13 How. Pr. 35 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1856
At the argument I was strongly inclined against this demurrer. This inclination was very materially due to the impression, that in order to sustain it, and to concur in the opinion delivered in the case of Lawrence agt. Wright, (2 Duer, 673,) to which. I was cited, I should be obliged to hold, that title to lands can only be pleaded by alleging seriatim the chain or deduction of conveyances by which it is to be proved. From such a view of the system of pleading which the Code intended to establish, I should be constrained to dissent, even if it were sustained by the decision of the. superior court in the case to which I refer, and to which I would most cheerfully bow, if I had a right to consider it as an authority which exempted me from the duty of exercising my own judgment. But a careful consideration of the point involved in Lawrence agt. Wright, has satisfied me that the principles of that decision will not lead to this consequence; and a more deliberate examination of the complaint in this action has con
The action is brought to recover the possession of real estate, and damages for withholding it. It is obvious, therefore, that it must be founded upon possession under a lawful title by the plaintiff, or those through whom she claims, and an unlawful entry and ouster by the defendant. These are facts which must be both averred and proved, in order to a recovery. The Revised Statutes, in abolishing the common-law action of ejectment with its fictions, substituted a compendious form of declaring, framed upon these principles.
Section 7, of the title of ejectment, (2 R. S. 304,) enacts that it shall be sufficient for the plaintiff to aver that he was possessed of the premises on a certain day, and that, being so possessed, the defendant entered into the same, and unlawfully withholds the possession thereof. I see no reason to doubt that this, among other provisions, is retained and made applicable under the Code l)y § 455; and if this complaint had contained the elements of a declaration, framed in accordance with this statute, I should have had little hesitation in holding it sufficient on demurrer—or to let in any proof at the trial.
This complaint alleges that the plaintiff “ has lawful title as the owner in fee simple” to the premises described, and that “ the defendant is in possession of said real estate, and unlawfully withholds the possession of the same from the plaintiff.”
It has repeatedly been decided, that the allegation that an act is “ unlawful,” is not the statement of a fact, but of a conclusion of law. If there are no other facts stated, showing that the particular act or refusal of the party which is complained of, is in violation of his own duty, or of the rights of others, the mere adding to the statement of any such act or refusal, the epithet of unlawful, will not be a sufficient averment of its wrongfulness or illegality, where the act is indifferent in its nature, and not evidently or essentially wrong, or criminal in itself. An act which may or may not be right and lawful according to the circumstances under which it is done, is not properly averred to be unjust and unlawful by merely calling it such. The facts
The plaintiff, in an action for the recovery of real estate, may frame his complaint in accordance with the rules given for a declaration in ejectment by the Revised" Statutes. An actual seizin and possession by the plaintiff, and an unlawful entry and ouster by the defendant being thus alleged, it would of course frequently turn out that the facts proved at the trial might not correspond precisely with these allegations. The plaintiff might never have had actual possession of the premises in person, but. only his ancestors, or those under whom he claims title: or the ouster and interference with that possession might have been committed, not by the defendant, but by his grantors or predecessors. These variances, however,'the statute authorizes the courts to disregard. The complaint, drawn by the Revised Statutes, contains a complete and formal statement of a series of facts constituting a cause of action for the recovery of real estate, and the statute lets in any proof that will sustain a judgment for the plaintiff.
If, however, the statute form is not pursued, then the facts must be stated as they are, that the plaintiff, or some one under whom she claims title, was seized and possessed of the prem
This complaint is demurrable, because all its allegations of fact may be true, and still the defendant be rightfully in possession of the lands it describes.
There must, therefore, be judgment for the defendant, with leave to the plaintiff to amend, on payment of costs.