11 N.W.2d 665 | Wis. | 1943
Action of ejectment by Chris Schroeder Sons Company and Walter Schroeder, as trustee, against Lincoln county, Wisconsin, which asked to have the complaint made more definite and complete, and city of Tomahawk, Wisconsin, and Nick Sons, Inc., who demurred to the complaint. The order sustained the demurrer, directed that the complaint be dismissed, and granted judgment in favor of city of Tomahawk and Nick Sons, Inc.
In 1938, after a tax delinquency of nine years, Lincoln county took a tax deed upon the property in question, and in June, 1939, commenced an action against the plaintiffs in this action to quiet title to said property in the county court of Lincoln county. Upon the failure to appear as defendants in that action, judgment was rendered against them and in favor of the county on July 28, 1939. A motion to vacate that judgment was later denied. The appeal from that ruling was dismissed by the supreme court.
The original complaint in this action of ejectment was filed February 25, 1942, and asked, (1) the setting aside of the tax deed, and (2) the setting aside of the judgment of county court of Lincoln county for want of jurisdiction. A demurrer was sustained because of insufficiency of the complaint in not alleging a tender of taxes due, a prerequisite for bringing the action. Leave was given at that time to file an amended complaint.
It is the sufficiency of this amended complaint with which we are now concerned. This complaint, filed September 1, 1942, states, (1) "that on August 2, 1939, the plaintiffs were seized in fee and rightfully possessed of that certain parcel of land in Lincoln county . . . that while said plaintiffs were so seized the defendant Nick Sons, Inc., on said day, without *180 right, entered into possession of said premises and ousted and ejected the plaintiffs therefrom, and now unlawfully withholds possession thereof from the plaintiffs to their damage in the sum of $5,000." They also alleged "that the defendants Lincoln county, Wisconsin, and city of Tomahawk, Wisconsin, make some claim to the property heretofore described."
Nick Sons, Inc., and city of Tomahawk again demurred, and the respondent, Lincoln county, made a motion to have the complaint made more definite and certain. Before the hearing on these issues the plaintiff filed an affidavit of prejudice and moved for change of venue. The motion was denied by the court. The circuit court then sustained the demurrer of city of Tomahawk and Nick Sons, Inc., and ordered judgment dismissing the plaintiff's complaint; the court also granted Lincoln county's motion to require plaintiffs to make their complaint more definite and certain. Only one of the questions sought to be raised is properly presented on this appeal. The orders with reference to change of venue, making pleading more definite and certain and extending time to plead, sought to be challenged are not appealable orders and the appeals have been dismissed. The complaint was demurred to by respondents. It was ruled that the complaint is defective and that the action is to be dismissed as to those who demurred. No questions, other than those relating to the sufficiency of the complaint, are raised by the appeal.
The complaint fails to meet the requirements of the rules of pleading in actions of ejectment. There is no showing that the plaintiff was entitled to possession at the time of the commencement of the action. There must be an allegation setting forth the plaintiff's estate or interest in the premises claimed "that he is entitled to possession and that defendant *181
unlawfully withholds possession from him." Sec. 275.05, Stats. These elements are essential in a good pleading. This complaint, although following a usual outline does not attempt to set forth a then present right to possession but fixes the time when the plaintiffs "were seized in fee and rightfully possessed" at a time upwards of two years before the commencement of the action. There is an allegation that one of the defendants "now unlawfully withholds possession thereof from the plaintiffs," but this does not amount to an allegation that appellants are entitled to possession. When analyzed with the provisions of the statutes and the doctrine of well-considered cases in mind, the complaint is a pleading that has studiously avoided saying anything about the appellant's present right of possession, and has left unsaid anything to indicate that they have a valid existing right thereto. The charging of wrongful conduct on another's part does not create an allegation or show that the complainant has not lost his right to recover the premises. Evasive pleadings are more often found in answers and replies than in complaints, but they are not entirely strangers there. When the law requires the statement in a complaint of a fact such as a present right to possession, and the pleader alleges that two years before the commencement of the action he was seized of the fee, he places his pleading in the class described. By well-established rules of pleading that allegation is an affirmative pregnant. It is pregnant with the acknowledgment that between that time and the time of the commencement of the action something occurred to prevent him from presently, truthfully claiming the right essential as a foundation for an action in ejectment. Schaetzel v. Germantown Farmers'Mutual Ins. Co. (1868)
Thus far we have considered only what appears upon the face of the complaint. In the order sustaining the demurrer the court below directed that Nick Sons, Inc., and the city of Tomahawk "in their respective rights have judgment herein dismissing plaintiff's complaint." We find no error in this. A court, after the decision of a demurrer in the exercise of its discretion in a proper case may refuse to countenance further proceedings on the part of a defeated pleader.M. Schulz Co. v. Gether (1924),
By the Court. — Order affirmed.