Wheelock v. Warschauer
Wheelock v. Warschauer
Opinion of the Court
Field, C. J. and Norton, J. concurring.
This is an action under the thirteenth section of the Forcible Entry and Unlawful Detainer Act. The complaint alleges that the defendant is a tenant of the plaintiff, and that he unlawfully detains the demised premises, setting forth facts showing a wrongful holding over. The answer admits that a tenancy once existed between the parties, but alleges that it was terminated by the eviction of the defendant under a judgment in ejectment recovered against him by one Dutton. It alleges also that the defendant pleaded his title
The right to maintain the action depends upon the existence of a tenancy, and a tenancy once created is presumed to continue so long as the tenant remains in possession. This presumption may be rebutted, however, for the rule which estops a tenant from disputing the title of his landlord does not prevent him from showing that the tenancy has been determined. He is estopped so long as the tenancy continues, but the tenancy being dissolved, the disabilities resulting from his position as a tenant are removed, and the estoppel ceases. “ The tenant,” says Greenleaf, “ may always show that his landlord’s title has expired, or that he has sold his interest in the premises, or that it is alienated from him by judgment and operation of law.” (2 Greenl. Ev. 253.) This doctrine is supported by a multitude of cases, and it seems that where the tenant is evicted by one having an adverse title, he may take from the latter a new lease, and set it up as against the landlord. (1 Washburn on Real Property, 359 ; Foster v. Norris, 3 A. K. Marsh. 609.) It is the duty of the landlord to protect him in his possession, and he may treat the eviction as terminating the tenancy, and resist any claim by the landlord, either for rent or for the possession. It is necessary, of course, that notice be given of the proceeding by which the tenant is evicted, so that the landlord may not be taken by surprise, and suffer an injury by reason of the carelessness or collusion of the tenant. There is no doubt that a defense of this character is admissible in the present case, for the statute expressly
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reference
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- WHEELOCK v. WARSCHAUER
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- Syllabus
- In an action bjr a landlord against his tenant under the thirteenth section of the Forcible Entry and Detainer Act, the latter may defend by showing an eviction under an adverse title in a judicial proceeding of which proper notice was given to the landlord. Such a defense does not involve any question of title, the effect of an eviction being to dispossess the landlord as well as the tenant, and to relieve the latter from the obligations of his tenancy. The rule which estops a tenant from disputing his landlord’s title does not prevent him from showing that the tenancy has been determined, and he may treat an eviction, with notice, by one having an adverse title, as a termination of the tenancy, and thus resist any claim by the landlord either for rent or possession. The notice by a tenant to his landlord of proceedings to evict him may be oral.