86 Mo. App. 447 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900
This is an action of forcible entry and detainer in which plaintiff prevailed in the trial court.
Defendant is a mining company and is a lessee from the owner of the land. The plaintiff was a miner and went upon a designated lot upon defendant’s land to dig for mineral (lead and zinc). Plaintiff took with him some mining tools and had done work in his search for mineral. He went daily on to the land and prosecuted his work under what are sometimes designated as mining rules, which defendant had adopted and which are authorized by section 1034, Eevised Statutes 1889. A disagreement between the parties came about, on account, as defendant claimed, of plaintiff’s willfully violating the rules aforesaid and thereby forfeiting his right to go upon the land to prosecute his work. Defendant thereupon, without plaintiff’s consent and against his will, went upon the particular lot upon which plaintiff was prosecuting his work and removed his derrick from the lot and his tools from the shaft. Plaintiff then begun this action.
In order to maintain forcible entry and detainer one must have had peaceable possession of the property when he was ousted. Nelson v. Nelson, 30 Mo. App. 184; Wood v. Dalton, 26 Mo. 581. And the possession must be real and not a mere sham. DeGraw v. Prior, 60 Mo. 56.
The question for decision is, did plaintiff have such possession of the land as will afford him ground upon which to base his action? We think he had not. He only claims to have had whatever possession his daily entry under the rules aforesaid gave to him. That was no possession at all. It was only an occupancy by license and plaintiff was a mere licensee with the possession in the mining company as lessee of the lapd. By going upon the lot under the rules, plaintiff voluntarily became a licensee occupant and not a possessor. He would not even own the mineral he might discover and dig. This
Decisions of the supreme court and of this court, though not in eases of forcible entry and detainer, show the nature of plaintiff’s possession. Chynowitch v. Granby M. Co., 74 Mo. 174; Lunsford v. Lead Co., 54 Mo. 426. In Boone v. Stover, 66 Mo. 430, it is said: “By a lease, the lessee obtains an estate in possession of the land and its products, in respect to which he can maintain ejectment; but, in a license or grant of an incorporeal hereditament the grantor does not divest himself of the possession, and the liberty of working a mine or mines on it is not inconsistent with the retention of possession by the grantor.”
That case is affirmed in Foundry Co. v. Cole, 130 Mo. 1. Both those cases refer to Henley v. Wood, 2 B. & Ald. 736, in which it was held the miner was a mere licensee though his contract or conveyance gave him a right of property in the mineral which' he “dug and got.” The miner under the rules shown in this case has less interest than that, for as before observed, the miner does not become the owner of what he finds and digs. It remains the property of the proprietor. Under the rules shown in this case the license would be revocable at any time by the licensor, but for the inference of a continuous right in the miner so long as the requirements of the rules are kept by him. But a mere licensee without possessory right, and whose occupancy is based on that sort of license, has not such possession as will sustain an action of forcible entry and detainer. McHose v. Ins. Co., 4 Mo. App. 514.
But plaintiff insists that he is sustained in his right to
We readily concede that a licensee could have such possession as would entitle him to this action when ousted with force. But a licensee who has no possession — whose license is merely to labor for the owner at certain compensation, is no more in possession than any other employee who goes daily on his employer’s premises (keeping his tools there) to labor for him.
He makes no pretense of having been in adversely to defendant except as his daily entry to do work under the mining rules may be so considered. He claimed under the rules and not independent of them. If a trespasser moves into' the possession of the owner’s house, claiming possession adverse to the owner, and the owner forcibly dispossess him, the trespasser may maintain this action. But suppose the trespasser was a burglar who was only occupying while he stole, his claim to possession would be a sham and he could not maintain this action against the owner. So if the owner returns home and finds himself barred out by his domestic servant. Here, if a possession has in reality heen set up, with intention of use and occupancy, and the owner forces it, the servant cou-ld have the action. But if the act of the servant was not, in reality, for
Tbe decision here made bas nothing to do with tbe merits of tbe original controversy between tbe parties. If defendant was in tbe wrong it is answerable in damages. If its agents have violated tbe criminal statutes, they are a subject of proper punishment. Tbe only question with us is whether plaintiff was in sucb position as to possession as gave him a legal right to maintain tbe action of forcible entry and detainer, and being of tbe opinion that be was not, we reverse tbe judgment'.