115 Me. 412 | Me. | 1910
An action of trespass quare clausum, for breaking and entering a close alleged to be the property of the plaintiff, situated in the town of Rangeley, and entering a building thereon formerly used as a school house, and is reported to this court upon an agreed statement of facts, from which it appears that the lot of land in dispute was located in what was formerly school district No. 3 in said Rangeley. In 1857 a school building was erected by individuals living in said district, on a lot other than the lot in
After proper vote by the town the plaintiffs took possession of the school house and lot above described, succeeding to all rights of the school district therein. In 1897 the town sold the above named school house, which was removed by the purchaser thereof, and erected the present building upon the same lot, occupying the same ground occupied by the old school house, and in addition thereto certain contiguous land which was necessary for the enlarged building. The school board in 1897 contracted with one Herbert Ross and others to put in the foundation for the new building. When they commenced work on the same, James Snowman objected to the erection of the new building to said Herbert Ross and his father, who reported the same to the school 'board, which was the duly authorized building committee for said town, which thereupon directed said Ross, to continue with the work, which he did. James Snowman died on January 5, 1906, leaving a will devising all his property to the defendant, which will was duly probated. The defendant and his predecessors in title have cut the hay of town upon said lot since the incorporation of said town from said lot. The inhabitants of said town never had a deed of said lot or any part thereof, or paid or tendered said Badger or either of said Snowmans anything for the same, or the right to maintain the
James D. Badge'r in i860, when he gave the oral permission to move the building upon the lot, did not attempt to make to the parties who moved the building, or to the district or the town, a grant of the land.
From the agreed statement it appears, “that since the school house was moved on the lot in i860 that the district up to 1894, and the town since that date, have claimed the right to occupy said lot for school purposes by virtue of the oral permission from James D. Badger in i860.” Occupation of a licensee can not be adverse to the true owner while he is claiming to occupy it by virtue of the license, and as long as the licensee continues to occupy the premises, or exercise the license by claiming it to be a license or an oral permission, said occupation gives no interest in the land, and it cannot be considered adverse to the true owner, because
In this case the agreed statement shows that the district or the town has never claimed to be the true owner. They have not claimed to occupy it adversely to the defendant, because “they have claimed the right to occupy said lot for school purposes by virtue of the oral permission of James D. Badger in i860.” From the agreed statement it would seem that, at the time of the alleged trespass, the town was only claiming to occupy the premises as the licensee, not as owners and not adversely to the title of the defendant, and, as the agreed statement shows that the district or the town never have occupied the premises under a claim of right as owners, openly, exclusively and adversely, but only as the licensee of the owner, or owners, it follows that the district had no title to the land in question and since the town took it over the town has had no title to the land. Title by adverse possession set up by the plaintiffs fail, and they are not entitled to maintain this action upon the ground that they were the owners of the premises described in the writ.
This being an action of quare clausum for entering the close of the plaintiff and entering a building thereon and the carrying away of a small amount of personal property, the gist of the action is the breaking and entering. The other allegations are simply laid as aggravations of the trespass. It is, therefore, incumbent upon the plaintiff to prove such unlawful entry, but the defendant is not liable for breaking and entering because he had the right to revoke the license which gave him the right to enter, and in this form'of action, if the breaking and entering is not made out, the action fails. Dingley v. Buffum, 57 Maine, 379.
Judgment for defendant.