Johnson v. Prussing

4 Ill. App. 575 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1879

McAllister, J.

This was replevin for a house, brought by Prussing against Johnson, in the Superior Court of Cook county. The writ and declaration were in the cepit. The pleas were: (1), Non-cepit/ (2), Property in defendant Johnson, traversing property in plaintiff. A jury was waived, and trial by court, who found defendant guilty and property in plaintiff; and, overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial, gave judgment on the finding. Defendant brings the case to this court on error. The bill of exceptions contains all the evidence, from which it appears that Johnson was lessee of Prussing of a piece of ground upon which the house in controversy rested; that such tenancy began in August, 1874, and by its terms was to end in August, 1879; that the house was erected and owned by Johnson, who was in the act of moving it, having raised and provided rollers for the purpose, whereupon Prussing issued his distress warrant, and Johnson’s family being in the house, Prussing’s bailiff, or custodian, was put in charge of it by remaining on the lot. Johnson having declared he would remove it anyhow, Prussing sued out the writ of replevin in tins case. The only basis of Pmssing’s right of recovery, was the issuing of this distress warrant, and the alleged levy upon the house thereunder. The judgment in this case is manifestly erroneous. The writ and declaration are for the wrongful taking and detention of the house. In Simmons v. Jenkins, 76 Ill. 482, the court said: “To sustain the action of replevin for wrongfully taking and detaining a personal chattel, it is necessary to show that the defendant wrongfully took- it from the actual or constructive possession of the plaintiff. This is elementary law.”

Johnson’s family were in the house before, at the time of the supposed levy of the distress warrant, and so continued down to the time of the execution of the replevin writ. The only ground for issuing the replexdn writ was that Johnson said he would move the house anyhow. He did no act. He did not wrongfully take the house out of the possession, actual or constructive, of the plaintiff So that the plaintiff failed to make out his case, under the issue on the plea of non cepit. Hnder the issue upon the plea of property in Johnson, it is still worse. The case fails to shoxv that Johnson was to' pay any rent, or that any xvas due'. The right of a landlord to dis-train for rent arises at common law, and is not created by statute. “ There can be no distress unless there has been an actual demise at a certain fixed rent, either in money, produce or services, payable at a time certain.” Taylor’s Landlord and Tenant, Sec. 561; Valentine v. Jackson, 9 Wendell’s R. 302.

So that the distress warrant, under the circumstances of this case, was unauthorized and void. Even if valid, there was no sufficient levy shown; no possession was taken of the house, or act done which would render the bailiff or Trussing trespassers, but for the writ. A paper levy, with merely a custodian on the lot, not in the house, was not such a levy as gave Trussing a special property in the house.

For these reasons, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded

Reversed and remanded.