Case Name: Edward Long v. J. S. Kasebeer
Court: Kansas Supreme Court
Jurisdiction: Kansas
Decision Date: 1882-01
Citations: 28 Kan. 226
Docket Number: 
Parties: Edward Long v. J. S. Kasebeer.
Judges: All the Justices concurring.
Reporter: Kansas Reports
Volume: 28
Pages: 226–242

Head Matter:
Edward Long v. J. S. Kasebeer.
1. Injunction; Petition as Evidence. Where the jurat to a petition sets forth that the affiant is the agent of the plaintiff; that the plaintiff is a non-resident of the state; that he (affiant) has heard read the petition, and that the several matters therein stated are true, the petition is admissible as testimony upon the hearing of an application for an order of injunction.
2. Temporary Injunction; When Granted. Where a plaintiff, who is-the owner of and in the actual possession of a quarter-section of land, a part of which is inclosed and fifty acres thereof are broken and in cultivation, brings an action against a defendant, who, under some pretended claim of title, has entered upon the premises and commenced to erect a building thereon, and threatens to deprive the owner of the possession thereof, to quiet his title thereto, and the defendant is wholly irresponsible, such plaintiff may have a temporary injunction, pendenteKte, to restrain the defendant from ousting him of the actual possession, of the premises, from erecting any buildings thereon, and from any interference with the cultivation thereof.
Error from Allen District Court.
March 7, 1882, Kasebeer filed his petition in the district court against Long, in the following words:
“ 1. Plaintiff says that he is and for years has been the owner and in the actual possession of the southwest quarter of section thirty (30), township twenty-five (25), range twenty (20), in Allen county, Kansas, and that the same is partially inclosed, and about fifty acres thereof broken and in cultivation.
“2. Plaintiff further says, that defendant has no interest or right whatever in or to said premises, but that he claims some interest therein adverse to plaintiff, and that a short while ago said defendant, unlawfully and against the wish of plaintiff, entered upon said premises and commenced the erection of buildings thereon, and has brought a part of his family thereon, and declares it to be" his purpose to, and unless restrained forthwith, he will at once take up his permanent residence thereon and assume the management and control of all said premises and appropriate the same, and the use and occupation thereof, to himself exclusively, so as to deprive plaintiff of all his rights of ownership in and to said lands.
“Plaintiff further says, it was and is his (plaintiff’s) intention and purpose to cultivate and improve said premises, either in person or by tenant or agent, and has already made arrangements to that effect for the current year.
“ Plaintiff further says, that defendant is irresponsible and not able to respond in damages for such injuries and damages as plaintiff would sustain by reason of said wrongful acts by said defendant threatened and about to be performed. Said premises are of the value of over five hundred dollars.
“Wherefore, plaintiff prays judgment,that until the final hearing of this cause, the defendant be enjoined and restrained from in any manner interfering with said property, or entering upon or cultivating the same, or-exercising acts of ownership over the same, as well as from in any manner interfering with plaintiff’s use, occupation and control of said premises, and that upon the final hearing such injunction be made perpetual ; and that plaintiff’s title be quieted against the claims of said defendant; and for such other relief as equity may require.”
“State oe Kansas, Allen County, ss. — Ira H. Kasebeer being sworn, says, he is agent for said plaintiff; that said plaintiff is a non-resident of the state; that he, affiant, has heard the foregoing petition read, and that the several matters therein stated are true. Iba H. Kasebeer.
“Sworn to before me, and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of March, 1882.
J. H. Towner, J. P. Saline Township.”
The defendant filed his answer, denying that the plaintiff was the owner of the real estate, or ever had been such owner; denying that the plaintiff was, or ever had been, in the actual possession of the premises; denying that the plaintiff ever made any improvements thereon; and denying that the plaintiff intended to cultivate or improve the same. The defendant further alleged that he was the owner of and held the equitable title to the land, and that he was in the actual possession of the same. He asked that upon a final hearing of the case, his title be quieted against the claim of the plaintiff. On the 29th day of March, 1882, upon notice duly given, application was heard in the district court, for a temporary injunction in favor of the plaintiff, and against the defendant. In support of the application, plaintiff offered in evidence the petition, with the verification thereto. No other evidence or proof was introduced, and thereupon the court sustained the application, and granted a temporary order of injunction enjoining and prohibiting the defendant from interfering in any manner with plaintiff’s cultivation of the premises, or making improvements thereon, or harvesting the crop grown thereon. Thereupon the defendant excepted, and has brought the case here.
O. F. Hutchings, for plaintiff in error:
1. The verification to the petition was wholly insufficient, and should not have been received as evidence over Long’s objections. (Civil Code, §114; 15 How. Pr. 253; 2 Wait’s Pr., p. 341, subdiv. b; 2 Estee’s PL, p. 197, subdiv. 25; 5 How; Pr. 237; 12 id. 64; 13 id. 313; 14 id. 311.)
2. All of the material allegations in the petition are mere statements of conclusions, and of a secondary nature, and should not have been received as evidence over Long’s objections. An affidavit is one of the modes of getting the testimony of witnesses before the court, and must consist of “ such statements of fact as would be proper in the oral testimony of a witness.” (14 Kas. 463, syllabus; Code, §§ 340, 341, 344, 239; Atchison v. Bartholow, 4 Kas. 124; 16 id. 209, 430; 4 Wait’s Pr., p. 582, and cases cited.)
Secondary evidence is no more competent in an affidavit than in a deposition, or from a witness on the stand. Take for instance the allegations in this petition as to the ownership of the land, etc.: are they not mere conclusions of law, and secondary statements of the contents of records? The record is the best evidence of the title to the land. Would a party on the witness stand be permitted to testify that he was the owner of land, and the other party had no title, especially where title was the principal question put in issue by the pleadings? If Kasebeer had produced the proper evidence of his title, would it have appeared that his only claim to the land was a tax deed void upon its face? Is the allegation in his petition that Long has “ no interest whatever in or to said premises” merely his opinion that this void tax deed has divested Long of his patent title? And as to the allegation that defendant “unlawfully” entered upon the premises, is the plaintiff to be allowed to decide whether the act was lawful or not? The contents of records cannot be proved by affidavits, any more than such contents can be proved by depositions, or by witnesses upon the stand. The only difference in the testimony obtained by affidavit, deposition, and oral examination, is the difference in the mode of getting it. (Code, §§ 340, 341, 342, 343.)
3. But if the petition be taken as absolutely true, conclusions of law and all, and the answer be disregarded, there is no case made for an injunction or any other equitable relief. The petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action to quiet title under § 594 of the code. This action can only be maintained by the party in actual possession. The petition and verification show that Long, not Kasebeer, is in actual possession. The only improvements on the land (except those made by, and now in possession of Long) consist of some breaking and a fragmentary fence. It is not shown who made these improvements, and there is no pretense that Kasebeer ever had any house upon or ever actually occupied the land. The verification shows .that he is a non-resident of the state. Imagination must be resorted to, to make out a case of actual possession by Kasebeer. At all events, the petition shows that Long is in actual possession, and if the statements of conclusions of law in the petition are taken as evidence, the case is one where both parties are in actual possession. We submit that the statutory action to quiet title will not lie unless the plaintiff has “peaceable” possession. Where two persons claiming adversely are both in actual occupancy of land, an action to quiet title cannot be maintained by one against the other. (16 Kas. 515, 551.)
But the petition, conclusions of law and all, being taken as true, makes a case of a simple, naked trespass, and an injunction will not be granted to restrain a mere trespass, (7 Kas. 232,) especially where the title is denied, or is in doubt, (High on Inj., §§458, 460; 9 Wend. 571,) and there is an adequate remedy at law, (High on I'nj., §459; 16 Cal-202; 27 id. 363,) and there is no showing of irreparable injury, (2 Cal. 463; 13 id. 190; 8 Minn. 113; 7 Johns. Ch. 315.)
The land in this case is not shown to be either timber or mining land, but naked prairie land, with meager improvements, and the irreparable injury complained of is the erection of buildings and other valuable and lasting improvements, which, if the petition be true, inure to the benefit and not the destruction of the estate, and become the property of Kasebeer. If the petition be. true, Kasebeer- has a summary and adequate remedy at law by action against Long as a settler “without color of title,” under the forcible. entry- and detainer statute. (Comp. Laws 1879, p. 727, §159.)
If injunction in this case be proper, it is difficult to see why the action of forcible entry and detainer may not become obsolete, and the intruder be ejected by temporary injunction before trial and judgment in all cases. There certainly is no material allegation in the petition that may not be made in every case of alleged forcible entry upon lands. In this case the defendant by his answer asks for affirmative relief, and that his title be quieted against plaintiff’s adverse claim of title. This relief can only be had if defendant is in actual possession. The court by a temporary injunction turns him out of possession, and thereby prevents, him from making this defense. This is a great wrong, and ought to be remedied before the final trial of the case. Obedience to the injunction in this case undoubtedly' requires Long to abandon his possession, buildings and improvements, to Kasebeer. Equity will not permit its remedies to be used to turn out one who is in possession. (1 Barb. 316; 10 Mich. 335; 45 Ga. 201; 71 N. C. 329,463; 51 Cal. 529.) Injunctions to restrain alleged trespasses are only granted in aggravated cases, when a strong showing of irreparable injury or destruction of the estate is made out. (8 Blackf. 378; 31 Ohio St. 420.)
Cates & Keplinger, for defendant in error:
The plaintiff’s first assignment of error is, because of the admission of the petition-affidavit. It is alleged that the nature of affiant’s agency is not stated. To state the fact of •such an agency is a pure gratuity, and it certainly cannot be a ground of complaint because of the failure to incorporate a surplus”item in the affidavit. This is not a case of statutory verification; it is a case of a witness testifying by affidavit.
The admission of the petition-affidavit was not error, for two reasons: First, the conclusions of the affidavit are not •conclusions of law, but of fact. Allegations of ownership are allegations of fact. (12 Eas. 125.) Also, these conclusions •of fact are in every instance conclusions from primary facts set forth in the affidavit. For instance, the petition alleges that the premises are and for years had been in the actual possession of plaintiff; that he had the same partially inclosed and a large part in cultivation. From these facts, uncontradicted, the law implies ownership. In fact they constitute title. (Mooney v. Olsen, 21 Eas. 691.) The allegation of ownership is a necessary sequence of these primary facts. Second, at all events the affidavit properly states some material facts; as to those it is competent. The objection of •the defendant was to the affidavit as an entirety. To have sustained the objection would have excluded proper evidence, and for that reason it would be palpable error. If defendant had objected to particular portions, the plaintiff might ■easily have supplied any deficiency occasioned by their exclusion. The court committed no error in overruling the exception and admitting the affidavit as an entirety; when admitted it was in effect as if it had been admitted without any exception. An invalid objection is equivalent to no objection.
Evidence consisting of pure naked conclusions of law may be disregarded as not being evidence at all; not so where the evidence consists of conclusions of law and fact, or, as in this case, conclusions of evidence of this character, if admitted without objection, that is, without valid objection, is just as good as allegations in an unanswered petition. There was therefore in effect no objection even to objectionable portions, if such there were. The case stands precisely as it would if every allegation of fact in the petition, whether primary or of conclusions, were admitted to be true.
The plaintiff' was, and for years had been, in the actual possession, and was in fact the owner of a tract of land, a large part in cultivation, nearly all inclosed. He had made arrangements to occupy and cultivate the same for the coming-year. The defendant is totally irresponsible; instead of resorting to an action at law to eject plaintiff, he trusts to his superior qualities as a bulldozer. Counsel suggests an action of forcible entry as the proper and adequate remedy instead of injunction. Upon the facts stated, neither ejectment nor forcible entry would lie. Those actions will lie only where plaintiff is out of possession. Two different persons cannot be in actual and adverse possession of land at the same time. The ouster of plaintiff is not yet complete. If the court declines to assist him in maintaining his possession, it will not be-until after an unsuccessful contest with defendant on his.own field (that of physical force), that he will be in a condition to-maintain an action of forcible entry or ejectment. Counsel refers him not to a right which he has, but rather to one which he may secure by surrendering a right "he already has. He-is fairly entitled to hold possession undisturbed, until all adverse claims are established by law. Defendant is in the very act of depriving him of that right by force. He invokes the-aid of the court to assist him in maintaining a right which he now has.
We submit that one having the status of plaintiff below, is entitled as a matter of absolute right to the undisturbed possession of the premises until the final termination of the litigation, without regard to the pecuniary responsibility of the defendant. The granting of a temporary injunction is largely within the discretion of the court. The court will always take into consideration the relative advantages and disadvantages which will accrue to the respective parties, in the event of the allowance or disallowance of the order.
True, as counsel suggests, if plaintiff were to surrender possession, the land would furnish an adequate remedy, so far as the recovery of it is concerned.
The principles of law applicable to this case may be briefly stated: “The old rule that an injunction could not be granted to restrain a trespass where the right was doubtful or the defendant was in possession, claiming by an adverse title, has become obsolete, and the courts will interfere in such cases where the urgency of the case demands a prompt remedy and no other remedy is obtainable. The fact that the injury is irreparable may arise either from the nature of the injury, or the want of responsibility of the person committing it; and either will furnish sufficient grounds for interference by injunction.” (2 Wait, 19.)
After a full discussion of this subject, in a note to 11 American Decisions, p. 500, the author says: “ It is thus seen that the ultimate ground upon which the equitable injunction in case of trespass rests is, inadequacy of legal remedies for the injury, which is the broad foundation of all remedial jurisdiction by equity. ... To exclude equitable relief, it must appear not only that there is some remedy at law, but also that it is adequate,” citing Osborn v. U. S. Bank, 9 Wheat. 738; Watson v. Sutherland, 5 Wall. 74; Clark v. Jeffersonville Bid. Co., 44 Ind. 248. See also 11 Ala. 295; 5 Barb. 486; 18 Cal. 206; 38 Ga. 641; 28 N. H. 449; 45 Mo. 509.-
Counsel speak of this being a substitution of injunction for forcible entry, and says it is difficult to see why the latter may not become obsolete, and the intruder be ejected by temporary injunction. Not at all. The design of injunction in this case is to stop the defendant before he succeeds in ousting the plaintiff.
John B. Goodin, also for defendant in error:
There was no error in granting the temporary injunction. The petition contains the necessary averments in an action to quiet title. But if not, it is good as a petition for a perpetual injunction. An injunction may be the final judgment in an action. The petition need contain no other prayer than for an injunction. (Code, §237.)
For the purpose of the temporary order, the petition properly verified is an “affidavit” within the meaning of §237 of the code. (4 Kas. 139.) Under the statute, the affidavit need not be made by the plaintiff. Any one knowing the facts could swear to them, whether he was “agent” for the plaintiff, or not. The person who swears to the petition in •this case swears that the matters set forth “are true;” not that he believes them true, but that they are true. So it is entirely immaterial that the “nature of his agency” should be disclosed, as counsel for plaintiff in error contends. Counsel says that Kasebeer alleges in his petition “that bpth he and Long were in possession.” Hardly so strong as that. He says he is in possession rightfully, and has been for years; that Long made .a wrongful entry, committing divers trespasses and threatening complete appropriation of the premises.
Kasebeer brings suit to quiet title and for perpetual injunction. He applies for a temporary order, and submits his evidence. He procures an affidavit to be made setting up facts. Long having had previous notice of the application for the temporary order, appears, but he files no affidavit, makes no proof. Now, the only question for the court, as with the district judge, is this: Does the petition (which is also the “affidavit”) disclose sufficient grounds for a temporary order of injunction? We are told that forcible detainer and ejectment are appropriate and adequate remedies, and that one or the other should have been resorted to by Kasebeer. But neither would avail him unless he were out of possession. The petition shows that he has made substantial improvements on the land, bs breaking, fencing, etc., and has reduced it to actual possession. A mere intruder, without shadow of right — for he offers no evidence — is attempting and threatening to do just what the rightful owner contemplates doing, i. e., to assert supremacy over the land and to cultivate the same. The acts threatened, to be done will, if committed, be a continuing trespass, lasting indefinitely. In such a case defendant in error should not be compelled to wait until sometime in the future, aggregate his damages, and then sue for them. A right of action accrues to him from the commission of every wrongful act upon the premises. Suppose, for each of these, Kasebeer should elect to prosecute an action at law. Here, actions would be multiplied; and a familiar ground for equitable relief by injunction, is the prevention of a multiplicity of suits. Continuing trespasses which indicate no time of termination, are clearly distinguishable from a single wrongful act — a mere trespass — speedily done, unaccompanied by peculiar injury, and which may be readily compensated in money, in an action for damages. (26 Miss. 84; 27 N. J. Eq. 364.)
But even in a mere trespass, if an action at law will not bring compensation, an injunction will lie. Two things must concur before equity will deny its jurisdiction, to relieve by injunction: First, there must exist a remedy at law; second,this remedy must be adequate, else the injury is not repaired — is irreparable. Here, plaintiff in error is confessedly insolvent, and an effort by Kasebeer in an action at law for the redress of his injuries, would be a remedy “theoretically perfect, but practically fruitless.”
It will not be contended that, in order to constitute possession by Kasebeer, he must actually reside on the land. His possession is established by fencing, improving and cultivating — all evincing an intent to make an appropriation of it for some purpose. These things he did before Long’s trespass upon the premises; and can the wrongs committed by plaintiff in error be set up to defeat a temporary order, granted only to last during the pendency of the litigation? It is true that a perpetual injunction, in case of disputed title to lands, will not be granted until the title of plaintiff is established, either by admission or by judicial judgment or decree, because, ordinarily, “equity will not try titles to land.” (38 How. Pr. 94.)
Not so, however, as to temporary orders. A temporary injunction will be allowed until the right oan be adjudicated when plaintiff makes a strong prima facie case. (31 Conn. 165; 9 How. [U. S.] 28; 3 Bland’s Ch. 440; 3 Bush, 125.)
“A defendant is not to be permitted to defeat plaintiff’s right by merely'denying his title, where injury is irreparable and the case urgent.” (1 Woodb. & M. 280; 1 Ga. 6; 45 N. Y. 703.)
O. F. Hutchings, for plaintiff in error, in reply:
Opposing counsel says that “this is not a case of statutory verification; it is a case of a witness testifying by affidavit.” If so, then the affidavit was- incompetent, and should have been excluded on Long’s objection, for the following reasons: It was made and sworn to before any action was begun or service of summons had, and long before any motion for a preliminary injunction was made or notice thereof given. It relates to the facts as they existed a long time before, and not to the facts as they existed at the time the motion was made or heard. Can an affidavit made a year before an action is commenced be used as evidence on a motion in that action? If not, why can one made a month or a day before be so used? A witness can no more testify by affidavit before the action is begun than he can testify orally or by deposition before the action is commenced.
But an affidavit in the language of this petition would be incompetent any way. It consists of mere conclusions. The fact of ownership of land is a matter of record, and must be proved by the record. The allegations of ownership and of actual possession are conclusions, the truth of which depends upon numerous minor facts. To establish these conclusions, the facts must be proved.
A witness may not testify to these conclusions, either orally upon the stand, or by deposition or affidavit.
A general allegation of ownership may be a sufficient allegation of fact in a petition. (12 Kas. 123.) But, “every lawyer knows the difference between the statements of the facts in a petition, and the statements of the facts in an affidavit.” (16 Kas. 437.)
Specific objections were made to this kind of evidence, and were overruled. I insist that Olmstead v. Koester, 14 Kas. 463, and Centre Tp. v. Hunt, 16 Kas. 437, are squarely in point. The fact that the judge exercises a discretion does not alter the case. If a temporary injunction should be granted without any proof, or upon statements of an unsworn witness, admitted over objections and exceptions, I suppose it would be no sufficient answer to a petition in error to say that the granting of a temporary injunction is largely a matter of discretion.
Opposing counsel argue the case largely outside of the ■record. Kasebeer must stand or fall by his petition. There is no allegation in the petition that he ever occupied the land. He is a non-resident of the state. , There is no allegation that Long dispossessed him or “bulldozed” him-. There is no-pretense that he ever made a particle of improvement upon the land. The petition does not show who improved the land, nor does it show that Kasebeer had reduced the land to actual possession. On the contrary, this idea is excluded by the allegation that he had made arrangements to, and intended, either personally or by tenant, to occupy it in the future.
Much is said by opposing counsel about Long being “totally irresponsible,” and “confessedly insolvent.” There is nothing in the record to justify any such assertions. But mere insolvency is no ground for an injunction. In the note to 11 Am. Dec., referred to by opposing counsel, it is said: “ It will be found that' in most of the cases where the relief has been granted, there have been other circumstances besides the insolvency to authorize it;” (p. 505.)
In this case the defendant was not destroying or in any manner injuring the estate. He had peaceably taken possession of it when vacant and unoccupied, and was erecting buildings and making valuable improvements upon it, under claim of title, while Kasebeer resided in a foreign state.

Opinion:
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Horton, C. J.:
It is objected that the verification to the petition is wholly insufficient, and ought not to have been received as evidence. Section 114 of the code, and many cases, are cited as sustaining the objection. Neither the provision of the code referred to, nor the decisions cited, support the objection. The question before us is not one of statutory verification. The pleading was not of the character to necessarily require verification, and the affidavit annexed to the petition made the petition sufficient , 1 to be received and considered on the hearing for the interlocutory order. In Atchison v. Bartholow, 4 Kas. 124, in the jurat annexed to the'petition the affiant merely testified on information and belief. In this case the affiant deposed that he was the agent of the plaintiff; that the plaintiff was a non-resident of the state;. that he had heard the petition read, and that the several matters therein stated were true.
It is further urged that the petition makes a case of simple naked trespass, and does not authorize a temporary or final order of injunction, or any other equitable relief. The petition will not bear this construction. It alleges that the plaintiff is now, and has been for years, the owner and in the actual possession of the premises; that the same are partially inclosed, and about fifty acres thereof broken and in-cultivation; and then sets forth that, proceeding under some pretended claim of right, the defendant is seeking to oust plaintiff from the possession of the premises, and appropriate the same to his own use and occupation. It further alleges that the defendant is irresponsible, and not able to respond in damages for the injuries and damages apprehended. So long as the plaintiff is in the actual possession of the premises, the defendant has no right by force to attempt to enter thereon to oust him of such possession, or to deprive him of the use thereof, or to erect any buildings thereon. It is said that the fact that the injury is irreparable may arise either from the nature of the injury, or the want of responsibility of the person committing it, and that either will furnish sufficient grounds for interference by injunction. To exclude equitable relief, it must not only appear that there is some remedy at law, but also that it is adequate. If the defendant is irresponsible, the actions at law proposed by his counsel can scarcely be said to be adequate.
Again, the defendant has no right to erect and maintain a building, on land owned and in the actual possession of plaintiff, and the erection of such building is a trespass of. a character to authorize equitable relief. (Grant v. Crow, 47 Iowa, 632; Sword v. Allen, 25 Kas. 67; Webster v. Cooke, 23 Kas. 637; Code, § 238.)
We do not understand from the petition'that the defendant has actually turned the plaintiff out of possession and taken full and absolute possession, but only that he has entered upon the land under some pre- ,. tended claim of title, and that he is seeking to oust plaintiff of all possession, and to assume the management and control of the land at the time of the application for the temporary order of injunction. The injunction, pendente lite, does not determine the parties' rights, and as the district courts have considerable discretion in allowing or disallowing, and in sustaining or vacating temporary injunctions, we perceive no good reason in this case for reversing or vacating the order granted!
The order and judgment of the district court will be affirmed.
All the Justices concurring.