97 Me. 315 | Me. | 1903
The case is this: John H. Eveleth in his lifetime executed to the defendant Gill a written agreement to sell and conve}' to him a building in Greenville for $1628, to be paid in monthly instalments with interest, and also to lease to him the land upon which the building stood for fifteen years at a rental of ten dollars per year. Also, by the terms of the agreement, Mr. Gill was to have possession of the premises until he failed to perform the conditions of the agreement. Mr. Gill immediately entered into possession of the premises under this agreement, which was dated May 1, 1895, and had made all the payments called for by the agreement up to the beginning of this litigation.
John H. Eveleth died Nov. 7, 1899, and the plaintiff- Hattie Eveleth became the owner of ,one-third of his interest or title in said building and land. February 21, 1900, the plaintiff began this process of forcible entry and detainer against Gill in the Dover Municipal Court to remove him from the premises. Judgment was rendered for the defendant in that court, and the plaintiff appealed and the whole case with the pleadings and evidence is reported to the law court for determination.
The plaintiff’s declaration is as follows: “In a plea of forcible entry and detainer, for that the said Louis Gill, at said Greenville, on the fifteenth day of February A. D. 1900, having before that time had lawful and peaceable entry into the lands and tenements of the said Hattie Eveleth, situated in said Greenville, to wit: a certain building situated on the south side of West Street in said Green-ville, and known as the St. Germain House, and the land on which said building stands, and whose estate in the premises was determined on the fifteenth day of February A. D. 1900, then and still does forcibly and unlawfully refuse to quit the same.”
The plaintiff thus acknowledges that the defendant was originally in lawful possession under a lawful estate, but alleges that his estate was terminated on Feby. 15, 1900. To prove such estate and termination thereof, the only evidence adduced by her was that on the
“If any tenant or occupant, under any lawful title, of any building or tenement not owned by him, uses it or any part thereof for any purpose named in section one, he forfeits his right thereto, and the owner thereof may make immediate entry without process of law, or may avail himself of the remedy provided in chapter ninety-four.”
Granting her contention as to her rights under section 3, c. 17, we think it clear that in resorting to the legal process authorized only by the statute, she must state, as well as prove, a case within the terms of the statute, and this she has not done.
The summary process of forcible entry and detainer at common law was a criminal, or quasi criminal, process and was only allowed where the entry and detainer Avere with force, the strong hand. The legislature of this state has devised a process of the same name, but now purely civil in form and nature, for the cases specified in the statute. It follows under the general laAV of pleading that the plaintiff in such a process should allege in his declaration the facts declared by the statute to be an occasion where the process may be used. Thus it was said by this court in Treat v. Bent, 51 Maine, 478, “This process of forcible entry and detainer is one created and regulated by the statutes, and in order to be maintained, must come clearly within their provisions.” In that case the process Avas quashed because it did not “disclose enough upon its face to give the court jurisdiction.” In Woodman v. Ranger, 30 Maine, 180, the second section of It. S., (1841) ch. 128 authorized the process for a forcible entry, or forcible detention: the fifth section authorized the process for a landlord Avhose tenant unlaAvfully refused to quit after his tenancy had been terminated by a thirty days’ notice in writing.
In the case at bar it is clear that the plaintiff has not alleged a case under § 3, of c. 17, R. S., which is the only case she has adduced any evidence of. There is in her declaration, no allegation that the defendant is a “tenant,” or “occupant,” no allegation of what particular purpose named in section one he had used the building for, and indeed no allegation that he had used it for any of those purposes. There is no allegation to apprise the court or the defendant that evidence will be offered of a case under. that statute. The statute is highly penal. It works a forfeiture of possibly valuable rights purchased by large expenditure. There should, therefore, be full particularity and certainty of allegation in all legal proceedings to enfoi’ce it. The statutory case should be fully and clearly stated. Want of allegations necessary to show a case within the terms of the statute is as fatal as want of evidence of such a case.
True, the language of the statute is “may avail himself of the remedy provided in chapter ninety-four”, but the language quoted only designates the process. It does not prescribe the allegations to sustain it. It does not imply that the process provided in chap. 94, may be framed to describe the cases heretofore named in that chapter, and yet be sustained upon evidence of an entirely new and different case not named in that chapter. On the contrary, the effect of the language is to make section 3, c. 17, an addition to chap. 94. By the new section thus added, the process is authorized upon another state of facts different from all those before specified. As stated in Woodman v. Ranger, supra, there must be allegations of these facts to authorize evidence of them and a judgment thereon, and this even though the case is reported to the law court on the evidence. Loggie v. Chandler, 95 Maine 220, 229.
It should be observed that the variance is not a mere technical one which would ordinarily be waived by reporting a case to the law court. Pillsbury v. Brown, 82 Maine, 450, 9 L. R. A. 94. The variance here is wide and substantial. The declaration, if of any case
For want of necessary allegations to which the evidence can be applied, the entry must be,
Plaintiff nonsuit.