4 Mo. App. 514 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action for unlawful detainer. Plaintiff com
Plaintiff rested his case upon his own testimony, which was as follows:
4 41 was in possession of the premises sued for on the 10th day of March, 1876. I had four rooms originally. About the 10th of March, 1876, I occupied one room. I was an insurance agent, and carried on fire insurance there up to that time. I had occupied the office there since 1871. I had property in the room I occupied; I had a desk, carpet, stove, and chairs, and a safe. On the 10th of March I received a notice from the defendant to give up possession. On the next morning, when I returned there, I found that all my things had been taken out into the hall. I tried the door of the front office, the one I had occupied, and found it locked. The lock to the door had been taken off and a new one put on, so that my key which I had did not fit. I left the room on the evening of the day before. I locked the door with my key. No one was in the room when I left. I then entered through the rear office, and was told by the secretary that the insurance company had put my things out. I found the secretary of the defendant in possession, and in my room, and he told me that the defendant had ordered him to put my things out, and he had done so; that I had no right in the room, and could not come there any more; that he had had the lock changed to prevent my access to the room; that he had done this at the request of the defendant. After that time the defendant used the room as its office. I have never had possession since. The defendant has had the room ever since, and has it now.*516 Before the defendant notified me to leave, they had sent me two bills for rent. I took an office in the next room, a few days after I was put out. My furniture was damaged to the amount of fifty dollars. The room I occupied was worth twenty dollars per month. It has been worth that since the defendant took possession, and it is worth it now. I have been in the real estate business, and have had the renting of property, and am acquainted with the rental value of such a place.”
Cross-examination: “I was in the 'employment of the defendant on the 10th day of March, 1876. (Contract shown witness.) I was serving under this agreement on the 10th day of March, 1876. I refused to accept the bill for .rent sent to me. It was sent some time in February. I don’t remember that the company had notified me that I was no longer in their employ, and that I must pay rent if I occupied their office any longer. The company occupied a part of my office and a room in the rear. I was to occupy a desk-room in the company’s front office. Before the company moved in I had occupied three rooms. Mr. Heimentz was the landlord. I rented of him before the company moved in. I had not paid any rent since the company moved in, in June, 1875. I told Mr. Heimentz that I was to remain there, rent free, after the company moved in. This conversation was about a week or month before the company moved in. I never made .any agreement about the office with the defendant. The only agreement that I had about occupying the office was with Mr. Heimentz. I never agreed to give up possession to the company. The company put up two curtains with its name on them in the front office. It put up signs on the front office. I had never worked for the defendant before they moved into the •offices which I had occupied.”
Plaintiff here rested his case.
To this testimony defendant demurred as not sufficient to support a recovery. The demurrer was overruled.
Defendant then introduced testimony to the effect that
The following instructions, asked for defendant,' were refused:
“ 2\ If the court, sitting as -a jury, believes that the plaintiff, on the 10th day of March, 1876, was not in the exclusive possession of the premises claimed, the plaintiff cannot recover.
“3. The court instructs that if it believes from the evidence that the defendant had rented, used, and occupied the premises in question as its office and place of business, and that defendant so used and occupied said premises on the 10th day of March, 1876, the plaintiff cannot recover.
“4. If the court believes from the evidence that the plaintiff had been in the service of the defendant, and had been permitted by the defendant to use his own desk while laboring for the defendant, in defendant’s office, and that afterwards the defendant discharged the plaintiff from its*518 service and removed plaintiff’s desk from its office, the court will find for the defendant.”
The first question to be determined, in disposing of this case, is whether one in possession of premises in common with another can maintain the action of forcibly entry and detainer when unlawfully turned out by his co-tenant. On this point we cannot do better than to quote the language of the learned judge delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in Presberry v. Presberry, 13 Allen, 284:
“ However the rule may be where the process is brought by a lessor to evict a tenant for rent in arrear, or on the ground that his estate is determined, we are fully satisfied, after looking over the authorities touching proceedings in forcible entry and detainer, that the complaint may well be supported where a tenant in common is evicted, or held out violently and with a strong hand, by his co-tenant. The existing statute concerning forcible entry and detainer is substantially a reenactment of the statute of 1784, which was preceded by a colonial statute of similar import. 13 Wm. III. c. 71. The provisions of both these last-named acts, with some modifications, were taken from the statutes of England on the same subject, more especially from 8,Hen. VI. c. 9 ; and, so far as they made provision for the restitution or ‘ reseizing ’ of land of tenements forcibly entered or detained, they did not essentially differ therefrom. Under these statute provisions it was early held by the English courts that a joint tenant, or a tenant in common, might ‘ offend against the purport of them either by forcibly ejecting or forcibly holding out his companion ; for, although the entry of such tenant be lawful, yet the lawfulness of his entry in no way excuses the violence or lessens the injury done to his companion.’ Hawk. P. C. 64, sec. 33; Dalt. 315; Bac. Abr., title, Forcible Entry and Detainer. The leading case in which this point was distinctly raised and decided is King v. Marrow, Ca. temp. H. 174, where the*519 previous cases are cited. And it seems to have been uniformly held that, by the true interpretation of the statutes in England, restitution of the premises might be awarded for one joint tenant, or tenant in common, against the other. These adjudications, having been made prior to the separation from the mother country, and in relation to legislative provisions which were subsequently enacted by the General Court of the Colony, must be deemed to be an authoritative •exposition of the meaning of the statute, and to have been adopted and acted upon -when similar statutes were passed by the Colonial Legislature, more especially as they seem to be, in themselves, just and reasonable. Upon careful consideration, we are unable to see any good ground for refusing to yield an assent to them.
“ Of course, in such cases the remedy must be made to conform to the right or title of the party. The writ of restitution should not issue to restore the plaintiff to the possession of the whole estate, but only to such portion as it appeared on the-trial he was entitled to possess and enjoy. Nor would there be any practical difficulty in enforcing such process. The defendant could be removed by the officer from the exclusive possession of the premises, and the plaintiff put into joint possession with his co-tenant.”
So, in Illinois, under their statute, it is held that one joint tenant, or tenant in common, may maintain an action of forcible entry and detainer against his co-tenant. Mason v. Finch, 1 Scam. 495. And in Kentucky it is also held (Robertson v. Robertson, 2 B. Mon. 237; Taylor v. White, 1 T. B. Mon. 37) that where one parcener forcibly keeps his coparcener out, the action will lie, but judgment of restitution can only be to be restored to the joint, not the exclusive, possession.
Our statute contains provisions which are not explicitly set forth in the statutes under which the decisions which we have cited were made. Thus, our law expressly provides the form of the judgment, — -“that complainant have resti
The claim in this case did not correctly describe the character of the possession to which the plaintiff says he is entitled. This would not be fatal to a recovery; but the finding and judgment in the case were, in this respect, wholly unsupported by the proof. It is not pretended that plaintiff" was entitled to the exclusive possession of these premises ; and clearly the judgment, in this respect, is wrong. The judgment could not be for any thing more than an undivided interest. If there be any legal right to restitution in this case, it cannot be, as adjudged below, a right of exclusive-possession, but only to an occupancy in conjunction with defendant; for, from such an occupancy only, on his own showing, was plaintiff driven. As the evidence did not authorize the finding and judgment for restitution of the entire and exclusive possession, the judgment must, of course, be reversed. 2 B. Mon. 239; Eads v. Rucker, 2 Dana, 112.
It can hardly be necessary to say that a mere license cannot be enforced by any process known to the law; that it passes no interest, and is a mere authority to do some act or acts in or about the premises ; and that, if plaintiff was-a mere licensee of defendant, there was no common possession, or possession of any kind, by him, and this action will not lie. If, however, McHose had a right to the exclusive possession of the room, and permitted defendant to occupy the room with him, for the purposes of their business, the-fact that he was their servant would give them no right .to-
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause remanded.