Leroux v. Murdock

California Supreme Court
Leroux v. Murdock, 51 Cal. 541 (Cal. 1876)

Leroux v. Murdock

Opinion of the Court

By the Court:

The pleadings are verified, and the answer denies the allegations of the complaint only in the conjunctive, and tenders an issue upon the unlawful character of the entry; denies that the defendants unlawfully entered and * * * do now unlawfully detain, etc. It cannot, therefore, be maintained that the plaintiff was correctly nonsuited for a failure to prove the entry of the defendant Murdock.

Nor was the action of the court in nonsuiting the plaintiff correct in other respects. The proofs upon the part of the plaintiff tended to bring the case within the second subdivision of section 1160, Civil Code Procedure, which provides that an unlawful entry made during the absence' of the occupant of lands, followed by a refusal to surrender upon notice of five days, shall be held to be a forcible detainer, and. tended to establish such a possession of the premises as would characterize the plaintiff in being an occupant thereof, within the last clause of that section.

The ruling of the court below was directly in conflict with our views, as expressed in Shelby v. Houston (38 Cal. 410), and Wilson v. Shakelford (41 Cal. 630).

Judgment and order denying a new trial reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.

Reference

Full Case Name
GEORGE LEROUX v. WM. MURDOCK, JOSEPH TROXEL and CHRISTOPHER ROBISON
Cited By
5 cases
Status
Published
Syllabus
Denials in an Answeb.—When the complaint is verified, an answer which denies its allegations in the conjunctive is insufficient. Idem.—If the complaint in an action of unlawful detainer avers that the defendant unlawfully entered upon the demanded premises, and the answer denies that he entered unlawfully, it admits the entry and raises an issue only upon the question of its lawfulness. Foboible Detainee.—In an action of forcible detainer, evidence that the plaintiff had a house in which he had lived, on a tract of land, and had the year before cultivated it to grain, and at the time of the alleged unlawful entry had a volunteer crop growing on it, tends to prove such a possesion of the land in the plaintiff as makes him an occupant thereof within the meaning of the second subdivision of section 1160 of the Code of Civil Procedure, in relation to a forcible detainer, even if he had been absent from the land for several weeks before the entry of defendant.