60 Mo. 572 | Mo. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff brought bis action for forcible entry and detainer. The canse was tried before the court without the intervention of a jury, and a judgment was rendered in his favor. The
Eor the defendant there was evidence to show that his grantor, Withers, had been in possession many years prior thereto and had built a house on the land and inclosed afield; that the house was torn down, and the rails removed or destroyed, but there were still traces that the field had been in cultivation. The improvements disappeared in 1868, after that the cultivation ceased; but Withers, who did not reside in the county, occasionally came back in the neighborhood to superintend and look after the land, and it was known generally as his.
Eor the plaintiff the court gave three instructions, which although somewhat objectionable when taken singly and apart, yet when taken as a whole and together, were correct enough; and, as the cause was tried by the court, they cannot be regarded as misleading.
The first thing that the plaintiff did, when he entered the land and commenced his work thereon in July, 1870, was to plow a few furrows across a portion of it, and as to this act, the court declared, for the defendant, that the alleged entry on the land and plowing a few furrows across a portion of it, was not such an actual possession as would authorize a verdict for the plaintiff. This was a correct presentation of the law, on defendant’s side. Something more was required, showing an intention to possess, accompanied with acts indicating that purpose.
In reference to the possession of Withers, either by himself or his tenant, and whether he had abandoned it previous to plaintiff’s acquiring his right, the court instructed that any act done by the owner of land after his tenant has left it, indicating his intention not to abandon it, but to hold the possession to himself will continue the possession in him,
Defendant asked several other instructions which the court refused, but it is not deemed necessary to consider-them, as those already given presented the question of possession in the most favorable attitude in his behalf.
From the theory on which the case was submitted, as illustrated by the declarations, it is manifest that the court, as the trier of the fact, must have found that the land was unoccupied when the plaintiff took possession of it; that the plaintiff’s possession was an actual one and consisted of something more than plowing a few furrows; that Withers, by himself and his tenants, had abandoned the possession and was not in possession thereof at the time of the sale to the defendant, and that consequently there was no continuation of the possession in the defendant.
We have nothing to do in this court with the weight of evidence. The testimony was conflicting, and the court having found that plaintiff was in the peaceable possession of the land, and that he was ousted therefrom by the defendant, the verdict cannot be disturbed.
Judgment affirmed;