The precise question here presented has never been decided in this State that we are aware of. It has been held that a writing, purporting to be a will of lands, which has but one subscribing witness, and which has never been proved as a will, is not color of title: Callender v. Sherman, 5 Ire. 711: and so of a copy of such a writing taken horn the book of records of wills in a county: Sutton v. Westcott, 3 Jon. 283. Those cases obviously differ from this, as here the writing was proved as a will. The difficulty is, that in 1810 a will of personalty was good if attested by one witness, whereas a will of realty was required to be attested by two.
Realty might be devised by a holographic will, with one or no attesting witness, but then the hand-writing of the testator was required to be proved by those witnesses.
So that, unless we assume, as we cannot, that something more was done than the record sets forth, we cannot hold that this will was proved so as to pass realty, and consequently the title of the devisor did not pass to the devisees.
That, however, is not the question. Was it color of title Í In Grant v. Winbourn, 2. Hay. 220, it was said that it was the intent of the act of 1716, “ that where a man settled upon and improved lauds, upon the supposition that they were his own, and continued in the occupation for seven years, he should not be subject to be turned out of possession: hence .arises the necessity for color of title, for if he has no such color *344or pretence of title, he cannot suppose the lands are his ownr, and he settles on this in his own wrong.”
Afterward, it was held that, whether or not the writing, ■was color of title, did not depend on the belief of the grantee at the time, for, even if he knew that the land was the property of another-person than his grantor, it might still.be color: Riddick v. Leggett, 3 Mur. 539; Rogers v. Mabee, 4 Dev. 180: but, on its professing to pass a title, which it fails, to do, either from want of title in the person making it, “ or from the defective mode of conveyance employed: hut it must not he so obviously defective that no man of ‘ ordinary capacity ’ could he misled by it:" Tate v. Southard, 3 Hawks. 119; Dobson v. Murphy, 1 D. & B. 586. In endeavoring: to apply this rule, and to ascertain whether this will was so obviously defective for the purpose of passing land as to come within it, we are to exclude the presumption generally applicable, that every man is supposed to know the law; for the statute.upon which the whole doctrine of color of title is founded, recites, as the evil to he remedied, that many persons had gone into possession of land npon titles having patent defects, e. g. on sales by administrators, endorsements of patents, &c., which, on the supposition that all men know the law, could have deceived no one, and would, not have deserved protection. So, in Tate v. Southard,it is said that“ a writing, where the title does not pass hy reason of the defective mode of conveyance employed,” is color of title: so-is a deed by husband and wife without her privy examination, Pearce v. Owens, 2 Hay. 234; a deed purporting to be by an attorney without any authority appearing, Hill v. Wilton, 2 Mur. 14; an unconstitutional act of the legisture, Episcopal Church v. Newbern Academy, 2 Hawks 233. All these are examples of patent defects which could not have misled a lawyer. We think that, in this case, the defect in the probate of the will was- not so obvious but what it might have misled a man of ordinary capacity. The will appears to-have been proved; it does not, manifestly, or except by a *345course of legal reasoning, appear not to be proved so as to-pass land. Had the record of the probate stopped after saying that the will was proven, and not added the words-“by Andrew Hart,” it might have been very doubtful whether it would not be presumed to have been proven in the only way it could legally have been, as a holographic will.
Must it be presumed to occur to every man of ordinary capacity, that the addition of these words vitiated it ? To^ a lawyer, upon reflection, it would. The statute from which the doctrine of color of title is derived, is a statute of repose. Courts have long since ceased tobe astute to defeat statutes of limitation. It has been well said that through them, Time, which is constantly destroying our muniments of title, is as constantly curing the loss.
It may be, that had this title been earlier assailed, the plaintiff might have proved the due execution, which, after fifty-eight years, he cannot be expected to do. In England, where wills of lands are not admitted to probate in the Ecclesiastical oourts, the rule is, that a will thirty years old,, produced from the proper custody, and accompanied by possession of the land, proves itself’ Stark, Ev. 521; 2 GreenL Ev. § 679.
Pee, Oueiam. Judgment reversed, &c.