8 N.H. 57 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1835
delivered the opinion of the court.
The question to be decided is, whether the evidence in this case was in law sufficient to maintain the issue on the part of the demandant.
The matter in issue was whether the tenant had entered and expelled the demandant.
To maintain this issue on his part, it was not necessary that the demandant should show an actual expulsion. It was only necessary to show that the tenant had done what gave him a right to consider himself as disseized.
The only evidence introduced to maintain the issue, on the part of the demandant, was, that the tenant, having a deed of the land from a third person, declared that he had bought the land and intended to hold it. Did this evidence show a disseizin ?
In order to settle this question, it becomes necessary to ascertain the true nature of a disseizin.
Seizin signifies, in the common law, possession. Co. Litt. 153, a. It is not, however, every possession which
He, who has a lawful title to a fee or a freehold in land, is presumed to be in possession, and to have seizin, until the contrary appears. 4 Mass. R. 417—418; 4 Wheaton 213, 223; 3 N. H. R. 23.
He who enters under a deed which purports to convey to him a fee or a freehold, or under any other color of title to such an estate, is presumed to enter claiming according to his deed or other title, and his possession is seizin. 8 Cranch 250; 5 Peters S. C. R. 354; 3 N. H. R. 51.
And he, who enters without color of title, and turns the owner out of possession, or forcibly holds him out, lias a possession which amounts to a seizin. 3 N. H. R. 51.
He, who having a lease for years, is in possession of land, is presumed to be in possession claiming according to his lease, until the contrary appears : and in general his possession is not considered as a seizin in himself. By the feudal law, the possession was always considered to be in him who had the freehold. He who was in possession for a term of years was considered as holding the land in the name of the tenant of the freehold. Co. Litt. 330, b, note 285.
And even at this day, the possession of a tenant for years is considered as the possession of the tenant of the freehold, which constitutes a seizin in the latter. For if any one enters and turns the tenant for years out of the possession, and forcibly holds him out, the tenant of the freehold is disseized.
He who enters upon land, without any color of title, is always presumed to enter under the tenant of the freehold, and his possession is always considered as the possession of the freeholder, until the contrary appears. 3 N. H. R. 52.
Seizin then may be defined to be possession of land under a claim, either express or implied by law, of an estate amounting at least to a freehold.
And Coke, in his commentary on this passage in Little-ton, says, every entry is no disseizin, unless there be an ouster of the freehold. Co. Litt. 181, a, and 153, b.
And this language of Littleton and Coke is considered at this day as giving a true definition of an actual disseizin. 1 Johnson’s cases 36; 6 John. R. 217; 2 N. H. R. 456, Wendell vs. Blanchard; 5 Cowen 374; 4 Mass. R. 418.
Every disseizin is a trespass; but it is not every trespass which amounts to an actual disseizin. A disseizin is a continued trespass under a claim of title.
Si eo animo forte ingrediatur fundurn alienum non quod sibi usurpet tenementum vel jura, non facit disseisinam, sed transgressionem. Sed quoniam ineertum est, quo animo hoc facial, ideo quereos sibi perquirat per assisam et quo casu querendiun erit a judice quo animo hoc fecerit. Bracton 216, b.
And again: “ Item non solum fit disseisina secundum quod preedictum est, sed etiam si quis praspotens uti voluerit in alterius tenemento contra ipsius tenentis voluntatem, arando, fodiendo, falcando et asportando, contendendo tenementum esse suum quod est alterius; Si autem nihil clamaverit in tenemento, aliud erit, quia tunc erit transgressio et non dis-seisina de libero tenemento.” Bracton 161, b.
These descriptions of an actual disseizin, by Bracton, accord perfectly with what is understood to be a disseizin in fact at this day, and show the true distinction between a mere trespass and a disseizin.
To constitute an actual disseizin, there must be an entry With intent to usurp the possession, and to oust another of his freehold. Cro. Car. 302; 4 Mass. R. 418; 15 Mass. R. 498.
There is, then, an actual disseizin whenever one man wrongfully enters upon the land of another, with intent to
But there is another species of disseizin, called a disseizin by election ; which is a very different thing from an actual disseizin. The distinction between a disseizin by election and disseizin in fact, was taken originally for the benefit of the owner of the land, and in order to extend to himincer-taiiricases the remedy by assize. And it is still continued with us to enable the owner, whenever any trespass or injury is done to his real estate in derogation of his right, or whenever there is any obstruction to his full enjoyment of his lands, tenements or hereditaments, to settle his title with the wrong doer in a writ of entry.
By a disseizin at the election of a party is not to be understood an act which in itself is a disseizin, but which the party supposed to be disseized may if he pleases consider as not amounting to a disseizin : On the contrary, an act which is capable of being made a disseizin by election is no disseizin till the party in question by his election makes it such. Co. Litt. 330, note (285.)
We come now to the question, Under what circumstances may the owner of real estate elect to consider himself as disseized ?
There can be no disseizin, even at the election of the owner of the land, unless the supposed disseizor can under the circumstances be considered in law as having the possession. No mere words, no claim of right or title, unless coupled with some act which can in law be considered as possession, amount to a disseizin. Nothing can be treated as a disseizin, unless it can be viewed as an actual usurpation of the possession. Thus a deed of land, duly acknowledged and recorded, does not amount to a disseizin unless the grantee enters under the deed. 6 Pick. 5, Favour vs. Sargent.
And it seems, that an extent of an execution upon land, when neither the officer, nor the appraisers, nor the creditor
He cannot, then, in such a case be treated as a disseizor.
But almost any interference with the possession of land in derogation of the rights of the owner may, if he so choose, be considered as a disseizin.
Thus if a man go to a house that is locked, and taking the door in his hand claim the same in fee, although he do not enter, it will be a disseizin of the house. 1 Rolle’s Ab. 659, l. 5. Such an act is in law sufficient to give possession of the house to him who makes the claim, if the owner so elect.
And the owner may at his election consider any person as a disseizor who is found upon the land, and who refuses or neglects to leave it upon his request, although such person disclaims having any possession. 4 N. H. R. 217, Walker vs. Wilson; 6 Greenleaf 376, Brigham vs. Welch.
The owner of land may elect to consider himself as ousted by one, who entered as the mere servant of a third person, and who is a mere trespasser. 2 Starkie's N. P. Cases 187, Doe vs. Stradling.
The law in these cases permits the owner of the land, for the sake of the remedy, to abandon the possession to the wrong doer, and treat him as an actual disseizor.
And when one is rightfully in possession of land belonging to another, if he set up a claim to the estate, or usurps a dominion over it, inconsistent with the rights of the owner, — whether this be done by words or by acts, the owner may elect to consider him a disseizor.
If A, holding lands as a tenant at will to B, take a lease of one who has no title, B may consider both the lessor and the lessee as disseizors. 6 N. H. R. 419, Wilson vs. Webster.
So if a lessee for years convey the land in fee, both the lessee and his grantee, if he enter, are disseizors at the election of the owner. 5 Cowen 134; 1 Burrows 112.
If a tenant in common, or joint tenant, enter claiming the whole, and take all the profits, it is a disseizin of his co-tenant. Co. Litt. 243, b; Hobart 120; Cowper 218, Fisher vs. Prosser; 1 Pick. 114, Shumway vs. Holbrook; 1 Caine’s R. 33; 11 East 49, Doe vs. Bird; 1 Greenleaf 89, Bracket vs. Norcross; 8 Pick. 175.
If a tenant in common resist the entry of his co-tenant, it is a disseizin. 1 Mass. R. 323.
If any one disturb the entry of him who has a right to enter upon lands, it will be a disseizin. 1 Rolle’s Ab. 659, l. 15.
It has never been held that mere words, or the taking of a deed of laud without entry under it, or the prosecution of a real action against a stranger, to recover land, can be considered as a disseizin. There must be some actual interference with the possession of land to constitute what may be considered by the owner as a disseizin at his election.
The declaration of a party may give a character to his acts or his possession, which will make them disseizins, when they would not otherwise be so ; but mere declarations cannot in themselves constitute a disseizin.
It seems, then, that in order to give a party a right to elect to consider himself disseized, there must be what can in law be considered a possession of the supposed disseizor, either wrongful in itself, or made wrongful by some act or claim of his, inconsistent with, and in derogation of, the rights of the owner of the land.
In the case now before us, the evidence showed nothing that can in law be considered as possession of the tenant, after the entry of the demandant stated in the plea, and was of course wholly insufficient to sustain the issue on the part of the demandant.
Verdict set aside.