197 Mo. App. 358 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1917
This is an action for forcible entry and detainer. Plaintiff had judgment before a justice of the peace of Pemiscot county, and upon defendant’s appeal to the circuit court of that county, there was a verdict and judgment for defendant, and plaintiff thereupon appealed to this court. Under the provisions of section 3939, Revised Statutes 1909, the appeal was by this court transferred to the Springfield Court of Appeals, which court rendered a decision in the case. [See Underwood v. Caruthersville, 146 Mo. App. 288, 129 S. W. 1076.] Thereafter the supreme court held the above-mentioned section to be unconstitutional and void (see Dunham v. Nixon, 232 Mo. 98, 133 S. W. 336), and the cause was thereupon retransferred to this court, where, under the ruling of the Supreme Court, the jurisdiction of the -appeal continued to reside. Thereafter this court adopted the opinion of the Springfield Court of Appeals, and accordingly reversed the judgment and remanded
Counsel for respondent, defendant below, admits in his statement and bipef that “there is but little difference in the record as to the' substantial testimony given at each trial of the case.” We have carefully examined the statement of facts as set forth in the opinion on the last appeal and find same an excellent, full and fair exposition of all the needed facts in the ease. We find no reason to change any part thereof. Said statement is as follows:
“ The property in question consists of a strip of land thirty five feet in length and twelve feet in width, in the city of Caruthersville. It appears that the defendant had for many years been in possession of a lot in the city of Caruthersville upon which stood the city’s public buildings, fronting approximately south on George street, as we understand the small plat before us. Plaintiff claimed to be the owner and in possession of a lot lying immediately north and in the rear of defendant’s said lot. The strip of ground in controversy lies along the dividing line between these two lots. Defendant’s city hall and jail stood upon its lot, and there was a small building in the rear thereof, referred to as the engine house, used for storing the city’s fire apparatus, which
1. One assignment of error pertains to a certain remark made by plaintiff’s counsel in his closing argument
2. Allen, J., when this case was here on the former appeal (184 S. W. 486) was of the opinion that the plaintiff had made no case for the jury and that the case should be reversed outright. Plowever, his brother judges, while they concurred in the opinion written in the case by him, as to the errors noted as occurring at the trial, held that the question of plaintiff’s possession was a matter for the jury and not a question to be disposed of by the court as a matter of law. This holding on their part necessarily reversed and remanded the cause.
While it is true, as a general rule, that legal conclusions announced on a first appeal become and remain the law of the case, not only upon a retrial, but also upon a second appeal, yet this rule is not without exceptions. Our supreme court has repeatedly reconsidered questions adjudicated iipon from appeals where there were cogent and convincing reasons for doing so, and especially has this been the case where the former ruling inadvertently overruled and nullified a statute, or overruled some sound and well settled principle of law. [Bagnell v. Railway, 242 Mo. l. c. 21, 145 S. W. 469; Citizens Nat’l. Bank v. Donnell, 195 Mo. 564, 94 S. W. 516; United Shoe Machinery Co. v. Ramlose, 231 Mo. 508, 132 S. W. 1133; Padgett v. Smith, 205 Mo. 125 103 S. W. 942; Wilson v. Beckwith, 140 Mo. l. c. 382, 41 S. W. 985; Mangold v. Bacon, 237 Mo. 496, 141 S. W. 650; De Ford v. Johnson, — Mo. —, 177 S. W. 577.] And where on a later appeal this court finds that its decision on a former appeal of the case has inadvertently misconstrued a decision of the supreme court, and its decision is therefore in conflict with such
On a re-examination of the question whether plaintiff’s possession is one to be disposed of as a matter of law by the court, or as a question of fact for the jury’s determination, we now conclude that the case of De Graw v. Prior, 60 Mo. 56, which is followed in Scott v. Allenbaugh, 50 Mo. App. 130, and in Robinson v. Ramsey, 190 Mo. App. 206, l. c. 211, 176 S. W. 282, is conclusive of the question. It is therein held, in an opinion written by Napton, J., that in a suit of forcible entry and detainer, the question of “what acts constitute possession is certainly for the court to decide — whether the acts have been done is for the jury; and the court may with propriety leave the whole matter to the jury upon proper instructions, where there is any evidence tending to show a bonafide prior possession. ”
We therefore hold that the majority view on this question as announced in this case on the former appeal, supra, should be and is hereby overruled. We now hold that the effects of the acts which go to make up the character of possession is a question for the court, and we therefore hereby adopt as the law in this ease the following portion of the opinion written by Allen, J., in the former appeal:
“The writer is of the opinion that plaintiff made no case for the jury, and that our order should be one of outright reversal. ’ ’
“The undisputed facts show that defendant had possession for some years of this entire strip of land in controversy. Indeed, the city’s engine house was built upon and occupied for years a very considerable part of it. This engine house was connected with the city hall; that is, as plaintiff himself testified, ‘It was joined on the end corner room of the city hall. ’ The two lots, belonging respectively to plaintiff and defendant, are rectangular’ in shape, as are the other lots in this block. The fact that the city’s buildings covered the greater part of one end of this strip of land was notice to plaintiff, and-to every
‘ ‘Respondent contends that plaintiff had been in possession of this strip of ground, exclusive of that occupied by the engine room, for a period of more than two years by reason of his use thereof in connection with his coalyard. But it does not appear that plaintff’s acts in this connection were of such character as to give him a possession which the law will recognize and protect under the circumstances. It was an open, notorious, and visible fact that defendant’s buildings extended over and stood upon one end of this trip. Its occupancy of its lot was such originally as to carry with it the possession of the entire lot, including the strip in controversy. After plaintiff had acquired the lot in the rear of defendant’s lot, he began, according to his testimony, to dump coal upon a part ‘of that portion of the strip not occupied by the engine house. As plaintiff “said, no one objected to this.
“Granting that plaintiff from time to time dumped coal upon some of this ground, and that he and those dealing with him drove over some of it from time to time, these acts do not appear to show such possession, under the circumstances, as to entitle plaintiff to maintain this action. In suits of this character, what acts will constitute possession is a matter for the courts. [De Graw v. Prior, 60 Mo. 56.] And the facts shown in evi
“After acquiring Ms lot, plaintiff did not undertake to inclose this strip therewith by a fence, or otherwise definitely establish the line later claimed by him to be the true line. The so-called bulkhead (to which plaintiff sometimes refers in his testimony as a bulkhead fence) was, as said, not a fence at all. It did not extend entirely across the vacant portion of the lot, and was evidently not intended to mark the boundary of the possession claimed by plaintiff. Its purpose was merely to prevent plaintiff’s coal from rolling about. And it later disappeared altogether, leaving nothing to definitely determine the boundary line. Any physical possession arising by virtue of it was abandoned. [Dyer v. Reitz, 14 Mo. App. 45.] And there is no testimony that at the time of defendant’s alleged entry there was any coal on that part of the strip. There were, as said, a few tons of coal on the end of the strip which was formerly occupied, for the most part, by the engine house. This coal had been placed there after the removal of the building, and before the work of excavating began. And defendant’s witnesses testified that it was put there after plaintiff had erected the fence in March, 1907.
“It seems that the only physical posesssion obtained by plaintiff, by virtue of his trespasses upon this land, that was of a definite and exclusive character, was that acquired by the erection of the fence in March, 1907. This was evidently the view taken in the opinion on the former appeal, for it is said:
‘When plaintiff built the fence, that gave him the physical possession of the land, and, if the law will recognize and protect that possession the defendant could not forcibly enter and oust him, but if it be true, as indicated by some of the testimony, that plaintiff erected the fence solely for the purpose of securing some advantage in expected litigation between him and defendant, then his pretended possession can avail him nothing and the law will leave him where it found Mm. ’ [Underwood v.
“Upon the facts of the record before us, this view appears to be eminently correct, and ought to be adhered to.
“It is true, as learned counsel for respondent asserts, that it is not always essential in cases of this character that one claiming possession of land inclose the same by a fence. The extent of the occupation may otherwise sufficiently appear. But this is a controversy between the owners of two adjoining city lots, which, so far as this record shows, had never been separatéd by a •fence prior to 1907. Under such circumstances, surely one’s possession of a strip such as that in controversy must be manifested by something which definitely and unequivocally establishes the extent of the occupation. [See Keen v. Schweigler, 70 Mo. App. l. c. 422, 433.] •
“Let us consider then the physical possession acquired by plaintiff by virtue of the construction of this fence in March, 1907. In the course of the opinion, on the former appeal, it is said:
‘Another well-settled principle of law is that possession taken primarily for the purpose of securing an advantage in threatened or expected litigation is not such a possession as the court will recognize, and it cannot be made the foundation of any sort of action as between that party and the. one against whom the advantage was sought by the act of taking possession. [Dyer v. Reitz, 14 Mo. App. 45; Swayze v. Bride, 34 Mo. App. 414; Apperson v. Allen, 42 Mo. App. 537; Buck v. Endicott, 103 Mo. App. 248, 77 S. W. 85; Milen v. Freeman, 136 Mo. App. 117, 117 S. W. 644.]’ [Underwood v. Caruthersville, 146 Mo. App. l. c. 294, 129 S. W. 1079.]
“Without attempting the unprofitable task of a comparison of the. evidence contained in this record with that in the record on the former appeal, it may be said that the record before us shows beyond controversy that plaintiff erected this fence, which was built during the night or very early one morning, solely for the purpose of securing a supposed advantage in litigation; and that
“All of defendant’s evidence, definitely touching the matter (and many witnesses testified), goes to show that plaintiff erected this fence after the lines had been run and the stakes set upon this strip of ground for the foundation work for the new building. And there is much positive testimony that the work of excavation had actually been begun. Plaintiff, in testifying in his own behalf, .denied that the lines had been run before he erected this fence, claiming that this work was begun some three days later. But plaintiff’s own testimony shows that the old buildings had been removed, that there was building material on hand, and preparations under way for the construction of the new city hall. And it was an open, notorious fact that this work was about to begin, if indeed, as all the other testimony in the case shows,- it was not already under way. Plaintiff admits that he employed a helper and erected this fence very early one morning when no one 'was about. The ££ scrambling possession” thus obtained by him is not such possession as the law will recognize and protect.”
We hold that the plaintiff in the present case had failed to make it a case for the jury, and the judgment is therefore reversed.