87 Mo. App. 486 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1901
Murray Phillips and Amos R. Phillips
No injury of any kind to the inheritance was shown; in fact, the only thing insisted on by the plaintiffs is the reasonable rental value for the three years the ground was occupied by Stewart’s tenants prior to the institution of the suit. The
The evidence tended to show the yearly value of the rents and profits was from three dollars to three dollars and a half an acre. The court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for $540.
No objection was made to the sufficiency of the petition in the court below by demurrer or otherwise, except in the motion in arrest. It must, therefore, be held good if it states a cause of action at all. Paddock v. Somes, 102 Mo. 226; Thompson v. School District, 71 Mo. 495; Grove v. City of Kansas, 75 Mo. 672. Appellant contends it is not good as an action for use and occupation, because it does not aver the relation of landlord and tenant existed between plaintiffs and defendant. This position is well taken. Bank v. Aull, 80 Mo. 201. He also insists it is not good as a suit for mesne profits.because it fails to allege the plaintiffs had possession of the premises and were disturbed or expelled by the defendant. So far as the sufficiency of the petition is concerned, this defect, if it is one, is plainly cured by the statute of jeofails, the ninth clause of which expressly provides against the stay or reversal of a judgment for the omission of any allegation or averment, without proving which the triers of the issufe ought not to have given the veráict. R. S. 1899, sec. 672. The allegation of an unlawful, tortious entry and seizure of the crops states a cause of action good after verdict. Knox County v. Brown, 103 Mo. 223; Bank v. Leyser, 116 Mo. 51; Green v. Supreme Lodge, 79 Mo. App. 179; Murphy v. Ins. Co., 70 Mo. App. 78.
This is clearly an action to recover mesne profits. The essential fact to be proven by the plaintiff in that action and, therefore, the one necessary to be pleaded is, that he was in possession of the premises when he commenced proceedings, and such is the substance of the judgment as we understand it, in
Possession by plaintiff prior to the suit is a prerequisite to Ms right to recover. Brown v. Galloway, 1 Pet C. C. 291; Buell v. Harding, 72 Maine, 129; Caldwell v. Walters, 22 Penn. St. 378; Stancil v. Calverts, 63 N. C. 616; Carson v. Smith 1 Jones (N. C.) 106. Such possession by the respondents was admitted.
The trespass by the defendant and possession on the part of the plaintiff when it was committed, as conditions of recovery, were pure fictions growing out of. the common-law theories of pleading, and like other legal fictions have no place in our present system. Originally, at common law, as now under the code, rents and profits were recovered in ejectment as part of the damages. Afterwards, when the proceedings became fictitious and the plaintiff nominal, the damages assessed were nominal also. On this account, and to prevent the owner from being left without redress for the loss of his rents, the courts sanctioned an application of the common-law action of trespass vi et armis as a remedy. This came to be styled an action for mesne profits. Adams on Ejectment (4 Ed.), ch. 13, p. 443. But the vi et armis, or trespass, was no more insisted on than is the ejectment which it was devised to supplement. The former action lay then, as it does still, against a tenant holding over after lapse of his term, and on his being ousted, the action for mesne profits also lay against him. In such instance there was, of course, no breaking of the close nor possession in the plaintiff at the time of the alleged trespass. So it was available against one who entered under a contract for a deed and then refused to perform the contract. Smith v. Stewart, 6 Johns 46; Turnpike Co. v. Rogers, 7 Bush, 532. The judgment in ejectment was conclusive against the defend- and in the supplemental suit as to the right of the plaintiff from the time of the demise laid in the declaration and later, after
The circumstance that this action was an offshoot from the old form of trespass vi et armis has caused the courts to be ingenious in springing devices to evade the requirement of injury to the plaintiff’s possession and thereby make the remedy adequate to all cases. It is, therefore, held that, when the owner re-enters,the entry relates back to the time when his right accrued and converts the original disseizin by the defendant into a trespass. Hooker v. Whitaker, 5 Watts, 474; Reid v. Stanley, 6 W. & S. supra; Dewey v. Osborne, 4 Cow. 329; Morgan v. Vance, 8 Wend. 587; Cox v. Callender, 9 Mass. 503. Where the defendant went into possession under a deed from the plaintiff and both supposed it to be valid, but after-wards plaintiff recovered on account of an informality in it, it was held, an action for the mesne profits would lie upon the fiction of law that the disseizee after his re-entry, had been in possession during the period of the disseizin. Truber v. Nuttler, 48 Comm. 347. That case was identical in material facts
Appellant makes the point that he rented the tract of land bought by him as one hundred and seventy-one acres, receiving pay for only that quantity and, therefore, the tenants and not he are answerable to the respondent for the rents and profits of the sixty acres surplus cultivated by them. The authorities are against this position. Actual occupation by a person, either in person or as landlord, renders him liable. Adams on Ejectment (4 Ed.), 449; Burne v. Richardson, 4 Tamit. 720; Doe v. Harlow, 12 Ad. & Ell. 40; Stoych v. Carr, 28 Penn. St. 135; Magwire v. Lebaume, 7 Mo. App. supra; Wood v. Maguire, 17 Ga. 303.
Our statutory legislation has revived the ancient right of a plaintiff to recover rents and profits as part of the damages in ejectment. R. S. 1899, sec. 3065.
The right can no more be defeated by a surrender of possession than it could at common law. The owner must be made whole. He neither gains nor loses by the fact that his entry is uncontested. So much like ejectment is the action for mesne profits that an innocent defendant is allowed to offset his claim for improvements. Green v. Biddle, Subeat 1; Freer v. Hardenhurgh, 5 Johns 272; Marrs v. Simple, Addis R. 215; Tongue v. Nuttwell, 31 Mo. 312; Thomas v. Malcolm, 39 Ga. 328; Evetts v. Tendrick, 44 T. 570. Neither does it bar a subsequent action for injury to the inheritance during the same period. Gill v. Cole, 1 Harr. & Johns 403.
The final question is, what was the measure of the damages the respondent was entitled to recover ? Appellant contends
The judgment must be reversed on a point not raised by counsel. Thev case of the respondents is neither better nor worse than if they had recovered by ejectment, as before stated. This action should simply round out their relief. Our statute concerning the recovery of rents and profits in ejectment expressly provides that when it shall not be shown on the trial that the defendant had knowledge of the plaintiff’s claim prior to the commencement of the action, he shall recover rents and profits only from the commencement, and when it is shown that such knowledge came to him within five years before the commencement of the. action, such recovery shall be from the time he acquired the knowledge. It is not perfectly clear when the defendant, in the case in hand, found out plaintiffs claimed title. He surrendered possession as soon as demand for it was made, but there was some evidence that the plaintiffs had been claiming for a while before that occurred.
We, therefore, rule that the measure of damages is the annual value of the monthly rents and profits of the land from the time when it shall be shown that Stewart first obtained knowledge of the respondent’s claim. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.