In this case plaintiff, claiming to hold under certain tax sales, cut logs from,several parcels of land on Huron river, in Baraga county, in the fall and winter of 1884-85, and in the summer of 1885 these logs were put in the Huron river, and brought down to Marquette in rafts which also contained logs belonging to defendant. Nester, and by tugs employed for both. After reaching Marquette, Nester held on to all of the logs which this action was brought to replevy. A considerable number were afterwards turned over to plaintiff, leaving only such as were disputed! The parties are at variance as to whether N ester had acquiesced previously in plaintiff’s claims.
The controversy on the trial chiefly turned on the right of Nester and his associates to show that Nester owned the original title to, most of the lands from which the logs were *383taken, and an undivided interest in one parcel. The court below ordered a verdict for plaintiff. The judge remarked, inadvertently, that, by arrangement, plaintiff was to have possession against defendant. Nester denies that any such agreement existed, and says it was understood he proposed to take possession of his own logs, and should assert his rights.
It was assumed on the argument, and was no doubt the fact, that the decision was based on plaintiff’s possession of the land, the nature of which was not left to the jury, but decided by the court to have been adverse and bona fide. The court held that no personal action would lie to determine the title to lands as a basis of fixing the title of the logs.
We have been somewhat embarrassed by the fact that counsel on both sides assumed, for the purposes of the argument, that this doctrine was correct, if applicable to the facts of the case. But defendants’ counsel claimed that it was not so applicable. We cannot safely pass upon a question not argued, but we do not wish to be precluded from a future examination of that doctrine as applied to lands valued chiefly or only for timber; and some of the points which were dealt with on both sides we may refer to with propriety.
The argument that no case can be tried out of the county, when the title to lands comes in question, cannot be supported when stated so broadly. There may be many cases where such a question comes up for decision, upon covenants or contracts, in suits not brought directly to try title or get possession. Suits upon covenants of warranty or seizin directly involve the state of the title, and are certainly mere personal actions. In some states a judgment in trespass, which is usually a local action, is held to be evidence of the title. That doctrine, however, has been rejected in this State. Keyser v. Sutherland, 59 Mich. 455.
It is difficult to see how a judgment in replevin can settle the title to land. If the doctrine contended for is true, it must rest on some other basis.
It has not been considered that, as between the original *384wrong-doer and tbe true owner of land, the title to what is-severed from the freehold is changed by the severance,, whatever may be the case as to strangers: Moores v. Wait, 3 Wend. 104; Farrant v. Thompson, 5 Barn. & Alderson, 826; Morgan v. Varick, 8 Wend. 587. In the latter-case reference is had to the old doctrine that when on© who is disseized re-enters, he shall have remedy for all the-waste done during his ouster; and it is no more than common sense to hold that title cannot, for all purposes, change-by the mere action of a wrong-doer. In most of the cases referred to in the books the things severed have been removed. But if some part of the freehold is severed, and yet remains on the land, no one would deny that a recovery in ejectment would establish title to it, so as to make its subsequent removal wrongful.
In the present case it is not the ousted owner of a freehold who brings replevin against the possessor of the land. It is the disseizor who seeks to replevy. The one claiming to be owner of the logs because owning the land is actually in possession. There was evidence to go to the jury that he was in peaceable possession of the logs, although this was disputed. We are not prepared to hold, without further consideration, that, under such circumstances, the true title may not be shown, and that the true owner may not keep-his own property when he gets it. If there is any reason to-the contrary, the rule must be a very technical one, which will, in many cases, do great injustice, and turn a party over to a personal remedy, which may be valueless. The present, case does not require the absolute decision of this question, and it will be open to future argument; but we cannot consent to be bound by any concessions of counsel on so important a question.
We think the State deeds are prima facie evidence of title. But there has never been any law in this State, that we are aware of, that gave a right of entry on a mere tax certificate before deed. The testimony clearly shows that a large share of these lands were cut over before the deeds issued. Up to that time the possession was presumptively *385in the real owner, and the tax deeds would not relate back to protect the acts of the plaintiff unless valid, if they would at all. For anything done before those deeds were made, we think the inquiry was open to ascertain whether the original title had or had not been divested by valid tax sales. The entry could not be treated as under color of title. And we are not able to see how a possession begun in wrong could at once be changed into a valid adverse possession by the subsequent acquisition of the deeds, when, as appears in this case, all the timber was cut under contracts made previously. The logs appear to have been cut on the most important of these lands, under a contract made in the previous fall with Mr. Belanger. It also appears, from plaintiff’s own testimony, that he was looking out to obtain the original title to the principal parcel in dispute, and did not intend to cut until he got it. This has an important bearing on a claim of adverse possession.
The case of Safford v. Basto, 4 Mich. 407, under circumstances very like the present, held as law that the person cutting timber under a void tax title was a trespasser. Without going so far, we have no doubt that the question was open for the jury as to the character and good faith of plaintiff’s assumption of possession. If it was not under tax deeds, or some other deeds, as well as in good faith, there would be nothing to help it, and the whole merits would be open to inquiry.
As the circuit judge did not apparently pass upon the other questions raised, we will not discuss them.
The judgment must be reversed, with costs, and a new trial granted.
The other Justices concurred.