Ellsworth v. McDowell

44 Neb. 707 | Neb. | 1895

Ragan, C.

Lewis C. Champlin brought action in replevin in the district court of Jefferson county against Elizabeth Ells-worth. Pending the action Champlin died and the suit was revived in the name 'of Elmer E. McDowell, his administrator, who had a verdict and judgment, and Ells-worth brings the case here for review.

On the 4th day of April, 1887, Champlin owned certain real estate in the city of Fairbury, in said county, and on that' date entered into a written contract with one J. H. Tschannen, in and by which he sold and agreed to convey said real estate to Tschannen when Tschannen should make the following payments: October 4, 1887, $25; April 4, 1888, $100; April 4, 1889, $100; April 4, 1890, $100; April 4, 1891, $100. The contract contained this provision : “ It is further agreed that in case any payments, either of principal or interest, remaining unpaid for the space of thirty days after the same shall become due, then, in that case, the whole amount unpaid on this contract shall be*710■come due and payable without further notice. And the ■said party of the second part [Tschannen] further agrees that any such delinquency in payment or the failure in other respects by the party of the second part to perform the stipulations of this contract, or any of them, shall entitle the party of the first part [Champlin] to the immediate possession of the premises described herein, and all equitable and legal interests in the premises, hereby contracted, with all the improvements and appurtenances, shall revert to and revest in said first party without any right of said second party of reclamation or compensation for moneys paid, as absolutely as if this contract had never been made.” Tschannen at once took possession of this real estate and erected thereon a frame building, or dwelling house, in which he and his family resided. It seems also, though this is not entirely clear from the evidence, that the father and mother of Tschannen’s wife resided with them in the house on said premises. In November, 1888, Mrs. Ellsworth, the plaintiff in error, purchased this house of •Tschannen and caused it to be moved from the lot on which Tschannen erected it to another lot. At the time of this removal Mrs. Ellsworth and her husband and the Tschannen family resided in the house. Champlin then brought this action in replevin for the house and caused the sheriff to remove it from the lots on which Mrs. Ellsworth had placed it .back to the lot on which it was built; the plaintiff in error and the Tschannen family, during the time of said removal and afterwards, residing in the house.

Several cases in replevin have been decided in this court in which a house was the subject-matter of the suit. Such are Mills v. Redick, 1 Neb., 437; Riewe v. McCormick, 11 Neb., 261; McCormick v. Riewe, 14 Neb., 509; Waters v. Reuber, 16 Neb., 99; Oscamp v. Crites, 37 Neb., 837; McDaniel v. Lipp, 41 Neb., 713. But an examination of these cases will show that in each case where the plaintiff was permitted to recover his possessory rights and rela*711tions to the property replevied were such that he could have maintained an action of trespass against the-party made defendant to the replevin action. In the case at bar -Champlin had no such possessory rights or claims, to -the property replevied as would have enabled him at the time of the bringing of this suit to maintain an action of trespass against Mrs. Ellsworth, or.against her vendor, Tschanaen, and, therefore, he cannot maintain this action. (Stockwell v. Phelps, 34 N. Y., 363; Rich v. Baker, 3 Denio [N. Y.], 79 ; Johnson v. Elwood, 53 N. Y., 431; Oscamp v. Grites, 37 Neb., 837; Kircher v. Schalk, 39. N. J. Law, 335.)

It is argued by counsel for the administrator thát prior ■to the bringing of this action Champlin was in the actual possession of the real estate which he had sold to Tscliannen and of the house thereon. If the evidence in the record sustained this assertion, then, of course, Champlin, being rightfully in possession of the real estate and the house thereon, could, maintain an action of trespass against Mrs. Ellsworth for removing the house or maintain an action of replevin to recover it; but the evidence does not sustain this contention. The record shows that some time prior to the removal of this house by Mrs. Ellsworth, and while Tschannen was absent from home, Champlin hired a workman to go upon the premises and put some stones and bricks as a foundation, under the house. The day this was done, it would seem from the evidence, Mrs. Tschannen and the other members of the family were also absent from the premises, but Tschanuen’s household goods were in the house and it was fastened. This is all the evidence in the record as to Champlin’s actual possession of this house and the lot on which it was located. This was not possession. Uhamplin, in causing the workman, to go upon these premises without the knowledge or consent of Tschannen, was guilty of trespass, and possession of property obtained by trespass cannot be made the basis of an action of replevin *712for the possession of such property. Champí in’s possession, if it can be called such, was not only wrongful, but. it continued no longer than the workman was engaged on the day mentioned in putting the stones and bricks under the house. The Tschanuen family continued to reside in the house, as already stated, until it was removed by Mrs. Ellsworth and until after the officer, under the writ of replevin issued in this action, moved the house back to the-lot on which it was erected.

Counsel for the administrator also argue that since the contract of sale between Champlin and Tschannen contained the provision that in case Tschanuen should make-default in the terms of his contract that such default should entitle Champlin to the immediate possession of the premises, and as Tschannen had made default in the payments promised to be made, that, therefore, the contract was at an end, all rights of Tschannen thereunder destroyed, and the-real estate and the house thereon belonged both legally and equitably to Champlin, and that Tschannen occupied tbeproperty from the time of his default as tenant at will. In other words, that Champlin had constructive possession of the property through his tenant, Tschannen. This argument is not tenable. After Tschannen made default in his promises Champlin had either one of several remedies.. He could, tender Tschannen a deed for the premises and sue him at law for the entire contract price. lie could have brought an action in equity to foreclose the contract as a mortgage and had the real estate sold for the payment of the amount remaining due thereon. (Gardels v. Kloke, 36 Neb., 494.) He could have maintained an action in ejectment. Because Tschannen had made default in his-contract Champlin was not thereby authorized to take possession of the premises.with force and arms; nor was the-relation of vendor and vendee created between the parties, by the contract altered by Tschannen’s violation thereof into that of landlord and tenant. The expression in the *713contract, that Tschannen’s default should entitle Champlin to the immediate possession of the premises, meant and means no more than that Champlin, by reason of the contract, might make the default of Tschannen the basis of an action for the recovery of the possession of such real es'tatq.

On the trial the administrator introduced evidence tending to disparage or impeach the title of Mrs. Ellsworth to the house in controversy, and the counsel argue here that the evidence in the record would not sustain a finding that Mrs. Ellsworth purchased this house from Tschannen. Mrs. Ellsworth purchased this property, if at all, with actual knowledge of the existence and terms of the contract between Champlin and Tschannen. She, therefore, has no greater rights to this house than Tschannen had. But Champlin cannot maintain an action of replevin for this house as against Tschannen, because, as already seen, at the time the action was brought he, Champlin, was not entitled to the immediate possession of the house. “To allow replevin to be maintained under such circumstances as these makes the writ in effect a writ of restitution for land, an office which it cannot be permitted to fulfill.” (Irvine, C., in Oscamp v. Crites, supra.) The question at issue here is not whether Mrs. Ellsworth at the commencement of this action had good title to this house, as the plaintiff in a replevin action must recover, if at all, upon the strength of his own title to the property involved, and not upon the weakness of the defendant’s title to such property. (Kavanaugh v. Brodball, 40 Neb., 875.) In Northrup v. Trask, 39 Wis., 515, it is said: “If one who is rightfully in possession of land under a contract of sale, after default in payment, but before any foreclosure of his equity, dispose of a house attached to such land, (as by removing it to other land,) the vendor in the land contract, having no possessory title to the house, cannot maintain replevin or trover therefor.”

The finding of the district court in favor of the admin*714istrator is wholly unsupported by the evidence. The administrator must return the house to the plaintiff in error or pay her its value. The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded..

Reversed and remanded.

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