30 N.Y.S. 987 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
An action was brought in this court by one Falding W. Skinner against the defendant Odenbach to recover the possession of the undivided two-fifths of a parcel of land in the county of Monroe, upon which the defendant had constructed an hotel. The action was duly referred, and the referee made his report in favor of the plaintiff. Immediately' upon the receipt of the report, and without notice to the defendant, the plaintiff caused to be entered a judgment in said action adjudging that he was entitled to the possession of an undivided two-fifths of said premises; and he at once caused to be issued, and directed to the sheriff of Monroe county, an execution directing him to put the plaintiff into possession of the whole of said premises. The judgment was entered and the execution issued on the 3d day of May, 1894. The sheriff, armed with this process, assumed to and did remove the defendant from the premises, and placed the plaintiff in said execution in possession thereof; leaving, however, the furniture of the defendant in the hotel. The plaintiffs in this action, claiming to be the owners of an undivided two-fifths of the said property, accompanied the sheriff and the plaintiff Falding W. Skinner to the premises, and entered thereon in company with the sheriff, and thereupon asserted and claimed that they were in lawful possession, to the exclusion of the defendant As soon as Odenbach learned of the entry of the judgment, he caused an appeal to be taken therefrom, and gave the undertaking required in such cases, with sufficient sureties, and, upon due notice, obtained an order of the special term vacating and set
The principal question presented by this appeal is whether the-court had the power to include the provision in said order relating to-the dispossessing of the plaintiffs in this action. The order was granted upon the return of an order to show cause, which recited that it was granted upon the affidavits of the defendant r-l his counsel, Edward Harris, and all the papers and proceedings reierred to in the affidavit, both in this action and those used upon the motion in the ejectment action. It was stated in the affidavit of the defendant that the only possession the plaintiffs obtained of the premises they got by means of the execution aforesaid, and by the acts of the sheriff thereunder. This was not denied by the plaintiffs’ affidavit. The court had the right to assume from these facts that the plaintiffs' possession was obtained by their accompanying the sheriff when he went with the execution to place the plaintiff therein in possession of the premises, and they entered the premises by the consent of the sheriff, and under his protection. The defendant, being in possession of the property, claiming to be the owner thereof, was entitled to remain, notwithstanding the judgment, for that, as we have seen, was for but the undivided two-fifths of the premises. The execution was irregular in so far as it directed the sheriff to put the plaintiff in possession of the entire property. While, as joint owner with the defendant, he had the right to enter upon the possession of the property by virtue of his judgment, the defendant had an equal right to the
The supreme court now possesses all the powers formerly exercised by the old supreme court and the court of chancery. Section 1311 ■of the Code does not confer any new powers upon the court, considered- as a court of equity; hence, no argument can be derived from it that it impliedly prohibits the court from exercising a similar power in respect to land. Instances are numerous where the courts have applied equitable principles and rules to purely legal actions, and the fact that the comm°”-law courts disclaim the power to act in such ■cases is no reason why the court is prevented from exercising its equity powers.
The plaintiffs in this action having obtained possession in the manner they did, and, in effect, forcibly ejecting the defendant from the possession of the property, illegally assuming to avail themselves of the authority of a process which gave no such authority, the special term, having jurisdiction of the parties, did not, we think, exceed its ■equitable powers when it directed the sheriff to reinstate the defend
While we have no hesitation in holding that the order, so far as it set aside the injunction order, and directed the sheriff to reinstate the defendant in possession of the property, was properly granted, it is not so clear that the court had power to direct the removal from the premises of the plaintiffs. Entertaining the motion and granting the order at a special term held in connection with a circuit was a matter in the discretion of the court. Falding W. Skinner not being a party to the action in which the order appealed from was granted, the court did not have jurisdiction to direct his removal. The order appealed from should be so modified as to limit its operations to the vacation of the injunction, and the restitution of the defendant to the possession of the undivided three-fifths of the premises; and, as so modified, it should be affirmed, without cost of the appeal to either party. All concur.