49 Mich. 133 | Mich. | 1882
This is an action of ejectment, and was tried; by the circuit judge without a jury. The facts are found by the circuit judge, and, omitting immaterial matters, the finding is as follows: That Richmond Covert, during bis-life-time, and at the time of his death, was the owner in fee-simple and in possession of the lands mentioned and set forth in the declaration; that the said Richmond Covertdied on the fifth day of July, 1874; that at the time of his-death he was occupying said described land, with his family,, as his homestead; that at the time of his death he had only one child, a daughter, who was then over twenty-one years-of age and married, and was living with her husband away from said piece or parcel of land; that the plaintiff in this-action was, at the time of the death of the said Richmond. Covert, his wife, and now is his widow, having never re-married, and that she lived awhile upon the said land after the death of said Richmond Covert, occupying the same as her-homestead, and did not at the time of the death of the said Richmond Covert, and has not, at any time since, owned or had any other homestead or real estate whatever; that she-was temporarily away from said premises at times, visitingher daughter, before mentioned, but never abandoned her said homestead, but intended to and did retain, treat, and hold the same as her homestead, and did from the time of her said husband’s death to the time of the trial'of this action; that the. said land is of less value than fifteen hundred dollars; that before the beginning of this action the defendant, Charles M. Morrison, wrong fully, and without any authority whatever, entered into the possession of the said premises, and wrongfully and unlawfully continues in possession of the same. It was conceded upon trial by counsel
Judgment for the plaintiff was ordered upon this finding.
It has been assumed in this Court that upon this record the defendant was at liberty to raise the question whether the plaintiff was possessed of a homestead right in the premises, and that unless she could’ maintain such a right on the finding, the judgment in her favor should be reversed. But this is a grave error. The finding discloses no ground on which the defendant is at liberty to question the plaintiff’s right to the possession, whatever may be its basis.
Ejectment in this State is a possessory action, and does not necessarily involve the title. The party having right to present possession is always entitled to recover, and it is quite unnecessary for him to show more, unless some question of damages or. the value of improvements made by the defendant shall require it. A ease of that kind is seen in Bertram v. Cook 44 Mich. 396.
If the plaintiff has been in possession of the land claiming title, he may stop with that showing, as a prima facie case; and he is entitled to judgment upon it unless the defendant shows either a present right in himself or an outstanding title in some third party upon which he is at liberty to rely. Warner v. Page 4 Vt. 291: s. c. 24 Am. Dec. 607; Hubbard v. Little 9 Cush. 475; Van Auken v. Monroe 38 Mich. 725 ; Gamble v. Horr 40 Mich. 561. And a mere intruder cannot be permitted to protect his intrusion, under an outstanding title in a stranger. It would be a violation of just principle to permit it. Jackson v. Harder 4 Johns. 202: s. c. 4 Am. Dec. 262.
This plaintiff does not show that she is claiming title in fee, and the finding by inference negatives it. But it is
It is not questioned on this record that the right to possession passed, on the death of the plaintiff’s husband, to his heir at law, nor that the plaintiff was left in possession with a right to dower. The statute gave her rightful possession of the dwelling-house for a year, with sustenance from the estate; Comp L. § 4291; aiid if she remained longer, and claimed and exercised control of the whole land, without legal right in herself but without objection from the heir, she was at the very least tenant at will to the heir, and that was sufficient to enable her to protect her possession as against mere intruders. No mere stranger to the title has any call or any business to disturb the widow’s possession for no better reason than because it is not perfect as against the whole world, or to assume to be as against her the champion of the rights of others which they do not choose to assert on their own behalf.
The judgment must be affirmed with costs.