15 How. Pr. 358 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1858
Notwithstanding the provisions contained in sections 36 and 38 of the Eevised Statutes, concerning the action of ejectment, declaring that the judgment under certain limitations shall he conclusive upon the title, it is still to all intents and purposes a possessory action. The plaintiff when successful recovers the possession. “ The action of ejectment is retained, and may be brought in the cases and in the manner heretofore accustomed,” subject to the provisions of the act. (Section 1.) “ No person can recover in ejectment, unless he has at the time of commencing the action á valid subsisting interest in the premises claimed, and a right to recover the same, or to recover the possession thereof,” &c. (Section 3.) He must "aver in his declaration, that on some day therein specified, which must be after his title accrued, he was possessed of the premises in question, describing them as hereinafter provided, and being so possessed thereof, that the de* fendant afterwards on some day to be stated, entered into such premises, and that he unlawfully withholds from the plaintiff
It is true the verdict is to specify the estate which shall have been established on the trial by the plaintiff, and unless set aside and vacated pursuant to section 37, it ultimately determines the right and the title which a verdict in ejectment did not determine before the Eevised Statutes, but it does this through the action of' ejectment, which up to that time was [purely and strictly a possessory action.
' If the premises are actually occupied, the occupant must be made a defendant. (Section 4.) This was the old rule, and the case of Doe agt. Stanton, (2 Barn. & Ald. 371,) turned upon the point whether the defendant was in the situation of servant to another, or in the possession as tenant., The latter clause of section 4, is an innovation upon the old practice. It enables a plaintiff to maintain an action for the recovery of lands,
The defendants then are, 1st. The occupant when the premises are actually occupied. 2d. Where the premises are not actually occupied, then the person exercising acts of ownership. Or, 3d. A person claiming title thereto or some interest therein at the commencement of the suit. (Vide Shaffer agt. McGraw, 12 Wendell, 558; Banyer agt. Empie, 5 Hill, 48.) It is no longer necessary to prove an actual ouster except when the action is brought by one tenant in common against a co-tenant, in which case an ouster must be proved, or some act amounting to a total denial of the plaintiff’s right. If the action be against several defendants and a joint possession of all be proved, the plaintiff shall have a verdict against all, whether they have pleaded separately or jointly. (Section 28.)
These references prove, I think, that whatever may be the condition of the defendants, whether in the actual occupation, or out of the occupation, and exercising acts of ownership, or simply and purely claiming the title, the plaintiff’s condition in respect to his ability to maintain the action, remains as it was. He at least must be out of the possession. The possession must be unlawfully withheld from him. And that fact must affirmatively appear upon the face of his complaint.
A person in the possession of real property suffers no actual injury from a claim of title by another person out of possession. And if the former desires to have the claim determined, he may effect his object by proceedings under the statute, “ to compel the determination of claims to real property in certain cases.” If the party claiming should enter upon his possession and exercise acts of ownership, his remedy is by an action of trespass. A party out of the possession cannot maintain trespass, and this is the reason why a party in that condition with a good title, must first resort to his action of ejectment, and ob
The defect in the complaint in this action—if there be one—consists in this, that the plaintiff shows himself in the possession of the premises claimed. He first states, “ that on the 1st day of September, 1855, he was seized in fee simple and possessed of all,” &c., describing the premises by metes and bounds. And “ after he became seized and possessed, the said defendants claimed and now claim title to, or some interest in the northern portion of the said premises, lying north, &c., and have exercised and do exercise acts of ownership over the same, or some part thereof, in violation of the right and title of the plaintiff,” and concludes with the usual prayer that he may recover the possession, &c. He does not say, as I think he should have said, that thereby he lost and was deprived of the possession of that portion of the premises upon which the acts of ownership were exercised, and to which the defendants claim title, which the defendants still unlawfully withhold from him. For this reason, I think the complaint materially defective. The latter clause of section 4 of tire statute was intended to give a plaintiff having the title and a right of entry, and who was out of the possession, authority to. maintain an action and recover lands in ejectment where there was no actual occupation, against a person exercising acts of ownership, or claiming title to land. And this,
The defendants must have judgment upon the demurrer. With leave to the plaintiff to amend, within twenty days, upon the usual terms.