101 Ala. 599 | Ala. | 1893
This is an action of trespass prosecuted by Maud Milner against Leonora J. Milner and one Rogers. The complaint claims damages “for trespass by the defendants ” on a certain described bed room, which was at the time in the possession and occupation of the plaintiff, and for ‘ ‘wrongfully, violently and rudely taking and carrying away” therefrom certain items of personal property. The case was tried on the general issue.
The house, of which the room in question was a part,, belonged to the plaintiff and her brother and sister in common, having descended to them from their mother. After the mother’s death, their father continued in possession and occupancy of the premises, plaintiff living with him, until his death not long before this litigation arose. Meantime he had taken a second wife in the person of the defendant Leonora J. Milner who continued to reside in the house down to the time of the alleged trespass, plaintiff all the time occupying this room. Said defendant had the personal effects in the room set apart to her and a minor son of her late husband by his first marrage by a decree of the probate court, as in part their exemptions of personalty from administration; but plaintiff insisted on the trial of this case, and introduced evidence going to show, that her father had given her most of this property in his life time, and that as to the rest it had belonged to her mother and became hers at her mother’s death. This gift by the father was denied bjr defendants, and one aspect of the evidence tended to show the contrary. There was also evidence that after her husband’s death, Leonora continued in some sort the head of the family. She was
It is manifest that the gist of this action lies in the disturbance of plaintiff’s possession and occupancy of the room, and not in any injury done to the room itself, and hence, if her possession was rightful and was wrongfully disturbed the right of action is in her alone and not in her conj ointly with her co-tenants in common. Having with others the title, it can not be doubted and is not contended but that her possession was rightful. The insistence is, however, that the disturbance thereof was not wrongful, the theory being that the defendant Leonora Milner, having remained in the house after the death of her husband, and continued to be, in a sense, the head of the household, had aright to enter any room on the premises including this one, notwithstanding objections on the part of those in the rightful occupation and use of them. We are unable to concur in this view. Mrs Milner,-the defendant, was wholly without right to even continue on the premises after the death of her husband. She did remain there at the mere will and sufferance of the plaintiff, who was the only common tenant in possession. Her assumption or continued exercise of control as head of the family was similarly without other warrant than plaintiff's forbearance until such time as she chose to put an end to it. Having thus the right to the exclusive possession of the premises as against Mrs. Milner whenever and to whatever extent she saw proper to assert it, it was of course competent for her at any time, and in the mode shown by the evidence to have been adopted by her, to assert that right in respect of the room personally and immediately occupied by her, and after such assertion — after her protest and objection to Mrs. Milner’s entering that room in the
What we have said disposes of the objection to that part of the general charge whereby the jury were instructed that, “if the plaintiff was occupying the room, she had a right to it as against a wrongdoer,” it being, as we have seen, undisputed that her occupation was rightful, and, as we have held, that such occupation became exclusive of Mrs. Milner and her agents upon plaintiff’s objection to their entry. The jury could not have been misled to the conclusion that defendants were wrongdoers ; under the uncontroverted evidence they were wrongdoers.
Charges 1 and 2, given at the request of the plaintiff, and the refusal of the court to give charge JO, requested by defendants, are similarly covered, and exceptions to these rulings of the court determined adversely to appellant by the conclusions announced above.
This action is joint and several. It was with the jury
We have considered all the assignments of errors insisted on in argument, and, finding them without merit, the judgment is affirmed.