69 Wis. 326 | Wis. | 1887
The plaintiff moved to strike out the demurrer as frivolous, which the court denied, with $10 costs of motion. We must consider the appeal from this order as equivalent to an appeal from an order sustaining the demurrer. For the rule has been settled, in a number of decisions, that an appeal from ah order striking out a demurrer as frivolous would be treated the same as an appeal from an order overruling the demurrer. Consequently, to be consistent in the practice, this must be treated as an appeal from an order sustaining the demurrer to the complaint. Counsel for the plaintiff says the order must in any event be reversed, because of the refusal of the court to allow him to amend the complaint. The record fails to show any such refusal, or that leave to amend was asked for. True, the order says nothing about leave to amend, but we cannot assume from that that leave was asked and refused. Doubtless the court -would have granted the plaintiff leave to amend, had he asked that favor. But a party ought not to be permitted to object for the first time in this court to an order which is silent as to amendment, when it does not appear that an amendment was asked and refused. The court could give $10 costs under sec. 2924, E. S.
We will now consider the complaint itself, as though the demurrer to it had been sustained. The complaint states, substantially, that the plaintiff, at the tax sales of 1883, 1884, and 1885, purchased a lot in the city of Fort Howard, upon which there was a dwelling-house; that i-n May, 1886, he obtained a tax deed upon the tax certificate issued upon the sale of 1883; that in August, 1885, the defendants unlawfully and tortiously broke and entered upon the lot, and removed the fences and dwelling-house thereon, and committed other acts of waste, which greatly impaired the value of the premises. Judgment is demanded that the defendants be restrained from committing further waste upon the premises, and that plaintiff have judgment for $500.
The plaintiff, however, does not claim that he could have this action of waste without the aid of ch. 136, R. S. 1878. He says that the action is brought under the provisions of that chapter, where no privity of estate, as between the parties, need exist, as at common law. An examination of that chapter will show that this view is not correct. Secs. 3171, 3172, 3173, 3174, and 3175 are applicable only to cases where some privity of estate or tenancy exists between the parties. This is obvious. A “restriction existed at common law in respect to estates in possession of tenants in dower and curtesy, because, as these were created by the law itself, it
If in this section the word “ waste” is a synonym for the word “trespass,” the contention of counsel would be well founded. But we think the word is used in this statute in its strict technical sense, and signifies an act which amounted to waste at common law, where a privity of estate existed. Ve have seen that such relation must exist, and that this distinguished waste from trespass to the realty. We do not think the legislature intended to give, or has given, the holder of a tax certificate the action of waste against a stranger who commits a trespass.
It is said the tax-title claimant needs this remedy against
Counsel also relies upon a remark in Lacy v. Johnson, 58 Wis. 414, to support his view. In that case a very different question was presented from the one we have here. The defendant there had entered upon lands for the purpose of cutting and removing the growing timber thereon, under
Our view is that the demurrer to the complaint should have been sustained.
By the Court.— The order is affirmed.