29 A. 543 | N.H. | 1890
Lead Opinion
"There is a large class of contracts called implied contracts, which rest merely on construction of law, and in which *283
there is, properly speaking, no assent of the parties to the terms by which they are bound. What the law looks to in these cases is, not the agreement of the parties, but their circumstances or acts; and from their circumstances or acts the law raises the duty and implies the promise by which, in the individual case, the party will be bound. In the case of an express contract, the law measures the extent of each party's duty by the terms to which he has expressly agreed; in the case of an implied contract, the terms are such as reason and justice dictate in the particular case, and which therefore the law presumes that every man undertakes to perform." 1 Chit. Con. (11th ed.) 79. "If the forms of common-law actions were adapted to the truth of the case, a defendant could not be held liable in an action of contract except upon proof of an actual contract, either express or tacit. But by a fiction adopted for the sake of the remedy, the law in some instances allows an action of contract to be maintained to enforce a legal obligation or duty which the defendant has never in fact promised to perform. The law in such cases implies a promise, though such implication may be directly against the actual fact, and even against the party's strongest protestations." Eastman v. Clark,
"It has been long settled, that if there are co-sureties . . . . and the creditor calls upon either of them to pay the principal debt, or any part of it, that surety has a right in this court, either upon a principle of equity or upon contract, to call upon his co-surety for contribution; and I think that right is properly enough stated as depending rather upon a principle of equity than upon contract: unless in this sense, that the principle of equity being in its operation established, a contract may be inferred upon the implied knowledge of that principle by all persons, and it must be upon such a ground, of implied assumpsit, that in modern times courts of law have assumed a jurisdiction upon this subject." Craythorne v. Swinburne, 14 Ves. 160, 164.
In Doe v. Morrell, Smith (N.H.) 255, a house had been built as a single tenement, with "two rooms on the floor, chimney in the middle, entry front side the chimney, outside door, stairs up to the chambers," and a part of it had been set off on execution, the sheriff and appraisers making partition "by an imaginary line, running through the middle front door, entry, through the stairs, *284
chimney, c." The plaintiff, deriving title from the levy, owned one part, and the defendant owned the other. The house was old, and the defendant's part became untenantable, was not worth repairing, and was condemned as dangerous by the fire-wards, who "ordered it to be repaired (or otherwise rendered not dangerous on account of fire)." The defendant "took down his part to the line, . . . carefully and prudently, doing as little damage to the plaintiff as he could. He . . . sawed through the plate, girt, stairs, boards, c., but did not take down the chimney." The action was trespass, and the plaintiff recovered damages on the ground that "from the nature of the thing" the parties must be considered as interested in common in the entry, chimney, stairs, etc., and each "was under an obligation to the other to keep his part in repair, at least so far that the tenement of the other should suffer no injury from want of such repair." On each side of the boundary line there was a community of interest, created, not by contract, but by the common law. In respect to repairs, the community of interest included a mutual obligation and a correlative right; and for the enforcement of such an obligation and the maintenance of such a right, the common law of this state furnishes an adequate mode of procedure. If the defendant, instead of demolishing his part of the building, had merely refused to repair it, the plaintiff would have had a remedy in equity if not at law. Roberts v. Peavey,
In Campbell v. Mesier, 4 Johns. Ch. 334, there was a decree in favor of an owner of a city lot against the owner of an adjoining lot, compelling contribution to defray part of the cost of a party-wall built by the plaintiff in place of an old and ruinous one which he had pulled down. It was alleged in the bill that he had been nonsuited, in an action at law brought for the same purpose, on the ground that he had no remedy at law. In the opinion, Chancellor Kent says, — "This case falls within the reason and equity of the doctrine of contribution which exists in the common law, and is bottomed and fixed on general principles of justice. . . . The doctrine rests on the principle, that where the parties stand in equali jure, the law requires equality, which is equity, and one of them shall not be obliged to bear the burthen in case of the rest. It is stated in F. N. B. 162 b, that the writ of contribution lies where there are tenants in common, or who jointly hold a mill, pro indiviso, and take the profits equally, and the mill falls into decay, and one of them will not repair the mill. The form of a writ is given, to compel the others to be contributory to the reparations. *285 . . . The doctrine of contribution is founded, not on contract, but on the principle that equality of burden, as to a common right, is equity. . . . In the case before me, the parties had equality of right and interest in the party-wall, and it became absolutely necessary to have it rebuilt. . . . Contribution depends rather upon a principle of equity than upon contract. The obligation arises, not from agreement, but from the nature of the relation or quasi ex contractu; and as far as courts of law have, in modern times, assumed jurisdiction upon this subject, it is, as Lord Eldon said (14 Ves. 164), upon the ground of all implied assumpsit. The decision at law, stated in the pleadings, may therefore have arisen from the difficulty of deducing a valid contract from the case. That difficulty does not exist in this court, because we do not look to a contract, but to the equity of the case. . . . The houses on each side . . . were old and almost untenable; and it would be the height of injustice to deny to the plaintiff the right of pulling down such a common wall, and of erecting a new one suitable to the value of the lot in the most crowded part of a commercial city. It would be equally unjust to oblige him to do it at his exclusive expense, when the lot of the defendant was equally benefited by the erection and much enhanced in value."
"The second diversity," says Coke, "is between chattels real that are apportionable or severable, as leases for years . . . and chattels real entire, as wardships of the body, a villeine for years, c., for if one tenant in common take away the ward, or the villeine, c., the other hath no remedy by action, but he may take them again. Another diversity is between chattels real and chattels personal; for if one tenant in common take all the chattels personal, the other hath no remedy by action, but he may take them again. . . . If two tenants in common be of a dove-house, and the one destroy the old doves, whereby the flight is wholly lost, the other tenant in common shall have an action of trespass; for the whole flight is destroyed, and therefore he (the defendant) cannot in bar plead tenancy in common. . . . If two tenants in common, or joint tenants, be of a house or mill, and it fall in decay, and the one is willing to repair the same and the other will not, he that is willing shall have a writ de reparatione facienda; . . . Whereby it appeareth that owners are bound in that case pro bono publico to maintain houses and mills which are for habitation and use of mell. If one joint tenant or tenant in common of land maketh his companion his bailiff of his part, he shall have an action of account against him. . . . But although one tenant in common or joint tenant, without being made bailiff, take the whole profits, no action of account lieth against him; for in an action of account he must charge him either as a guardian, bailiff, or receiver. . . . Never his bailiff to render an account is a good plea." Co. Lit. 200 a, 200 b. In the section of Littleton, on which this comment is made, it is said, — "If *286 two be possessed of chattels personal in common . . ., as of a horse, an ox, or a cow, c., if the one take the whole to himself out of the possession of the other, the other hath no other remedy but to take this from him who hath done to him the wrong to occupy in common, c., when he can see his time, c. In the same manner it is of chattels real which cannot be severed. . . . Where two be possessed of the wardship of the body of an infant within age, if the one taketh the infant out of the possession of the other, the other hath no remedy by an action by the law but to take the infant out of the possession of the other when he sees his time."
"Other harsh and repulsive doctrines, as well as the feudal tenure of land (Cole v. Lake Co.,
In the case of a chattel or land owned in common and held by one of the owners, there was special need of an appropriate writ. The refusal of a remedy by action tends to disorder. "The common law, which is the preserver of the common peace of the land, did abhor all force as a capital enemy to it; and therefore, against those who committed any force, the common law did subject their bodies to imprisonment." Harbert's Case, 3 Co. 11, 12. In many cases, reasonable force without legal process is a necessary legal remedy. Haley v. Colcord,
When a flock of doves, owned in common by two, was destroyed by one of the owners, the wrong was considered actionable for a reason based on the distinction between right and remedy. The injured party could maintain trespass because he was no longer a tenant in common. This explanation was satisfactory when his remedies were limited to the use of procedure that had been invented at an earlier day. Writs had not been invented for all cases in which his rights could be infringed by his co-tenant without a termination of the co-tenancy, but only for some of those cases. If a legal right would be violated by a refusal to account for the use and occupation of a house or mill owned in common by the occupier and another, the invention of a fiction, or a writ, or some other remedial measure, in such a case, was as indispensable as in the case of the same occupier's refusal to contribute to necessary repairs of the same property. The obligation to repair does not arise from contract, or from the court's opinion that the public good requires houses and mills to be kept in a condition fit for use, but from the nature and necessity of the case. Tenancy in common of a farm and live-stock naturally and necessarily includes a common duty of reasonably protecting the common interest. The house or barn is not to go to ruin for want of repairs which a prudent owner would make; the cattle are not to be starved; the land is not to *288
be sold for taxes (Eads v. Retherford,
The rights of these parties, growing out of the situation of the property and the nature of their estate, are so completely equitable that the defendant's conveyance of a divided half of the farm to a third person might operate as a partition, if it did not injuriously affect the plaintiff's right of division, or any of the other rights of which his title is composed. Holbrook v. Bowman,
"So intimate is the relation of co-tenants that one cannot acquire by purchase an adverse and superior title and set it up in opposition to his co-tenants, unless they refuse to contribute their share of the expense of procuring the paramount title. The title is held to be acquired by one for the benefit of all." Tied. R. P., s. 252; Cool. Tax. 467, 501, 502; Barker v. Jones,
The only question of any substantial importance in the present case is, whether an obligation of each owner to account was a part of the community of duty produced by their community of interest. It was not the defendant's duty to take or hold possession of the farm, or any part of it. But its possession was one of the matters affecting the common interest, in which, when he acted, it was his duty to act for the plaintiff as well as for himself. If he had evicted the plaintiff, and held adverse possession, he would have been liable in trespass for his use of the plaintiff's property. As there was no eviction, and his possession was the plaintiff's possession, in other words, as in living on the farm, cutting wood, and taking the crops, he acted for the plaintiff as well as for himself, he would not have acquired the plaintiff's title by twenty years' use and occupation. Campbell v. Campbell,
"Tenants in common are persons who hold by unity of possession. . . . The possession of one . . . is the possession of the other, and the taking of the whole profits by one does not amount to an ouster of his companions. . . . One . . . cannot bring an action of trespass against another for entry upon and enjoyment of the common property." 4 Kent. Com. 367, 370. If mere entry and possession by the plaintiff or the defendant had been a trespass, their farm could not have been rightfully cultivated without an agreement. No agreement was necessary. The defendant's right to use his undivided share necessarily comprised a right to use property that belonged to the plaintiff. He could not enter without going upon the land of both. He could not cut and consume wood or hay without converting to his own use something that belonged in part to the plaintiff. His right to use what was not his, and his obligation to account, were incidents of their community of interest. So far as he exercised the plaintiff's right of use and conversion, he acted for the plaintiff in *290 matters affecting the undivided estate. His appropriation of the plaintiff's property to his own use was not wrongful; and in the absence of contract, gift, and release, it could not be rightful unless he acted in a fiduciary capacity that involved an equitable liability to account for his exercise of the plaintiff's right. In using the plaintiff's property without such a liability and without a power derived from contract, gift, or release, he would not act for the plaintiff, nor in furtherance of the plaintiff's interest, but against him, and to his prejudice.
It was in reference to the duty of contribution resulting from the doctrine of equality applied to such relations as those existing between tenants in common that Lord Coke declared the common law to be the perfection of reason. Harbert's Case, 3 Co. 11, 13, 14; Campbell v. Mesier, 4 Johns. Ch. 334, 338. The rule of equality compels the plaintiff to bear his share of necessary expenses incurred by the defendant in making repairs, paying taxes, and removing incumbrances. In the adjustment of such claims, the plaintiff would be credited with the defendant's use of the plaintiff's property preserved by those expenses, and the defendant's obligation to account cannot depend on his having claims against the plaintiff. The theory that he acted for the plaintiff as well as for himself in such matters affecting the common estate as repairs, taxes, and incumbrances, and so far acted for the plaintiff in occupying and using the same estate as to make his possession of the plaintiff's undivided half the plaintiff's possession, and avoid liability in an action of trespass, but so far acted against the plaintiff in the same occupation and use as to avoid accountability in every other form of action, is inconsistent with a system of law founded on reason. The plaintiff's claim, not being defeated, as it formerly would have been, by a lack of remedy, cannot be disallowed without denying that one half of the farm was, his property, and holding that the defendant owned the whole.
"Tenancy in common is a joint estate in which there is unity of possession, but separate and distinct titles. The tenants have separate and independent freeholds or leaseholds in their respective shares, which they manage and dispose of as freely as if the estate was one in severalty. There is no restriction upon their power of alienation. And the tenant may dispose of it by will, while the heirs of an intestate tenant will inherit the estate. In like manner, the husband or wife of a tenant in common will have, respectively, curtesy and dower. . . . The interest of one tenant in common is so independent of that of his co-tenant that in a joint conveyance of the estate it would be treated as a grant by each of his own share in the estate. And . . . in order to convey the share of one co-tenant to another, the same formal deed is required as in a conveyance of it to a stranger. . . . Tenants in common are not seized of the entire estate. They do not hold it per my et per tout." If repairs are necessary to *291 prevent the property from going to decay, one "may either compel the others to join him in making the repairs, or, if he has notified them that repairs are necessary, bring an action against them for their share of the expenses. If one tenant cuts timber upon the land, and sells it, the co-tenants are entitled to their share of the money so received. And so also would he be liable to account for rents, received by him from the tenant of the land, over and above his share. But in order that a co-tenant may be held personally liable for rent through his own use and occupation of the land, a special agreement to that effect must be shown. An occupancy by one co-tenant without the interference of the others is not sufficient. He is merely exercising his right of ownership." Tied. R. P., ss. 239, 254, 255.
The proposition that the defendant merely exercised his right of ownership is not a denial of the plaintiff's title. The defendant's ownership included a right to exercise the plaintiff's right of occupation and use. His exercise of the plaintiff's right being lawful, he is not liable as a trespasser. It was lawful because, in its legal character, it was fiduciary, — he acted for the plaintiff; therefore he is liable as the plaintiff's representative. To say that his occupancy was not an exercise of the plaintiff's right as well as his own would be either a denial of the plaintiff's title, or an admission that there was an infringement of the plaintiff's right for which there must be a remedy. On the general question of liability in some form of action, it is not material whether the defendant exercised the plaintiff's right or violated it. "The name of property belongs to some of the essential proprietary rights vested in the person called the owner of the soil. . . . Property is taken when any one of those proprietary rights is taken of which property consists." Thompson v. Androscoggin R. I. Co.,
In a case on the statute of Anne for receiving more than came to the defendant's just share and proportion, Parke, B., expressed the opinion that when land, owned by A and B, is cultivated by A, B is equitably entitled to none of the profit because he bears none *292
of the loss. Henderson v. Eason, 17 A. E. N. S. 701, 709-711, 720, 721. There being no partnership in the business of cultivation A assumes all the risk and has all the profit. But this state of things has no tendency to show that B is not entitled to compensation for A's profitable or unprofitable use of his property. Equitable rent is one of the expenses of A's business; and when he occupies the whole or more than his share of the common estate, his non-payment of rent unjustly increases his profit, or unjustly diminishes his loss, at B's expense. In Brooks v. Howison,
In Savings Bank v. Getchell,
The procedure established by the courts at an early day "furnished a fixed number of `forms of action.' . . . A writ had been settled, not only for each of the different `forms of action,' but for the facts, circumstances, and events which could constitute the subject-matter of the particular actions embraced within each one of these several `forms of action.' The precedents of all the writs which had been thus established were kept in an office connected with the chancery, called the Registra Brevium. . . . . If no writ could be found in the collection which substantially corresponded with the facts constituting the ground of complaint, then the plaintiff could have no action. . . . The common law furnished a very meagre system of remedies, utterly insufficient for the needs of a civilization advancing beyond the domination of feudal ideas. . . . No contract could be enforced unless it created a certain debt, or unless it was embodied in a sealed writing. No means was given for the legal redress of a wrong to person or property, unless the tortious act was accompanied with violence, express or implied. The injuries and breaches of contract which now form the subject-matter of so much litigation were absolutely without any legal remedy." 1 Pom. Eq., ss. 21-23; Pom. Mun. Law, ss. 102, 175, 192-207.
Since it is settled that the plaintiff is entitled to such legal process for the ascertainment and enforcement of his rights as justice and convenience require, the authorities on which the defendant relies are immaterial. They are mere iterations of the doctrine that in such cases as this there is no remedy. Bac. Abr. Joint-Tenants (L); Henderson v. Eason, 17 A. E. N. S. 701, 718. The defence is a remedial defect that has ceased to exist in this state. There is "extreme difficulty in distinguishing between principles of substantive law and rules relating only to procedure, in the older books." Holm. Com. Law 190, n. The inns of chancery "were designed as places for elementary studies" where students "learned the nature of original and judicial writs, which were then considered as the first principles of the law." 4 Reeve Eng. Law 120. When remedies were considered first principles, and the development of substantive law was largely determined *294 by the operation of modes of procedure (3 Law Quarterly Review 166), there were no such understanding and observance of the distinction between remedy and right as are indispensable at the present time in this state. The ideas of the Middle Ages on the subject were full of confusion and error. The extent to which they have survived in other jurisdictions is an irrelevant inquiry. Under the law of remedy now in force here, rights can no longer be confounded with the inadequate relief afforded by English forms of action.
"Previous to the statute of Anne . . . no action lay by a tenant in common against his companion for the profits of the property owned in common. A remedy was given in that act by an action of account." Jones v. Harraden,
"Popham, C. J., said that every act done by one joint-tenant in benefit of himself and his companion is good; as payment of rent, c., to the lord by one doth discharge the other: but one joint-tenant cannot prejudice his companion as to any matter of inheritance or freehold but as to the profits of the freehold the one may prejudice the other; for there is a privity and trust between two joint-tenants, and therefore if one takes all the profits of the land or the whole rent c., the other hath no remedy; for it was his folly to join himself in estate with such a person as would break the trust" (Tooker's Case, 2 Co. 66, 68) "to remedy which an action of account is given by statute of 4 Anne, c. 16, although the defendant was not actually bailiff." Ballou v. Hale,
"At common law if a man were disseised, and his entry taken away, he could never recover by any action, the mesne profits. . . . But the chancery interposed and at last carried the remedy farther than had been admitted at common law." Bac. Abr., Accompt (B). The income of a farm belonged to the owner of the farm before the means of recovering the income was supplied by chancellors and parliaments. When there were several owners, the right of each to his share of the income existed before the statute of Anne. To deny the vested right of each in the income is to assert that the land is not theirs. That right is the substance of the title — the whole of the beneficial interest. "A conveyance of the use of land forever is equivalent to a conveyance of the land." Farrar v. Cooper,
When one tenant in common "has laid out large sums in improvements on the estate, . . . although . . . the money so laid out does not, in strictness, constitute a lien on the estate, yet court of equity will not grant a partition without first directing an account, and compelling the party applying for partition to make due compensation. So, where one tenant in common has been in the exclusive perception of the rents and profits, on a bill for a partition and account, the latter will also be decreed." Sto. Eq. Jur., s. 655. Equitable adjustments between common owners do not depend upon the rule that he who asks equity must do equity. "In the courts of common law, both of England and America, there are certain prescribed forms of action, to which the party must resort to furnish him a remedy; and if there be no prescribed form to reach such a case, he is remediless; for they entertain jurisdiction only of certain actions, and give relief according to the particular exigency of such actions, and not otherwise. . . . Courts of equity . . . can administer remedies for rights, which rights courts of common law do not recognize at all; or if they do recognize them, they leave them wholly to the conscience and good-will of the parties." Sto. Eq. Jur., ss. 26, 29.
"Cases of account between tenants in common, between joint-tenants, between partners, between part owners of ships, and between owners of ships and the masters, . . . involve peculiar agencies, like those of bailiffs or managers of property, and require the same operative power of discovery and the same interposition of equity" as other cases of fiduciary rights and obligations. "Indeed, in all cases of such joint interests, where one party receives all the profits, he is bound to account to the other parties in interest for their respective shares, deducting the proper charges and expenses; whether he acts expressly by their authority as bailiff, or only by implication as manager, without dissent, jure domini, over the property." Sto. Eq. Jur., s. 466; Leach v. Beattie,
Whether the defendant's obligation to account is enforcible by a bill in equity, or in this action upon a promise implied by law, is a question of no practical importance. Time spent in considering it would be wasted. If, upon examination, it were found that the action in its present form cannot be maintained, the plaintiff would be allowed to amend his declaration by filing a bill in equity. Peaslee v. Dudley,
Case discharged. *297
ALLEN, J., did not sit: DOE, C. J., CLARK and BLODGETT, JJ., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
The difficulty sometimes met in drawing the line between declaring and making the law (Broom Com. 5) is not encountered here. Ever since estates in common have been known to the law, it has been the unquestioned legal right of a tenant in common — one of his essential proprietary rights — to occupy, use, and enjoy the common property without liability to account to his co-tenants, so long as he does not prevent them from exercising the same right. The earliest reported judicial declaration of the doctrine to which attention has been called is found in the Year Book, 17 E. 2, 552 (A. D. 1324), and the latest in the unanimous judgment of this court in Berry v. Whidden,
For the exercise of his legal rights upon land of which he is lawfully possessed in his own right, no one is in law or in equity accountable to another in any form of procedure. No promise to account can be implied (Sceva v. True,
The common law recognizes no right for the violation of which it does not provide a remedy. If it gives no remedy, it gives no right. 3 Bl. Com. 123; Broom Leg. Max. 193; Ashby v. White, 2 Ld. Raym. 938, 953; Rich v. Flanders,
Littleton (s. 323) and Coke (Co. Lit. 197, 200) state the distinction between an indivisible chattel of which the possession or use is of necessity exclusive, and apportionable lands which may be possessed and enjoyed in common. The law governing the rights and remedies of joint owners of such a chattel has no application to the present question. It is irrelevant for the purpose of argument or illustration, until it is shown that the possessor of the chattel is bound by law to account for its use to his co-tenant, who is free to take it into his own possession whenever he will. Prentice v. Ladd,
The plaintiff's position, that the exemption of the tenant occupying common lands from liability to account for the use of the property to his unexcluded co-tenants was due to the want of remedial process by which they could enforce their rights, is without foundation. The reverse is true. The law provided no remedy, because there was no violation of right. It might as well be argued that the wife's common-law disabilities, and the husband's title to her property, were due to the lack of suitable process for the vindication of her rights, or that, on a recovery of land, the defendant's inability to obtain compensation for improvements made by him while in peaceable possession under a supposed legal title (G. L., c. 232, ss. 6-8) was owing, not to the law of property, but to the neglect of the judges to invent a method of procedure by which his claim for betterments could be enforced. If the position is sustained, the unwritten laws of property are few that judges who happen to think them harsh or inequitable may not repeal under the guise of remedial invention. Rich v. Flanders,
Whether it would be wise in the legislature to repeal the law and make a tenant's "own omission to occupy the joint estate a ground of action against his co-tenant" (
An excluded tenant in common may recover of his co-tenant the possession in ejectment (Lit., ss. 322, 323, 1 Chit. Pl. 79, 191) and the mesne profits in a subsequent action (Goodtitle v. Tombs, 3 Wils. 118, 1 Chit. Pl. 79, 195, Runn. Eject. 443, Stearns R. A. *299
404), or he may maintain trespass for his damages. Wood v. Griffin,
Equity follows, and is bound by the law. It can neither give to the plaintiff, nor take from the defendant, a legal right. Against established law it can afford no relief. 3 Bl. Com. 429-437; 1 Sto. Eq. Jur., ss. 11-20. "In no case does it contradict or overturn the grounds or principles" of the law. "That is a discretionary power, which neither this nor any other court, not even the highest, acting in a judicial capacity, is by the constitution intrusted with." Cowper v. Cowper, 2 P. Wms. 720, 753, 754. It cannot compel a party to account who is declared by law to be under no obligation to account. Hence, though having full jurisdiction (1 Sto. Eq. Jur., ss. 441, 466), it has never yet required, or attempted to require, an occupying tenant in common to account for the use of the property to a co-tenant who may occupy whenever he will.
Courts of justice cannot lawfully make, or repeal, the law. The power is denied to them by the common law (Co. Lit. 115 b, 282 b, 379 b, 1 Bl. Com. 70, 71, 142, 269, and Christian's notes 3 and 4 at p. 70, 1 Kent 476, Brydges v. Chandos, 2 Ves. Jr. 417, 426, Entick v. Carrington, 19 How. St. Tr. 1029, Mirehouse v. Rennell, 1 Cl. Fin. 527, 607, Egerton v. Brownlow, 4 H. L. Ca. 1, 123, Attorney-General v. Dean of Windsor, 8 H. L. Ca. 369, 391-393, Beamish v. Beamish, 9 H. L. Ca. 274, 337-339, 349, Freeman v. Tranah, 12 C. B. 406, 411-415, Osborn v. Bank of U.S., 9 Wheat. 738, 866, Bellows v. Parsons,
A sufficient reason, if there were no other, for leaving the repeal of the common law of property rights to the legislature is, that its enactments look to the future without disturbing the past; they have, and under the constitution can have, no retrospective operation (Bill of Rights, art. 23), while judicial lawmaking is necessarily retroactive, not only in the particular cause adjudged, but in all other similar and subsisting causes. By the established law of the land, the defendant, during all the time he occupied the premises, did the plaintiff no wrong and incurred to him no liability. He exercised his legal right, and left the plaintiff at liberty to exercise his equal right. Webster v. Calef,
The doctrine of the supreme court of the United States, and of this court, that contracts valid under the settled judicial or practical construction of the constitution and laws when they are made, cannot be invalidated by a subsequent judgment of the court that the construction was wrong (Douglass v. County of Pike,
SMITH, J., concurred in this opinion.