People ex rel. Cooper v. Newcomb Field

58 Barb. 270 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1870

By the Court, Potter, J.

The law of this case, as pronounced at the general and special terms, under somewhat varying states of fact, has greatly complicated our review. Desiring to observe all proper regard for the adjudications of the court, whose decisions we so highly respect, and which, so far as they are applicable, we must hold to be the law of this case, we are met with some apparent conflicts of theory between the rulings at the circuit, and the law as I understand it to have been announced in the reported decisions of the same case. (52 Barb. 198. 1 Lansing, 222.)

The third section of the statute, entitled “ Of forcible entries and detainers,” (2 R. S. 508,) requires that the complaint shall show that the complainant has some estate *274in the premises, then subsisting, or some other right to the possession thereof, stating the same.

The relator alleged, as is seen, “ that he had a good and legal right and estate to said premises, and that he still has a legal right to the possession of said premises.” This is not stating the right, but the legal conclusion. This was held in 52 Barbour, not. a compliance with the statute. This is a statute proceeding; the authority to proceed is derived from the statute; and in such, cases, strict compliance is required, though this objection may be waived by omitting to make it in proper time. The objection to the sufficiency of this complaint was taken before the county judge, and the objection overruled. In the same case, in

I Lansing, the court held that, in such casé, if the objection is taken before the county judge and overruled, after the proceedings are brought into this court by certiorari, it is competent for the defendant, and he should renew the objection before he traverses the inquisition. This was done on the last trial and traverse of this case; and the objection was overruled by the circuit judge. It appears to me that on this review, we should, regard the decisions of the general term as the law of the case in this court, and I think it would be unbecoming in us, even did we doubt its soundness, to overrule such decisions. The objection, then, so taken, should be held good, and the ruling to be error. (11 Wend. 157. 7 How. Pr. 441. 11 N. Y. 94.)

There are certain undisputed facts in this case which seem to me to have a controlling influence upon the case— influence in settling the law—-and are most material to its determination.

Many years prior to the year 1860, one Sands Higginbotham was, or claimed to be, the owner, and was in possession, of certain lands in Oneida village, including the premises in question, and by an agreement made by him with one James Fish, the latter was permitted to remove *275a building owned by him, upon the premises in question. Ho thing was said about the time it might remain, or when it should be removed; no agreement was made to pay rent; Higginbotham refused to receive any; and Fish made no agreement to pay rent. Fish removed his building partly upon the premises and partly in the street.

On the 15th of February, 1860, Higginbotham and wife conveyed by deed to Hathan B. Wilber, Albert E. Ooe and others, in trust, certain premises and real estate in said village, which included the premises in question. On the 31st of October, 1861, a majority of these trustees made an executory contract with the defendant and one Charles Field, for the sale and conveyance to the latter of a portion of the said trust property, and which contract included, in its description, the locus in quo. This contract, in terms, gave the vendees possession of the premises so agreed to be conveyed, and they entered into the possession, for the purpose of erecting a building upon the premises, in pursuance of the said agreement. Charles Field afterwards released to the defendant. In the spring or summer of 1862, the defendant, desiring to build a block of stores upon the lot, requested Fish to remove the building in question from the lot, which Fish agreed to do, and made preparations by a contract to do so, and he obtained the implements for that purpose, and consented that the defendant might excavate the earth up to the building he occupied, and the defendant did so excavate up to the side, and in front, of the building, without objection. After this, and on the 31st of July, 1862, Fish sold this building to the relator, Cooper, by a written contract, stating that the shop (the building in question) should remain where it was, Fish to retain the possession, until the money was paid; and when paid, he was to render up possession to the relator. Fish remained in possession under the relator, until about the 1st of May, 1863, when he removed his things from the shop, except *276a few trifling articles, and gave the key to the relator, whose possession from that time was the possession of the key, and occasional opening and entering into the shop, and locking up and departing therefrom, until the morning of the 9th of June, 1863, when the building was wholly removed from said premises into the street, by the defendant. The above, I think, are undisputed facts. It may not be material, upon the question of law which these facts present, to add the following; but it may be as well to state it in this connection; that when the relator purchased the building he knew the progress of the defendant’s preparation for building, and the extent of excavation then made, to the side, and in front of the building he purchased; and knew that Fish had made a bargain with men to move the shop from the premises; that Fish had actually procured the removal of the hay scales in front of the shop; and the relator also knew that such intended removal was to enable the defendant to erect his block of buildings.

Upon the facts above stated, the relator’s possession in law, if he had any possession, was that, exactly, and no better than that of his vendor, Fish, and the relator took subject to all the previous acts of Fish. The possession of Fish was either that of a mere licensee, or as tenant at will. Whatever his interest had been before the sale to the relator, it had in part been surrendered to the defendant by Fish. Fish knew that the defendant held a conveyance, or an agreement for one, with possession under it, in a direct line from Higginbotham, under whom he (Fish) took, and had been in possession. He knew as a fact, and he was bound to know in law, that Field had all the rights that Higginbotham possessed when he, Fish, moved his building upon the premises. Fish had never denied, and in law he could not deny, the title of Higginbotham, under whom he entered into possession. As little could he deny the title of Higginbotham’s grantees, or alienees.

*277If Fish was a tenant at will, (which I do not assert,) and if the relator could take a conveyance of such a tenure, (which I deny,) the tenancy was destroyed by setting up the title of the State, or of any one else, in hostility to the title under which he held or went into possession. I think the court erred, on the trial, in permitting the relator to show title to the locus in quo in any one other than Higginbotham and his alienees. Indeed I think it would have been the duty of the court at circuit to have nonsuited the plaintiff, if the objection had been made on the ground that there had been no forcible entry, in law, by the defendant; but this objection was not in due form made.

Due respect for what the court has settled to be the law of this case, (which was probably not before the judge at the circuit,) makes it unnecessary to discuss the controverted facts which appear in the voluminous case before us. I propose only, further, to notice the exceptions to the charge of the judge to the jury, and the exceptions to his refusal to charge, made to him by the defendant’s counsel. I think, in view of the law as settled, that the following paragraphs of the judge’s charge which are excepted to, are each erroneous, viz: “ The relator was in the actual possession of the premises, and was at the time he went there; that he was in the constructive possession in the morning when he went there, after the building was removed, so as to entitle him to maintain these proceedings.”

“The relator has the right to go to the water in the feeder, or at least to the angle of the bank, upon his complaint and the inquisition.”

“If the land belonged to the State, then he (the relator) can maintain forcible entry and detainer.”

I think the refusal of the court to charge the following propositions, as requested by the defendant’s counsel, was also erroneous:

*278[Third Department, General Term, at Plattsburgh, July 5, 1870.

“Neither Fish nor any one holding under him, can dispute the title of Higginbotham.”

“The relator cannot prove, under the complaint and inquisition, that the shop in question was on the land belonging to the State.”

“If Higginbotham was in possession of the premises in question, whether the State land or not, if Fish moved the shop on them by the license of Higginbotham, Fish could not controvert Higginbotham’s title.”

If there had ever been a tenancy at will, it was such that it had been terminated by the request of the defendant to remove the shop and terminate it, and by the consent of Fish to do so, and a surrender of a part of the premises by him in pursuance of such request. The entry of the landlord, after this, was in pursuance of a legal right to enter; he was revested with the right of possession, and could not be a wrongdoer in entering; and as a legitimate consequence, could not be guilty of forcibly detaining that which was his own. He committed no act of violence upon the relator; he committed no breach of the peace with a multitude of people, and with a strong hand.

The case was tried, I think, upon an erroneous theory, and errors are the natural consequence. I do not propose to discuss, from the facts, the distinctions between the actual and constructive possession; whether there may be, m certain cases, forcible detainer, when there has been no forcible entry ; whether the building in question was real or personal property; nor where is the true line that separates the property of the defendant from that of the State. Doubless the jury have passed upon some of these questions ; but in my view of the law they were immaterial in this case. The errors we have pointed out are sufficient to direct a new trial.

New trial granted.

Miller, P. J., and Potter and Parker, Justices.]