Court Opinion

ID: 7365392
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:51:07.376211+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:44.771007
License: Public Domain

SAYRE, J.
Appellee, having first recovered judgment against appellants, in a suit brought in 1905, for a certain tract of land in a statutory action in the nature of ejectment, and having been restored to possession, brought this action in 1907, declaring in trespass for an injury done to the freehold by cutting trees, and in trover for the conversion of the trees so cut by appellants while in possession. In the ejectment suit there was no claim for the damages now sued for, nor could they have been recovered in that action.—Prestwood v. Watson, 111 Ala. 604, 20 South. 600. Now the statute provides differently. — Code 1907, § 3839.
By the evidence it appeared, without conflict, that the trees had been cut before the action in ejectment had been brought. It was necessary to a recovery under either count that plaintiff’s title and right of possession — that is, his constructive possession — at the *137time of tbe injuries complained of, should be established, and this of course involved an inquiry as to the title to the land at that time. Defendants here insist, as they did in the court below by objections to evidence and by exception to the general result, that plaintiff could not recover because the law will not permit the title to land to be made the subject of inquiry in a personal action. We think their understanding and application of the rule to which they refer cannot be sustained. Apart from any question as to the venue of the cause, about which the parties have nothing to say, and with which we will therefore not be concerned, the rule rests upon considerations which were stated in Powell v. Smith, 2 Watts (Pa.) 126, and repeated by this court in Cooper v. Watson, 73 Ala. 252, in this language: “It would provoke much useless litigation, and be attended with great practical mischief, if an owner out of possession were suffered to harass the actual occupant with an action for every blade of grass cut, or bushel of grain grown by him, instead of being compelled to resort to the action for mense profits, after a recovery in ejectment, by which compensation for the whole injury may be had at one operation.”—Beatty v. Brown, 76 Ala. 267. The right of the owner to maintain his actions for mesne profits and for injuries by waste or otherwise pending the defendant’s wrongful possession — actions which, though different in form, are governed by similar principles — does not depend necessarily upon his having previously recovered possession by ejectment, for he has the same right when he has regained possession by lawful re-entry.—Fry v. The Bank of Mobile, 16 Ala. 282. After possession regained the reason of the rule fails. To deny the right to prove title, and thereby constructive possession, in a personal action after recovery of possession in eject*138ment or by re-entry, would deny an action for an invasion of a substantial legal right. That right of action has never been denied.
The question which arises here relates to the necessity for proof and the admissibility of evidence. It relates to the evidential effect of the judgment of recovery in ejectment. In Fry v. Bank of Mobile, supra, adopting, the language of the cases generally, it was said that after re-entry by the lawful owner, or after he has recovered in ejectment, the law, by a kind of jus postliminii, supposes the freehold all the time to have continued in him. But appellee is mistaken in supposing that on a mere re-entry the law indulges a presumption that the right of entry existed for any length of time prior thereto. Non constat at the time of the acts complained of, the defendant may have been lawfully in possession with a right to do as he did, and plaintiff’s right to possession may have accrued subsequently. It could hardly be supposed that in such case a mere entry establishes, presumptively or conclusively, a right of action for what went before. In repect to the action in general the rule is that one must have either an absolute or temporary property in the soil, and actual possession by entry to be able to maintain an action of trespess. In order that the owner may maintain an action for wrongs done to the freehold during his disseisin, the law indulges a fiction, by a kind of jus postliminii, which permits the mere right of possession at the time of the injury to serve the purpose of an actual possession in actions for mesne profits and the like, after actual possession has been regained. But this constructive possession must be proved like any other fact necessary to recovery. The recovery in ejectment is conclusive as to plaintiff’s right during the time subsequent to the demise laid in the common-law *139action and subsequent to tbe commencement of tbe suit in statutory ejectment. Where tbe injury occurs previous to sucb time, title must be proved. This appears in tbe earliest authorities, to which, in view of tbe contention, it may be well to recur. On tbe authority of Aslin v. Parkin, 2 Bur. 665, which was an action of trespass to recover mesne profits after judgment obtained against tbe casual ejector, and tbe leading case on tbe subject, is based tbe language of Blackstone’s Commentaries (vol. 3, p. 205) : “In this case tbe judgment in ejectment is conclusive evidence against tbe defendant for all profits which have accrued since tbe date of tbe demise stated in tbe former declarations of the plaintiff; but, if tbe plaintiff sues for any antecedent profits, tbe defendant may make a new defense.” Of this passage tbe learned annotator Couch says: “Tbe effect of a judgment in ejectment is here too broadly stated. It is evidence of title from tbe date of tbe demise, but is no evidence of tbe length of time during which tbe defendant has been in possession. Where be appears and defends tbe .ejectment, be admits, as has been noticed, bis possession at tbe time of tbe service of the declaration, and tbe judgment therefore is evidence of sucb possession; but, if tbe plaintiff seeks to recover profits for an earlier period, be must give other evidence.” In Sedwick & Wait’s Trial of Title to Land, § 671, it is said: “If tbe plaintiff claims mesne profits for a period prior to tbe demise in tbe declaration, tbe title is open for investigation.” In Tillinghast’s Adams, p. 393, it is said: “When tbe plaintiff seeks to recover tbe mesne profits accruing antecedent to tbe day of demise in tbe declaration, it follows from what has been already said that be must produce tbe regular proof of bis title to tbe premises.” In West v. Hughes, 1 Har. & J. (Md.) 574, 2 Am. Dec. *140589, the case and the rule are well stated as follows: “This action is brought to recover the mesne profits during the time the defendant remained in possession. If the plaintiff can prove, his title accrued before the time of the demise in the action of ejectment, and that the defendant had been longer in possession, he may recover antecedent profits. But in such cases the defendant is at liberty to controvert this title. But, from the time of the demise until the plaintiff was put in possession under the habere facias possessionem, defendant is accountable for the profits.” In Henry v. Davis, 149 Ala. 359, 43 South. 122, this court has stated the proposition' as follows: “The authorities are clear that, under the old system of pleading, the record of the recovery in ejectment was conclusive proof of the right of possession by the plaintiff at the time of the demise laid, and that, if he desired to recover for any trespass previous to that date, he was required to prove his possession, or right to possession, at the time when the alleged trespass was committed. As we have no demise laid in our statutory action of ejectment, it necessarily follows that the only time to which the judgment can relate is the date of the commencement of the suit; and so the authorities hold” — citing cases and text-books abundantly sustaining the proposition. There are none to the contrary. S'o, then, it was necessary for the plaintiff to prove his right of possession at the time of the injuries complained of, a time prior to the commencement of his action of ejectment, by showing his legal title at that time, and such evidence was properly admitted.
It being proper for the plaintiff to show his constructive possession at the time of the trespass and conversion alleged, by showing his title prior to the commencement of his action of ejectment, it results that defend*141ants ought to have been allowed to controvert that title. The authorities to which we have referred so hold. A conclusion favorable to the defendant on the issue, while defeating plaintiff’s action, would have no effect upon plaintiff’s title to the land, and right of possession thereunder, as determined by the judgment in ejectment, As to that the judgment in ejectment was conclusive between the parties except in a second action of ejectment. In Carlisle v. Killebrew, 89 Ala. 329, 6 South. 756, 6 L. R. A. 617, the action was in detinue for the recovery of personal property consisting of crops raised during the year 1887. The defendant had recovered the land upon which the crops were grown in an action of ejectment commenced on December 13, 1886, and had been formally put in possession by the sheriff under a writ of possession, and while so in possession had appropriated the crops in controversy in the detinue suit. Carlisle afterwards took possession of the land and brought his action of detinue. The ruling was that the judgment in ejectment was conclusive of the rights of the parties in the detinue suit. The court said: “But, where the question of title arises collaterally, as in the action for mesne profits, or otherwise, the record of a recovery in ejectment is not only admissible in evidence in favor of the party in possession under it, but is conclusive between the same parties, and their privies, on the same title, as to the question of possession and title.” But, in the case of Aslin v. Parkin, to which we have already referred, it was unanimously resolved, among other things^ that: “This judgment (the judgment of ejectment), like all others, only concludes the parties, as to the subject-matter of it. Therefore, beyond the time laid in the demise, it proves nothing at all, because, beyond that time, the plaintiff has alleged no title, nor could be put to prove *142any. As to the length of time the tenant has occupied, the judgment proves nothing; nor as to the value. And therefore it was proved in this case (and must be in all) how long the defendant enjoyed the premises, and what the value was; and it appeared that the time of such occupation by the defendant was within the time laid in the demise.” And it was directed that the plaintiff should have judgment. When the facts are considered, it will be seen that identical reasoning was followed in Carlisle v. Killebrew. These cases are exactly in line with what we have written. The muniments of title offered by the defendants, standing alone, were insufficient to overturn the title shown by plaintiff. But they were offered, in connection with the testimony going to show a continuous adverse possession by the defendants for a period of more than 10 years prior to the date of the alleged injuries, to show the bona fides of that possession. This evidence was admissible to show title in the defendant at that time, and to defeat plaintiff’s action. Plaintiff’s recovery in ejectment did not conclude that question.
For error in excluding defendant’s evidence as to title prior to the commencement of the suit in ejectment, the judgment of the court below must be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Dowdell, C. J., and Anderson and Somerville, JJ., concur.