13 How. Pr. 446 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1857
It has been decided, that upon certiorari, issued under the statute relative to forcible entries and detainers, this court is bound to interpose to correct mistakes in the law, bearing upon the merits, made by the county judge upon taking the inquisition. (The People agt. Read, 11 Wend. 157 ; Carter agt. Newbold, 10 How. Prac. R. 166.) It was also decided, in the case in Wendell, that as the statute authorized the judge to issue subpoenas at the request of either party, (§ 17,) the defendants had a right to examine
The defendants offered to prove, by a witness whom they introduced, that the defendants, and those under whom they claim, were and always had been in the actual and peaceable possession of the premises in question, and that the complainant had never been in the actual possession of such premises. But the judge decided that the defendants could not, in this stage of the proceedings, show the actual possession of the premises in question in themselves, or controvert the possession of the complainant, and rejected the proffered evidence. The offer went somewhat further than the decision of the judge as stated in the return. It was to show that the defendants were, at the time of the alleged forcible entry, and had been for a long time before, (“ always,” as stated by the defendants’ counsel—although it is difficult to see how that could have been proved,) in the peaceable possession of the disputed premises, and that they had never been in the actual possession of the complainant. Now, if the defendants were at the time in peaceable possession, and they, and those under W'hom they claimed, had long held such possession, and the complainant had merely made an entry upon the property, but not so as to give him the actual possession, there could not have been a forcible entry by the defendants within the intent of the statute.
It was not designed to give the summary remedy provided by the statute for the acts of a party whose possession had been long continued, and was peaceful. If such possession is without title or right, the law furnishes another, and in the end a more efficacious redress, and under proceedings where the rights and claims of the parties may be thoroughly investigated. The evidence tendered by the defendants was, therefore, pertinent to the questions before the jury of investigation, and the decision of which was to control their action. If it had been received it might, and if it had gone to the extent of the offer, should have led to a result favorable to the defendants.
It is unnecessary to consider the other questions discussed on the argument.
The order made at the special term should be vacated, with $10 costs, and the inquisition should be quashed.