5 Utah 118 | Utah | 1886
This is an action of forcible entry and detainer, instituted before a justice of the peace, where judgment was rendered for the plaintiff, (appellant,) and thence the case was appealed by the defendant (respondent) to the district court. In the district court the alleged unlawful detainer was waived, no evidence being introduced in support of it. The hearing was before the court, a jury having been waived. The judgment being given for the defendant, the plaintiff appealed therefrom to this court.
The statute governing this class of cases is as follows: “Every person is guilty of a forcible entry who either, (1) by breaking open doors, windows, or. other parts of a house, or by any kind of violence or circumstances of terror, enters upon or into any real property; or (2) who, after entering peaceably upon real property, turns out by force, threats, or menacing conduct, the party in possession.” Code Civil Proc., sec. 1033; Laws Utah 1884, p. 334. Upon the trial in such cases, the “plaintiff shall only be required to show, in addition to the forcible entry, * * * that he was peaceably in the actual possession at the time of the forcible entry.” Code Civil Proc., sec. 1046; Laws Utah 1884, p. 338.
The questions for our consideration, therefore, are whether the entry was forcible, and whether appellant was at that time “peaceably in the actual possession.” If both of these appear, he is entitled to a recovery; but it is otherwise if he fail in either.
The findings of the court are against the appellant on both of these points; and the findings of the court, like the verdict of a jury, will not be disturbed by the appellate court unless the preponderance of the evidence against the findings is so apparent and marked that the court can have no hesitancy in declaring that the particular findings under review are against the evidence: Walker v. Popper, 2 Utah, 281; Dewey v. Snyder, Id. 244; Harrington v. Chambers, 3 Utah, 94, 1 Pac. Rep. 362; Chamberlain v. Raymond, 3 Utah, 117; Trenor v. Central Pac. R. Co., 50 Cal. 230.
This, then, was the condition of the property when Taylor, Dean, and Brooks went there, and Brooks was put into possession by Taylor. The object of placing Brooks in- possession was to hold it for the Promontory Stock Company, and Dean was sent there to help him hold possession. The house was not occupied by any one being-in it — no person was there, but there was some personal property in the house, and outside of it there were corrals, shed, hay-stacks, and a large amount of fences. The only witness testifying to have visited the preinises prior to the time that Brooks was put into possession stated that he saw children there on the latter of his only two visits, and that in his judgment Adams and Schilling had occupied the place for over a year. Warren was in the employ of Adams and Schilling. Prom all these facts, it must have been apparent to appellant and his employees, as well as to the world, that those premises were at that time in the possession of somebody, even though no one was personally present when they went there. The personal presence of the party having the possession was not necessary. His possession was manifested by his having-built a house and corrals, sheds, fences, and putting up hay-stacks, and leaving some personal property in the house during his absence, and by his having used the property for a long time: De Graw v. Prior, 53 Mo., 316; Shelby v. Houston, 38 Cal., 422; Gray v. Collins, 42 Cal., 152; Allen v. Tobias, 77 Ill., 169.
The appellant and his employees acted as if they anticipated trouble. But why should they have anticipated trouble? Yet that they did anticipate it is apparent. Three of them went there to put Brooks into possession. Taylor testified that, when he put Brooks into the posses
From the foregoing facts, we think that the district court was authorized to find that Warren, and those whose interest he represents, had been in the possession for a long time, and were so when appellant took possession, on '’the first of September, and that the entry of plaintiff was tortious. The possession of Brooks was wrongful, and not in good faith. He knew it was contested, and that there would likely be trouble over it. It was a scrambling possession, and not such a peaceable possession as to enable the party thus entering to maintain an action of forcible entry against the person who had been thus dispossessed: Bowers v. Cherokee Bob, 45 Cal., 495; Conroy v. Duane, Id., 597; Gray v. Collins, 42 Cal., 152; Hoag v. Pierce, 28 Cal., 187; Wray v. Taylor, 56 Ala., 188.
The re-entry of the former possessor was not forcible. Warren had been in possession for a long while. He had built a house, put up fences, corrals, a shed, and haystacks. He was seen there twice by Brooks, while we was there. He was working about the stacks, and was at the house. During Brooks’ temporary absence, and while Dean was there, Warren entered the house by consent of Dean, and then ordered Dean to leave, and Dean left. He used vulgar and rough language in talking to Dean, but used no force, and did nothing that put Dean in fear of force, nor that was calculated to do so. Dean left because as he says, he did not want to have Warren as his enemy, or to think that he was acting for meanness; that they had always been good friends, and he did not want to have any hard feelings: Thompson v. Smith, 28 Cal., 527; Wood v. Phillips, 43 N. Y., 152; Berry v. Williams, 21 N. J. Law, 423.
We see nothing in the case to justify a reversal of the judgment. It seems to have been .but another instance,
For the reasons above stated, the judgment of the district court is affirmed, with costs.