Court Opinion

ID: 7964011
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:48:55.660517+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:35.243064
License: Public Domain

BeRRY, J.
“One * * * tenant in common * * * may maintain an action against his cotenant for receiving more than his just proportion of the rents *' * * of the estate owned by them as * * * tenants in common.” Gen. St. 1878, c. 75, § 43. Under this provision of statute the plaintiff brings the present action to recover an unpaid balance of her proportion of rents received by defendant for real property, of which, at the time of the receipt, they were, as she alleges, tenants in common. Both parties claim to derive title from the common source of an execution sale. Defendant insists that the sale was invalid; that plaintiff, therefore, acquired no title through it, and consequently did not become his tenant in common, so as to enable her to maintain an action of this kind.
*89The objection to the execution sale is that it was made upon an alias execution, and that this is an unauthorized and void process; ■the renewal of an execution provided for in Gen. St. 1878, c. 66, § 296, haying taken the place of an alias, and exclusively. At common law the right and propriety of issuing an alias execution are unquestionable. Our statutes do not assume to take this right away, and therefore it still subsists. Barrett v. McKenzie, 24 Minn. 20. This is also in accordance with the prevailing opinion and practice of the profession. When the constitution declares that the duties of clerks ■of district courts “shall be .prescribed by law,” it does not use the word “law,” as the defendant’s counsel supposes, as synonymous with “statute,” but in a broader sense, as including both statutory and •common law. The objection to the alias execution is not well taken.
Defendant’s remaining point upon this appeal is based upon the •exclusion-of evidence offered in his behalf. Defendant had testified •as follows: “When I took possession of the property [i. e., the property owned by him and plaintiff in common] there was nothing but ■a blacksmith shop on one corner of it. Fifteen dollars a month was big rent for the property in the condition it was in when I took it. After I took possession of the property I put improvements on it. Mrs. Walter [the plaintiff] did not object to my putting the improvements on.” Defendant was then asked by his counsel: “State what improvements you put upon the property, and the value of the same.” Plaintiff objecting that the question was immaterial and incompe-tent, defendant’s counsel offered to show by the testimony of this witness that, after defendant took possession of the land, he built thereon a frame barn, of the value of $600, and that the plaintiff at the time had full notice and knowledge of its construction, and made no objection; that the barn was a permanent structure, an ordinary :and suitable improvement of the property, and that defendant paid the entire cost of it, without any contribution by the plaintiff. The question was, however, excluded, and in our opinion properly so. It was not proper to show the value of the barn for the purpose of ■ charging plaintiff with any part of such value, or of the cost of construction.
*90A tenant in common cannot, in the absence of an agreement or understanding with his cotenant to that effect, make improvements upon the common property at the expense, in any part, of his coten-ant, so as to enable him to recover any portion of the cost or value of the improvements, either in an action brought by him for that purpose, or by way of set-off in an action brought against him by his co-tenant. We are not speaking of repairs, nor of what might be done upon a partition. Freeman on Cot. & Par. § 262; Crest v. Jack, 3 Watts, 238; Stevens v. Thompson, 17 N. H. 103; Thurston v. Dickinson, 2 Rich. Eq. (S. C.) 317; Taylor v. Baldwin, 10 Barb. 582.
In the second place, conceding, for the purposes of this case, that the defendant was by some applicable rule of law entitled to an allowance for so much of the rent received by him as was earned by the barn, his offer (including the question asked) did not go far enough. It did not embrace an offer to show how much the rent was increased by the barn; neither could the increase be properly estimated from the evidence in the case. For this reason it was immaterial, even upon the, concession mentioned. Follansbee v. Johnson, 28 Minn. 311. We do not understand the admissibility of the question and offer to be urged upon any other grounds than these, and no others occur to us.
Order affirmed.