9 Wash. 446 | Wash. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— This is an action of ejectment. The complaint alleged that the plaintiffs were the owners, seized in fee and entitled to the possession of the tract of land in dispute; that while they were such owners, and so seized and possessed, and entitled to the possession, defendant, without right, entered into and upon the same, thereby ousting and ejecting plaintiffs therefrom, and continued to
Appellant contends that a general denial puts in issue every material allegation contained in the complaint, and that under such denial plaintiffs must prove every fact essential to recovery, and defendant may prove any facts which defeat plaintiffs’ right to recover. Under the provisions of our Code of Procedure, § 532, in an ejectment proceeding, ‘ ‘ the defendant shall not be allowed to give in evidence any estate in himself or another in the property, or any license or right to the possession thereof, unless the same be pleaded in his answer;” and “if so pleaded, the nature and duration of such estate or license or right to the possession shall be set forth with the certainty and particularity required in a complaint.” Consequently the testimony offered in this case was inadmissible under the pleadings in this case by defendant to defeat the rights of the plaintiffs. The defendant in this action, then, so far as the pleading or the proof is concerned, was a trespasser without any right whatever, and if plaintiffs had any legal right at all it was a superior right.
It had been decreed by the probate court that the premises described in the complaint escheated to the state. This decision of the probate court was set aside by the superior court of the state. Afterwards partition proceedings were instituted in the United States circuit court, the result of which, it seems to us, was to settle this case in favor of the respondents’ contention. In that proceeding the respondent Allen, three of the original grantees, D. B.
The proceeding against the state in which the title was decreed to be in the respondent Allen was a proceeding in ?'em, and the decree being in rem was conclusive and binding upon the defendant. Ryan v. Fergusson, 3 Wash. 356 (28 Pac. 910).
The judgment will be affirmed.
Anders, Scott, Hoyt and Stiles, JJ., concur.