25 Ala. 711 | Ala. | 1854
1. We think it very clear, that the court' erred in allowing the appellee to read in evidence to the jury the record of the judgment in the case of Waddle against
It is said, however, that this evidence was offered to show that the possession of Hunter was lawful; but the most casual examination will show that this could not be done, by this proof, without inquiring whether the estate of Dumas had not been determined by the sale and conveyance of the premises by the sheriff to another. It has been said, and repeated by this court, that the statute against forcible entries and unlawful detainers was intended to protect possession ; and the purchaser of the title at sheriff’s sale has no more right to enter without the consent of him who is in possession, than' any other person with a lawful title. In the present case, the tenant in possession voluntarily gave it up to the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale; but this, we apprehend, did not invest the latter with a lawful right to hold against the landlord.—Clark v. Stringfellow, 4 Ala. R. 353 ; Lecatt v. Stewart, 2 Stewart 474.
We have, on this branch of the case, adopted, in a great degree, the language of Mr. Justice Goldthwaite, in Clark v. Stringfellow, supra, which, on this point, was almost identical with the case at bar.
It may be said, however, that the statute under which the former case was decided, and the section of the Code which defines an unlawful detainer, are essentially variant. In respect to possessions obtained and held under circumstances such as mark the present case, there is no essential difference,
We apprehend it • will scarcely be contended, that if the tenant should under-let the premises to a third person, for an unexpired portion of his term, and the sub-tenant should hold over under such circumstances as would have made the original .tenant guilty of unlawful detainer, he (the sub-tenant) would be guiltless. In respect to the terms of possession, the sub-tenant would be placed in the same situation with him from whom he derived his possession, and the landlord, is entitled to the same remedies against him, to recover it if it is unlawfully withheld. Indeed, the duties of the sub-tenant to surrender the possession to the landlord, at the expiration of the term, are the same which the law attaches to the tenant himself, and so, also, are the landlord’s remedies to recover it when withheld.
In the present case, it is shown that Dnina’s rented the premises in dispute to Neighbours for the years 1850-51, Dumas himself having possessed them during the years 1848 and 1849 ; that in October, 1851, Neighbours, while tenant of Dumas, put Waddle in possession, and he (Waddle), in March 1852, after the expiration of the term of Neighbours, under whom he entered, put the defendant' into possession, who, on demand lawfully made, refused to deliver the po.sses
As the charge of the court is general, and based upon the testimony thus illegally admitted, it is erroneous.
Let thb judgment be i-eversed, and the cause remanded.