24 Wis. 394 | Wis. | 1869
If, upon the facts stated in the complaint, and shown by the exhibits annexed to it, the defendant, Stauss, can maintain his action of unlawful detainer commenced before the justice of the peace, then this action cannot be maintained, for the reason that the facts relied upon for that purpose may be set up by the plaintiff in the name of his tenant, the defendant in the unlawful detainer action, as matters of defense thereto, and the same may be heard, tried and determined by the justice of the peace. The plaintiff does not allege, and it cannot, under the circumstances, be presumed, that the tenant refuses to allow him to make such defense.
If, on the other hand, it is clear, upon the facts stated in the complaint, that the action of unlawful detainer cannot be maintained by the defendant, then the plaintiff has no reason to complain. He then needs no process of injunction to restrain the action, which is the only remedy he seeks. ^
A repetition of the facts, which are somewhat numerous, with regard to the plaintiff’s claim of title and right of possession of the tenement, a dwelling-house, for which the action of unlawful detainer was brought, is deemed unnecessary. It is enough to say that such claim is made in undoubted good faith, and that the plaintiff, in like good faith, was let into or took possession of the dwelling, as owner, with the assent, or at least without any opposition or objection on the part of the only person who could at that time set up or claim any title or interest or right of possession in hostility to him. It is
Under these circumstances, it seems very clear to me that the action of unlawful detainer cannot be maintained, but that the defendant, if he wishes to obtain the possession, must resort to his action of ejectment.
That the summary remedy furnished by the statute (R. S. ch. 151) for recovering the possession of land before justices of the peace is not one in which the title to the premises can be brought in question, and, consequently, not a substitute for the action of ejectment, was long ago decided by this court. Gates v. Winslow, 1 Wis. 650; Ferrell v. Lamar, id. 8. The doctrine of those cases, as to the extent and application of the remedy, is the same in all the states, the statutes in each embracing, in substance, the provisions of the old English statutes, and having the same intent, namely, to prevent and punish acts which endanger the public peace, and to provide for the summary dispossession of tenants holding over after the expiration of their terms, or contrary to the conditions or covenants of the leases or agreements under which they entered. Cases of the latter kind are provided for by the twelfth section of the act; and, in those cases, of course, no question of title can arise, since the tenant is estopped to deny the title of his landlord. The only inquiry in them is as to whether the conventional relation of landlord and tenant exists; and, if it does, then whether the tenant is holding over after the expiration of his term, or contrary to the covenants or conditions of his lease. It is in cases of this kind that the remedy of unlawful detainer may be resorted to, and it can be extended to no other. The other two classes of cases to which the statute applies are forcible entries and forcible detainers. Cases of the first kind, called
“ On this subject, the law is,” says Chief Justice Savage, “that the same circumstances of violence or terror wMch will make an entry forcible, will make a detainer forcible also ; and whoever keeps in the house an unusual number of people, or unusual weapons, or threatens to do some bodily hurt to the former possessor, if he dare return, shall be adjudged guilty of a forcible detainer, though no attempt be made to re-enter.” The People v. Pickert, 8 Cow. 232. And, in The People v. Anthony, 4 Johns. 201, Kent, Ch. J., says: “On an indictment for a forcible entry and detainer, the petit jury may find the defendant guilty of the detainer only, for a writ of restitution will equally go, as if the conviction had reached the whole indictment, and the assessment of the damages will be in proportion to the degree of guilt or injury.” See also Foster v. Kelsey, 36
Having thus endeavored to show that there is no conflict in the decisions of this court upon the subject, it may perhaps be proper for me briefly to add some considerations, derivable from the statute and otherwise, why the remedy aflbrded by it ought not to be extended to the trial of mere questions of title, like that involved in the unlawful detainer action co'mplained of in this suit. In the first place, it is manifest from the entire provisions of the statute, that it was never intended to be so applied. In all cases, except those against tenants as provided by the 12th section, the parties proceeded against are spoken of as “ offenders,” or persons guilty of some breach of the peace or -violation of the criminal law. A system of penalties and forfeitures is provided. A fine not exceeding one hundred dollars must be imposed, and treble damages, with costs of suit, may be recovered. It cannot be that these are intended as the fruits of a peaceful entry and holding of the possession of land under a bona fide claim of title, though the same may afterward prove to have been defective.
And, if the change of phraseology from the territorial statute, by the use of the word or, in the place of and, between the words “unlawful” and “forcible” in the
And it seems to me, too, that the provision in the general statute regulating .the civil jurisdiction of justices of the peace, that they shall not have power to try actions where the title to land shall in any wise come in question, is entitled to great weight. It shows what the policy of the legislature is, and that it is not that the grave and difficult' questions arising in controversies of that kind are to be heard and decided in a forum so manifestly unfitted for the purpose. If the jurisdiction is to be held, it can only be upon the unequivocal language of a statute showing that the policy of the state has been changed, and that the legislature intend to raise those heretofore inferior tribunals to the dignity and power of courts of general jurisdiction. Such a change of jurisdiction and policy is not to be inferred from so slight a circumstance as the unimportant and apparently accidental change of phraseology which has occurred in our statute.
And, again, if the construction is to prevail; that atrial of the legal title may be had before a justice of the peace, it follows that he may also try and determine all questions of equitable title arising in the action, and render judgment upon the same. All equitable defenses may be made in actions at law, and the 22d section of the act provides that all matters in excuse, justification or avoidance of the allegations of the complaint shall be pleaded specially, or notice thereof given. If, upon the
But, if I am mistaken in my views of the law, which, on account of the importance of the subject, I have expressed very fully, and if justices of the peace have jurisdiction to try title to land, then, as I said at the outset of this opinion, the decision in this case must be the same. If the jurisdiction exists, the plaintiff has his remedy by pleading the matters set up in the complaint in defense of the action before the justice. If the jurisdiction does not exist, the attempt to prosecute that action will be futile, and his remedy will be complete on that ground.
For these reasons the order of the circuit court, refusing to vacate and dissolve the temporary injunction, must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
By the Court. — Ordered accordingly.