Johnson v. West

41 Ark. 535 | Ark. | 1883

Smith, J.

West and Davis brought forcible entry and detainer against Johnson and seven others for the east half of the northeast quarter, the southwest quarter of the north east quarter, and north half of southeast quarter of section one, township seventeen, north, range, thirty-four west, two hundred acres. The plaintiffs alleged that they were-the owners, and entitled to the possession of the land, and in peaceable possession when the defendants on or about the first of September, 1881, unlawfully entered upon and! forcibly took possession of the land, and do now forcibly and without right detain the same after lawful demand therefor. Security having been given, a writ of possession was issued at the commencement of the action and the-plaintiffs were placed in possession of the premises.

Three of the defendants answered, alleging that their co-defendants held under them and denying specifically the. allegations of the complaint.

On the trial it appeared that the lands were wild and. uncultivated. The plaintiffs claimed them by virtue of a purchase from one Elam, who himself claimed under a tax. title, but had never got possession. This purchase was evidenced by a bond for title, made July 22, 1881, Elam, agreeing to convey the legal title upon the payment of $1,000. On the twenty-fourth of July the plaintiffs went-upon the land, encamped there one or two nights, walked around the lines, gave a butcher, who had already established his slaughter-pen on the land, permission to-slaughter beef there ; employed a man to clear and fence five acres on the southeast quarter of northeast quarter of sec-tion one, and then returned home. The hired man about, the first of August shrubbed off about one-quarter of an acre in a retired spot, burnt the brush, cut timber,, made thirty-five rails and quit the place.

This seems to have been the extent of the possession the plaintiffs had up to September fifth,when the defendants Johnson and Griffith, entered, as lessees of E. P. Watson, upon the east half of northeast quarter of section-one. This tract of eighty acres Watson claimed by a title deduced from the original patentee ; but he had never taken possession. At that time there were no improvements-upon the land except the small patch of cleared ground above mentioned ; and even that escaped the observation of Johnson and Griffith for some time. There were no occupants and no signs of occupation. Between the -fifth and 'twelfth of September Johnson and Griffith hauled upon the land material for building a house. By the seventeenth a •-stone foundation had been finished, the sleepers laid, the .joistsput up, and a temporary shelter being erected over this foundation, Johnson and Griffith moved in. The house, ■in dimensions fourteen by twenty-four feet, was situated on the northeast quarter of northeast quarter of section one. In the morning of the day last mentioned, the noise ■of hammers was heard in a southern direction from the house. And in the afternoon Johnson and Griffith found •that some one had put up two sides of a small box-house, without floor or roof, on the southeast quarter of the ■northeast quarter. No one, however, was found near, and this being a part of the land they had leased, a notice was posted by them on the side of the house warning the makers of the new improvement to desist and leave the place, Johnson ami Griffith completed tbeir house, and were living in it, and preparing to fence and cultivate the land when they were turned out by the sheriff. The plaintiffs also proceeded to finish their box-house, and occupied it for a short time in the month of October, and fenced about seven acres on the northeast quarter of the northeast ■quarter, but finally returned to their homes, having locked the door and leaving some of their effects behind. After they had gone the defendants entered the house, •either by unlocking it from the outside or through a window, and put their co-defendant Triplett in the house as »their tenant.

The jury found the issues for the plaintiffs, and the ■defendants moved for a new trial upon the following grounds:

1. Misdirection of the court.

2. Verdict contrary to law.

•3. Verdict not sustained by sufficient evidence.

4-5. Verdict finds the defendants guilty of entering upon ¡and detaining with force the whole body of two hundred acres, whereas the proofs show that their entry and claim were confined to eighty acres.

6. The evidence shows no actual possession on the part ■of the plaintiffs at the time of defendants’ entry.

StTPItEME conm: not excepted to, ^*edr 6' ■ The record discloses that the court gave three tions, at the instance of the defendants and two of its own motion, and that both sides acquiesced in the enunciation of x the law applicable to the case. We therefore decline'to ■consider the first and second assignments.

2. eokciBLE ENEEXeesmlnt:!udg’ The error alleged in the fourth and fifth assignments did 0 ■not prejudice the defendants. In this action, upon the ■execution of a bond, the possession is taken from the •defendant and delivered to the plaintiff at the outset; and ■if the plaintiff finally prevails, the judgment is only for •costs. Now, the defendants are not aggrieved by the delivery to the plaintiffs of lands in which the defendants have mo sort of interest; nor are the costs of the action ordinarily enhanced by including a larger quantity of land than is -■actually in dispute between the parties. Besides, the answer, while it shows that the defendants claim only a part •of the lands described in the complaint, does- not show what that part is.

In Fowler v. Knight, 10 Ark., 43, it was held that to maintain forcible entry and detainer the plaintiff is not bound to show that he was in actual possession when the defendant entered. But in McGuire v. Cook, 13 Ark., 449, in a luminous opinion delivered by Chiee Justice Watkins, this was overruled so far as it intimates that this action may be maintained upon a constructive possession, or ¡that when the entry is peaceable, if made without color of title, the law will imply force, or that the plaintiff may recover by showing his right to the possession,without proof that he has actual possession. The last mentioned case, ¿however, was itself afterwards limited by Bradley v. Hume, 18 Ark., 284, where it was held that unlawful detainer would lie at the suit of a purchaser of land which,, at the time of the purchase, was in possession of a tenant under a lease from the vendor, upon demand, after the end of the term. And this was followed by Frank v. Hedrick, 18 Ark., 304, and Halliburton v. Sumner, 27 Ark., 460.

8. UNLAW»ül Detainer: Based on contract. The exception is more apparent than real. Unlawful, detainer is a remedy provided by statute for the benefit of landlords against tenants who hold over after the expiration of their terms. It is founded on the breach of a contract, implied by law, if not expressed, that the tenant shalL restore a permissive possession to the hands from which it was received. And the estoppel of the tenant to deny his-landlord’s title enures, both as to its benefit and burden, to-privies in law, blood and estate. Hence, the tenant can no more resist the title of the lessor when asserted by or in the hands of an assignee than when it was held by the lessor himself.

d. Forcible entry AND Detain - kr: Is a torfc. But a forcible entry and detainer is a tort, pure and. simple. Force is the gist of the action. It is a remedy designed to.protect the actual possession, whether rightful, or wrongful. It must accordingly be shown that the defendant did enter without the consent of the person having the possession in fact of the premises ; and that such, original entry or subsequent holding of possession was with force and strong hand. Constructive possession or-evidence that the plaintiff is entitled to possession is not sufficient. And implied force, as when the defendant, enters peaceably, though unlawfully, is not sufficient. Smith v. Laffery, 27 Ark., 46; Hall v. Trucks, 38 Id., 257. Furthermore, the plaintiff cannot maintain» this action upon a scrambling possession, as we decided in Anderson v. Mills, 40 Ark.

Now, it is quite clear that when the defendants made; their entry, the plaintiffs had not actual possession of the land or any part thereof. Perhaps neither of the parties had such a bona fide possession as to justify a resort to this summary remedy. To us it seems that both were maneuvering for position; each seeking to occupy the vantage ground of being defendants in an impending action of ejectment. DeGraw v. Prior, 60 Mo., 56; Voll v. Butler, 49 Cal., 74.

But if either party could maintain this action, it was •certainly not the plaintiffs. Their improvement, up to the ■date of tbe defendant’s entry, was merely nominal. The defendants, if they had observed it at all, would have had a right to suppose the project had been abandoned.

Hence the verdict was without evidence to support it on "the essential point of a substantial holding by the plaintiffs.

Again: There was no evidence of force used by the defendants beyond that which is requisite to constitute an ordinary trespass. They entered upon unenclosed lands, not occupied at the time by any person. It was done quietly and not tumultuously. No weapons, threats or intimidation were resorted to. And the subsequent taking possession of a vacant house was unaccompanied ‘ ‘by such words and actions as have a natural tendency to excite fear •or apprehension of danger.” Nor does the refusal of the defendants to get out of the house, unless put out by law, make them guilty of a forcible detainer. See Butts v, Voorhees, 13 N. J., (1 Green’s Law Rep.) 13; same case, 22 Amer. Dec., 489, decided under a statute from which ours seems to have been copied ; Hopkins v. Calloway, 3 Sneed, 11, which was quoted with approbation by this court in Keller v. Henry, 24 Ark., 575.

Reversed and remanded for a new trial.