Cox v. Cunningham

77 Ill. 545 | Ill. | 1875

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court

This was an action of forcible entry and detainer, brought in the St. Clair circuit court, for the recovery of two lots, being a part of the sub-division of a lot in Cahokia common, in St. Clair county, in this State. The plaint charged that appellant unlawfully withheld the possession of the same from appellee. The defendant filed a plea of not guilty. X trial was had before the court and a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of plaintiff, and, after overruling a motion for a new trial,-the court rendered judgment on the verdict, and awarded a writ of restitution, and from that judgment defendant appeals to this court.

We think that the evidence clearly shows that Gallagher leased the premises to appellant by a verbal lease. This, we think, can not be successfully controverted, and it is equally clear that he entered into possession under that lease. It does not apjiear, nor is it claimed, that the lease was ever canceled or abandoned by the parties; nor is it proved or claimed that appellant ever abandoned the premises, or that he disclaimed holding under the lease from Gallagher, but it is claimed that he'.attorned to or recognized appellee as his landlord, and hence became her tenant, and liable to her precisely as though he had not leased from Gallagher, but had from appellee before entering into possession in the first place.

Having leased from Gallagher, and entered under him, had appellant the power to so contract with appellee as to affect Gallagher’s possession, without first having surrendered the possession to his landlord ? Xll know that, had appellant underlet, or put another in possession, Gallagher could have maintained an action against such under-tenant and occupant, and recovered the possession. Appellant could have conferred on no one any higher or better rights than he held. Any one entering under him would have held precisely as he did, and would be liable to be dispossessed by the landlord by forcible entry and detainer, as would the tenant, had he remained in possession until the expiration of the term. Ballance v. Fortier, 3 Gilm. 291.

Even if appellant did attorn to or receive a verbal lease from appellee, that would in nowise affect Gallagher’s rights. His tenant could not give away or barter off his rights, or affect his interest, by underletting, or receiving a lease from another, until he full)' restored possession to his landlord. But a tenant may, no doubt, complicate his own rights by taking leases for the same property for the same time, from different persons. He may thereby estop himself from denving the title of either landlord. If, however, he were to take the lease for the shorter term from his second landlord, and was to be turned out by forcible detainer, according to the case of Ballance v. Fortier, supra, the first lessor could maintain such an action against his second landlord, who could not occupy a better position than the tenant of the person making the longer lease.

Did appellant, after leasing from Gallagher, receive a lease from appellee? The evidence is somewhat conflicting, but, when fully considered, we think it does not sustain the finding. The witness, Short, testified that appellant called on him to rent the premises, but he referred him to appellee. She says he did not see her, but she found him in possession, and turned his horses out of the inclosure. And appellant swore thathe rented the property of, and entered under, Gallagher. This, then, renders it manifest that appellant did not lease the premises before he entered, from appellee, nor did he enter into possession under her. On this question there would seem to be no doubt.

Did, then, appellant, after he leased from Gallagher, and had entered into possession, lease the premises from appellee, or did he attorn to her, or do any act that created the relation of landlord and tenant between them, or to render his possession her’s? Short- testified that, afterwards, at his house, appellant offered to pay the rent to appellee, but she declined to receive it until it was settled who owned the title. Appellee says, when she ordered appellant to leave, when she first found him in possession, he refused to give her possession, and refused to agree to pay her the rent, but said he would pay it to the person entitled to receive it. She further testified that, afterwards, at Short’s, appellant said to her, “I have found out that you are the right owner; the rent is ready for you at any time;” but she declined to receive it until the title was settled. This, appellant denies most positively. But even conceding this to be true, it falls far short of constituting a lease or an attornment. He by no means agreed to hold under her. She says there was no agreement that he should hold until the title was settled by the ejectment suit theh pending. Nor does it appear that there was any agreement that he should hold under her or pay to her any future accruing rent. He says she told him not to pay the rent to Gallagher, and he had not paid it. He says it was agreed between him, her and Gallagher that he was to pay the rent to the owner and they were to wait until the suit was decided. This seems to be the most probable version of the matter.

But were all appellee’s claim conceded, still it only amounts to an opinion on the part of appellant. Where a tenant of one person is in possession, to create the relation of landlord and tenant between him and another person, the evidence should be at least reasonably satisfactory—not inferred from slight circumstances. It is wholly unlike a person in possession as an intruder or wrongdoer, who admits another to be the owner, and agrees to pay rent for the time occupied, as the presumption in such a case is, that the occupant is willing to act justly, and pay rent. But not so with a person having a lease, and bound to pay rent. There can be no presumption that he is willing to pay full rent to two different persons. On the contrary, the presumption is the other way.

It is, however, urged that appellee had a prior possession. It appears that, about two years before appellant went into possession, appellee put locks on the gate and barn door, and' locked them, and had the lot plowed, and planted in corn, but Gallagher entered and had it, with the weeds, cut down. The brother of Gallagher testified that he rented the premises, for his brother, to a man from Clinton county, who occupied it for six the months next preceding the time when appellant went into possession. This is not contradicted by any evidence in the record. And it- appears that Gallagher had been in possession for about twenty years before this suit was brought: that this possession was uninterrupted, unless the locking the barn door and gate, and the plowing up the lot and planting corn on it, amounted to possession. They were, acts of trespass, unless justified by title, but can not be held, under the circumstances, to have been such possession as authorizes a recovery in forcible detainer against a person having such long, open, visible, notorious and uninterrupted possession as Gallagher has shown.

Even if this action can be maintained by a person who had previously sued in ejectment to recover the same land, whilst that suit is pending, appellee has failed to make out a case, and the judgment of the court below is reversed.

Judgment reversed.