June 1925 the appellant was in possession of all the land except
the large house and its curtilage, and that on 30th June 1926 the appellant was in possession of all the land including this house and curtilage. The evidence amply sustains this finding. The salient facts are that the appellant entered on and completed a survey of the land, dividing it into allotments, and that it placed sale advertise-
TAXES (S.A.). ments on the land, took purchasers on to the land to inspect it,
and, by June 1926, had practically sold all the allotments. Against this, the contract provided (clause 5) that the appellant should be entitled to enter into possession of the land or any part thereof on 9th March 1925, provided it should have completed its purchase in accordance with the terms and conditions contained in the contract. But Angas Parsons J. held, and I agree with him, that the proper interpretation of this clause is that the appellant was entitled to, possession of the land on 9th March 1925 when one-tenth of the purchase-money was paid. Again, the suggestion based on sec. 37 1 (b) of the Acts that the purchasers from the appellant were the owners of the land at the date of the assessments (Allen V. Commissioners of Inland Revenue (1) ) cannot be supported, for possession had not been delivered to them, and but few had paid fifteen per centum of their purchase-money.
Lastly, it was said that one Eitzen was in possession of the land. Under clause 10 of the contract, the vendor had " the right to graze the land and occupy the house erected on the property during the currency of this agreement, but will surrender this right to any sub-purchaser of any one or more allotments or of the smaller house on the said sub-purchaser substantially fencing the land SO purchased.' The vendor had an agreement with Eitzen allowing him, for a consideration, to graze his cattle and to use a house upon the land. But upon the sale of the land to the appellant, his rights were with- drawn, though he was allowed, as well as others, to run their cattle upon the land." Angas Parsons J. held, and in my opinion rightly held, on these facts, that the right to graze conferred upon the vendor under clause 10 of the contract and by the vendor upon Eitzen, did not exclude the possession of the appellant. The
1(1914) 1 K.B. 327 ; (1914) 2 K.B. 327