130 Mich. 47 | Mich. | 1902
This is an action of trespass, the plaintiff declaring against the defendant, “for that the said defendant, on, to wit, the 24=th day of February, A. D. 1900, with force and arms, willfully, maliciously, and unlawfully entered upon the land owned by said plaintiff, * * * said plaintiff then and there being in the lawful possession of said premises, and other injuries then and there did to said plaintiff.” The defendant pleaded the general issue, and gave notice thereunder that where the said injuries are supposed to have been committed was a public highway at the time the said injuries are alleged to have been committed, and that, if acts were done by said defendant as alleged by said plaintiff, they were done by defendant
Upon the trial it was stipulated that at one time Benzonia College was the owner of the land where the alleged trespass was committed; that, if plaintiff is entitled to anything, she is entitled to $5 and costs; that the alleged trespass was the cutting of a fence for the purpose of the highway claimed to have been laid out along the side of plaintiff’s land, and that all the cutting was done inside the bounds of what is claimed by defendant to be the highway ; and that the said claimed highway is the same highway over which litigation was had wherein Pauline Bird-sell was complainant and John S. Hayden was defendant in one cause, and Mary Fowles was complainant and John S. Hayden was defendant in another cause. The plaintiff, by this stipulation, did not admit there was any highway there, either by user or by having been laid out.
For the purpose of showing title in plaintiff, a deed was offered in evidence, made by Benzonia College February 10, 1900, to John Fowles and Mary Fowles, his wife, grantees. Mr. Fowles testified the land was bought with money belonging to himself and wife, and that they were in possession at the time of the alleged trespass. At this stage of the case the defendant objected to the reception of any further evidence, and moved to dismiss the case, for the reason that, if any trespass had been committed, it was one against Mary Fowles and John Fowles, for which the wife alone cannot maintain an action; to which the counsel for plaintiff replied:
“We will say that the plaintiff was in possession of the land. The title is in her as much as it is in her husband, and in her husband as much as it is in her. There is no question about that. She was in possession of the premises at that time jointly with her husband. But, where only one*49 of them brings an action of trespass, that one is entitled to only half of the damages. The evidence will disclose that Mr. Fowles himself, perhaps, has no action of damages there; that there was some sort of a proceeding to lay out a road, — a highway, — and that Mr. Fowles, in his own behalf, took an appeal from the action of the commissioner, for himself and himself alone; and that we concede that his rights there were adjudicated. Mr. Fowles himself, in my opinion, is barred from an action against any one trying to open a highway there, — that is, the path-master or such officer, — because he has already tested his right before the authorities in that regard; but ' Mrs. Fowles is entitled to one-half whatever damages was done.
“ The Court: Well, I will allow you to proceed in the meantime.”
Testimony was introduced by the plaintiff showing the cutting of the fence by the defendant. On the part of the defendant it was shown that the question of the legality of the same highway in controversy here was involved in a case before the same judge in the same court where Pauline Birdsell was complainant and John S. Hayden was defendant; that a hearing was had thereon upon pleadings and proofs taken in open court, in which the court decreed the highway was regularly and legally established. Objection was made to the admission of the decree in evidence because not properly pleaded, and also because this plaintiff is not bound by the decree. The decree was received in evidence. The plaintiff then sought to show in rebuttal the proceedings of the commissioner of highways, filed with the township clerk, claiming they would show the highway was not legally established. In reply to an inquiry by the court, it was stated the alleged trespass occurred after the decree in the Birdsell case. The court then excluded the records from the office of the town clerk, and rendered a judgment in favor of defendant.
The first question which calls for consideration is, Can plaintiff maintain this action of trespass, when she and her husband are in possession of the land under a deed
“ In this case the property to be improved and benefited was held by husband and wife jointly, and not as the separate property of the wife. Only at the death of the husband could the wife claim it as her separate property. During the lives of both, neither has an absolute’inheritáble interest] neither can be said to hold an undivided half. They take by entireties, and at the death of the wife the whole passes at once to the husband. Manwaring v. Powell, 40 Mich. 371; Allen v. Allen, 47 Mich. 74 (10 N. W. 113); AEtna Ins. Co. v. Resh, 40 Mich. 241. Neither has such a separate interest that he or she could sell, incumber, or devise, or which his or her heir could inherit. Vinton v. Beamer, 55 Mich. 559 (22 N. W. 40); Fisher v. Provin, 25 Mich. 347. It is 'an entirety, in which both take the same and inseparable interest. Neither can affect the other’s rights by a separate transfer, and whatever will defeat the interest of one will defeat the other’s. Vinton v. Beamer, supra.”
In Dickey v. Converse, 117 Mich. 449 (76 N. W. 80, 72 Am. St. Rep. 568), there is a citation and review of the many authorities, making it unnecessary to call attention to them here; In that case it is said:
“ This species of tenancy grows out of the unity of husband and wife, and is unlike that of joint tenants, who are each seised of an undivided moiety. The husband and wife are each seised of the whole, and not of undivided moieties. Hardenbergh v. Hardenbergh, 18 Am. Dec. 378 (10 N. J. Law, 42), note.”
It was held this rule applied to the crops growing upon the land, as well as the land itself.
Applying these principles of law to this case, it is clear that, if a trespass was committed, it was not committed upon the property ’and possession of the wife, so that she could recover, as counsel urge, one-half the damages, and
The judgment is affirmed.