16 Neb. 99 | Neb. | 1884
This was an action of replevin instituted in the county court of Hamilton county, wherein the defendant in error claimed the possession of “one frame building now in
Without entering into any discussion of the rules of pleading and practice involved in this question, we shall be content to refer to the case of School District No. 86 in York County v. McIntie, 14 Neb., 46, and adopt the conclusions there reached. 1st, That there is no such departure as would warrant the court in sustaining the motion to strike; and 2d, The subsequent filing of an answer and joining issue on this pleading is a waiver of the error if any had existed.
Upon issue joined, the cause was tried to a jury, who returned a verdict in favor of the defendant in error upon the question of the right of property and of possession, and assessed his damages at $50. A motion for a new trial was made by the plaintiff in error, which was overruled and judgment entered thereon.
The next and most important question in this case is as
In order to understand the exact point involved, a brief statement of the material facts, as disclosed by the record, is necessary, and which are substantially as follows: Prior to and during the month of March, 1882, the plaintiff in error was the owner of lot 14,-block 17, in the town of Aurora. About the first of March of that year the plaintiff in error and the.defendant in error had some conversation upon the subject of the purchase of the lot by the defendant in error. The price asked by the plaintiff in error was $450. About the twentieth of March the plaintiff in error left Aurora for Dakota territory, but before leaving he placed the lot in the hands of W. I. Farley, a real estate agent, for sale, and fixed the price at $500, making no reservations or conditions as to whom the lot should be sold. The defendant in error testifies that he purchased the lot of the agent, and the proof on the trial would fully warrant the jury in so deciding. The lot was surveyed and the corner established so that the carpenters might proceed with the work of constructing the building thereon. - The surveyor testified in substance that the defendant in error called upon him to make the survey and locate the corners. Pie and the defendant in error “stepped into Farley’s office to ascertain the numbers, and Reuber asked Mr. Farley if it was all right for him to go ahead and survey that, as he wanted to
The first point made by the plaintiff in error is, that “Where one person enters upon the land of another, and without the assent and agreement of the land-owner erects thereon a building it at once becomes a part of the freehold, and belongs to the owner of the soil.” The long-array of authorities cited in support of this proposition would, perhaps, deter us from questioning its soundness, were we ever so strongly inclined to do so; but in our view of the case it has no application here. But see Dietrichs v. The L. & N. W. R. R. Co., 13 Neb., 47. It is also urged that if the plaintiff in error had been present and known of the erection of the building his mere silence would not have been sufficient to raise a presumption of any assent or agreement on his part. It is not' necessary for us to discuss this question either, for he, through his agent, was more than silent. The lot- was to all intents and purposes sold to the defendant in error. His entry thereon was not wrongful. He was exercising the right which he had to use his property as he saw fit. Had he so elected, he could have removed his building at anytime before the efforts of the plaintiff in error to become its owner, and he would not have been in any degree liable to the plaintiff in error for the value thereof.
In Little v. Willford, 17 N. W. Rep., 282, the owner of
The authorities all distinguish betAveen an unauthorized erection of buildings upon the land of another, and improvements made thereon by his consent, as respects the title to the improvements or the beneficial interest therein. Tyler on Fixt., 88, 81.- Suppose the contract of sale and authority to take possession and construct the building, pending the completion of the contract, had been made by the plaintiff in error and he had afterwards refused to execute and deliver the necessary deeds, would the case haAm been materially different from what it is? We think not. The right to remove buildings under such circumstances is strictly equitable in its nature, but as betAveen the parties
, The case of Rush County v. Stubbs, 25 Kas., 322, is quite similar to this in many respects. There the plaintiff placed its building upon the land of the defendant, upon which he had a homestead filing, with the understanding that he should convey to the plaintiff when he procured his patent from the United States. The building was placed upon a permanent stone foundation, but the agreement with Stubbs was not in writing. Stubbs obtained his patent to the land but refused to convey to the county, and also refused to allow the plaintiff to remove the house. The county replevied the house, and the supreme court decided the action could be maintained. Brewer, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, used the following language: “The house was placed by the plaintiff upon the land to which the defendant Stubbs had an inchoate title, with the. understanding that it should remain the property of the plaintiff. How did the plaintiff lose its title? The manner in which it was annexed to the ground did not prevent the intention of the parties from remaining effective. .The building was, it is true, on a stone foundation, but it was held there by its own weight. That it could be moved without destruction is evident, not merely from the description of the building but also from the fact'that it had been once moved.
“ The contract of purchase may be laid out of consideration, for it was void and was repudiated by the owner of the realty, and it was not intended thereby to affect the ownership of the building. * * * The intention of the parties made this.building personalty, and neither the manner of annexation nor any other matter prevented this intention from being carried into effect. Demand wás conceded. Replevin and not forcible entry and detainer is the remedy to recover personal property.”
The act of the agent when acting within the scope of his
The plaintiff in error contends that the court erred in giving the first and second instructions asked by the defendant in error. On this proposition it is enough to say, that the instructions complained of were in the line of reasoning presented herein. They fairly submitted the case to the jury, and were correct.
It is next claimed the damages assessed by the jury are excessive, and were given under the influence of passion and prejudice. While the damages found by'the jury are perhaps higher than would have been given by the writer hereofj yet there is some testimony from which the jury might have arrived at their conclusion, and the amount is not great enough to suggest passion or prejudice oh the part of the jury. There is no error sufficient to reverse the case on that ground.
After a careful examination of the whole case we are driven to the conclusion that substantial justice has been done and that there are no errors prejudicial to the plaintiff in error. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Judgment aeeidmed.