15 Colo. App. 325 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1900
Whether we consider the interests of the public or the interests of the parties, we must regret our inability to affirm this judgment. The plaintiff has got nothing to which he might not be able to establish his title under proper conditions, and the defendants are prohibited nothing to which they have any apparent claim, yet the record does not warrant the judgment. A decree was entered which cannot be sustained on the bill. We shall dismiss all matters antecedent to the amended complaint. When it was filed it necessarily took the place of all prior pleading by the plaintiff and became the substitute for any which he had theretofore filed. For the purpose of the decision we shall consider it as we must take it after it was emasculated by the withdrawal at the hearing of all claim for damages, and in the light of the reservation then made of the right thereafter to litigate as to the alleged acts of the defendants. This voluntary act of the plaintiff requires us to look at the complaint as if it had been again amended by the striking out of all allegations whereon a cause of action sounding in damages could be predicated. We thereby have the right and the duty is laid on us to consider the sufficiency of the pleading thus viewed as a statement of a cause of action and as warranting the decree which was entered. These matters are sharply presented by the situation. The defendants answered. To the answer the plaintiff demurred. This demurrer was sustained. It is quite clear as we shall briefly suggest hereafter, the answer set up no defense unless it may possibly be to such part of the complaint as counted on the matters of trespass and damage. With those eliminated there was in law no is
To state the case made by the complaint: We shall summarize it in the briefest possible way consistent with clearness. The plaintiff alleged the recovery of a judgment by Joseph P. Schlink against William H. Smith for $197.50, an appeal to the court of appeals, and an affirmance. Pending the appeal Joseph died and Charles L. Schlink was appointed administrator. On this judgment an execution was sued out and levied on certain property which was described. Under the writ certain property was sold, part of it consisting of lots Nos. 29, 30, 31 and 32 Case & Ebert’s Addition to the city of Denver. The statute was observed, the plaintiff in the execution received the usual evidence of title and on the expiration of the period of redemption the sheriff made a deed for all this land and delivered it to the attorneys for the plaintiff. With the matter of this delivery we are not concerned for the complaint proceeds that thereafter William H. Smith and Mary, his wife, began an action against the administrator and the sheriff to restrain the execution and delivery of any deed to the property. The 'present complaint then sets up the history of that litigation, giving all the pleadings, the subsequent steps, and the ultimate decree. Therefrom it appears Smith and his wife in that suit set up a cause of action substantially that these lots were a homestead, properly preserved as such by due proceedings under the statute and
When the motion of the plaintiff to dismiss that part of his complaint sounding in damages was sustained, and we must not doubt the right of the plaintiff when he brings a suit to dismiss any part or all of it prior to the trial, it practically leaves for consideration only such part of the answer as consists of these allegations directed to the other portions of the complaint. The demurrer to the answer in so far as it was responsive to that part of the complaint setting up the litigation in the suit of the Smiths v. Schlink and the decree therein which was all that was left in the complaint after the motion was allowed, was properly sustained. We do not believe it lies with the Smiths at this time or at any time hereafter to question the validity of that decree or the character of the proceedings, or the suit which resulted in the
Having completed our examination of the answer we can recur to the complaint and we shall attempt to demonstrate that it states no cause of action and that thereon the plaintiff was not entitled to the decree which he got. The case was very considerably argued at the bar as it is in the briefs as an action to quiet title. We believe it contains none of the elements of such an action. We are quite ready to concede a possession obtained by trespass will be sufficient to support such a suit since the supreme court has so declared, and we are quite willing likewise to admit that unless the defendants set up some claim of title or adverse interest, they cannot by a denial of the possession and title of the plaintiff raise an issue and force him to proof of his complaint in this particular. This is the law. Its admission, however, in no manner aids the plaintiff, because if the plaintiff would state a cause of action to quiet title he must set up in his pleading and by apt averment show that the defendant has or claims to have, or is asserting a title or claim adverse to him. We do not understand this title or adverse interest or claim is simply with reference to the possession, but it is one which results from an assertion of an interest in the property of some kind or description. It must be an assertion of an interest in or an assertion of a title to the property of a sort which gives a right to the possession. It must be in the legal sense the assertion of an adverse interest or estate in the property. As the supreme court put it, “the very essence of the enlarged statutory proceeding remains the same as it was in equity, viz ; to compel one asserting an adverse interest in the property to aver and try such asserted interest.'’ Wall v. Magnes, 17 Colo. 476. The proceeding is totally unlike an action in ejectment. If the plaintiff does not aver that the defendant asserts an adverse estate or interest in the premises there is no basis for the action nor does it call for a defense,
Having dismissed his suit for trespass and damages, and the complaint as an action to quiet title being adjudged insufficient, there only remains to be considered the allegations found in the complaint whereon the plaintiff prosecutes his right to a permanent writ of injunction. Originally injunctions were never granted in cases of trespass except where there was an element of waste or a multiplicity of suits had been brought or threatened attacking the plaintiff’s title. The absence of limitation to the number of actions in ejectment which might be brought at the common law undoubtedly led to the granting of writs of injunction in such cases. It is quite clear there is no such element in this case and that there were no suits over the possession other than the one whereby the plaintiff’s title to lot No. 29 was conclusively adjudicated, and no possessory actions had been instituted to try the plaintiff’s title or to question it. We may therefore dismiss this element of equity jurisdiction from consideration. It only leaves the question whether a suit of this sort or a writ of this description may be brought in aid of an action of trespass. We need not discuss the question whether in an action of trespass there may be joined with it, as is always the case in mining litigations, a prayer for an injunction pendente lite to preserve the property pending the ultimate determination of the action. This is no such suit because when the plaintiff dismissed his action of trespass there was no such action left to be aided by the temporary writ. There is thereby left only the question whether a bill in equity for
We have thus as we think fully disposed of all the matters which have been presented to our attention and which the parties have any right to call on us to decide. So far as we can we have settled the question of title between the parties and simply permit the appellee to recover what if any damages he has sustained. We regret the necessity to leave this question open and we entertain the hope, though it may be ill founded, that when the defendants discover their inability to attack the title secured to the plaintiff by the decree in the suit of Smith v. Schlink, they may be willing to forego any further contest in the premises and prevent further litigation, and the parties may come together and adjust their various altercations.
For the reasons expressed the judgment of the court below is reversed.
Reversed.