801, J. Pitts, neither he nor J. Sullivan having entered upon the plaintiff, conveyed the premises to iS. &r E. Perkins, who, in June, 1803, conveyed the same to Mark Tucker, one of the defendants, under whom the other claims. And after this last conveyance, the defendants enter, which is the disseisin declared on.

King, for the plaintiff.

Wallingford, for the defendants.

From this view of the defendants’ title, we are satisfied that the plaintiff must prevail. No man, having a title to land, can pass the same by release, when neither of the parties to the release have any possession, actual or legal, in the land released . Nothing there-fore passed by Bradstreefs release to Nason, Allen being then : possession, claiming a fee simple.

Neither can a man, having right, convey when he is disseised. When Nason conveyed to Sullivan, the plaintiff, either by [ * 237 ] right or by wrong, was in fact seised. * If by right, Na-son had no estate to convey; if by wrong, Nason was disseised, and so long as the disseisin continued, no estate could pass by his conveyance to Sullivan. It is unnecessary to state the defendants’ title further; for the foundation failing, the superstructure must fall.

We have taken no notice of the mortgage by the tenants in common to John Tyng, to secure the payment of their bond to him. For the creditor having recovered judgment in 1796 on the bond, his executor, in August, 1803, discharged the judgment, and with it the mortgage. The mortgage may, therefore, be laid out of the case, as if never made .

Let the defendants be called. 
      
      
        Warren vs. Childs, 11 Mass. 222. — Mayo vs. Libbey, 12 Mass. 343.
     
      
      
         Vide Porter vs. Hill, 9 Mass. 34. — Perkins vs. Pitts, 11 Mass. 125.
     