Hershey v. Clark

27 Ark. 527 | Ark. | 1872

Gregg, J.

On the 15th of July 1871, the appellee brought a suit of unlawful detainer against the appellants for a house and some lots in the city of Fort Smith.

The appellants, by plea, set up that tlio wife was the owner of a one-fourth interest ancla tenant in common with the appellee, and as such, entitled' to the joint possession with her, and also set up the statute of limitations, which was afterward virtually abandoned. The appellee filed a replication which the court properly struck out.

Upon the trial, it appeared that appellee and the appellant, Ann E. Ilersliey, were sisters; that the property, in controversy, once belonged to Abraham and Aaron Clark, two brothers, both of whom had died without issue; that Abraham first died, intestate, leaving these two and one other sister, who are yet living, and another brother and sister who have since died, intestate and without issue. Aaron willed all his property to the appellee and his mother, and the mother has died.

The property, in controversy, had long been in the peaceable possession of the appellee and claimed and controlled by her.

In March, 1865, Mrs. Ilersliey, in the alísense of her husband and, at the solicitation of the appellee, moved into her residence on these premises. In August following, appellant, Benjamin, returned andjoined his family there, and they resided with the appellee until the commencement of this suit. Before suit, appellee, in writing, demanded possession of the appellants, and they refused to surrender possession of the same.

The court instructed the jury, in effect, that if they find from the evidence that the plaintiff was in the sole possession of the propex’ty, and that the defendants entered by her invitation, as- her guests or tenants, then, as to appellee, they occupied the relation of tenants, and they could not set up any adverse claim, and if, under such circumstances, they detained tlio property, after demand in writing, they should find for the plaintiff, and that no express agreement is necessary to fix the relation of landlord and tenant, but that it may arise where the one enters and occupies the premises of another with his permission or acquiescence, and from that a contract may be implied.

The court then instructed, at the instance of the defendants, that if they'had had peaceable and uninterrupted possession for more than three years, next before the commencement of the suit, they must find for the defendants.

Secondly. “If the jury believe, from the evidence, that the defendant, Ann E. Hershey, at plaintiff’s solicitation, moved with her children from Clarksville to Port Smith, and took up her abode with the plaintiff, in the house on said premises, and continued to reside there until August of that year, when defendant, Benjamin P. -Hershey, who went south during the late civil war, returned, and that he and his said wife and children continued to reside on said premises with plaintiff:' until the fall of 1869, with her consent, without any understanding or agreement cither express or implied, in reference to the time or terms of their occupancy, they should find for the defendants.” And,

Lastly. If they find that Ann E. was a tenant in common, and held peaceable possession, etc., for over three years, etc., without attorning to plaintiff', they should find for defendants.

The court then gave an instruction on its own motion, as follows: “ That the deed read in evidence, from Rogers and wife to Abraham and Aaron Clark, is prima facia evidence of title in the latter ; that if the father of grantees died before the execution of that deed, and that if Abraham Clark died before the year 1865, single and unmarried and without issue, and without will, leaving his mother and said Aaron, the plaintiff, defendant, Ann E. Hershey, and two other sisters, since deceased, defendant, Ann E. Ilershey, inherited an equal interest with the surviving sisters in the undivided half of the premises conveyed by the deed from Rogers and wife, and is a tenant in common with the plaintiff; and if such facts appear from the evidence, you would be warranted in finding that said defendants had a right to occupy said property with said plaintiff as a tenant in common,- unless he was plaintiff’s tenant.” To -which the appellants excepted. And it is here urged that this instruction made the jury judges of the law as well as the facts, and expressly 'made it optional with them to follow the law or not, and assumed that a tenant had not always a right to occupy during his tenancy, etc., and that it confused and misled the jury.

The last instruction was a crowd of words, and it had the appearance of leaving questions of law as well as fact to the .jury, but taken in connection with all the other instructions, we are of opinion its inaccuracies did not mislead the jury.

The appellants insist that Ann E. Hershoy was entitled to an undivided fourth interest in the premises; that she was a tenant in common and, as such, entitled to joint possession. This declaration of her rights is not denied as a legal proposition, but this is not an action to determine the parties’ rights in the property, but to decide who shall have the present possession ; and if Ilershey and wife went into possession under the appellee, they became her tenants and could not question her title until tlicjr parted with the possession she had given them. This was the main question before the jury, and they found for the appellee, and as such finding was not without •evidence this court will not question its correctness.

And to assume, as counsel do, that, because Mrs. Hershey had an interest in the property, she could set up her right of co-tenancy to defeat this possessory action, would certainly violate the rule that a tenant cannot dispute-his landlord’s title, but must surrender on expiration of his lease, or on demand, if holding at will. If an adverse title to a part could be set up by. any tenant, certainly a legal right to the whole could be as well pleaded, and thus the door would be open to all tenants to- dispute their landlord’s claims by establishing title in themselves. This would violate well established law, and greatly disturb that relationship which shoxdd exist between landlord and tenant. The policy of the law will not suffer one to go into possession by the favor of another, and then take advantage of that favor and confidence and hold possession while he litigates a claim of title.

The judgment is affirmed.