Bank of Topeka v. Sadler
Bank of Topeka v. Sadler
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In June, 1903, M. C. Sadler, the grantee in several tax deeds dated September 21, 1901, brought ejectment based thereon against Alfred P. Reid, the holder of the patent title, other defendants being j oined. A first trial resulted in a judgment for the defendants. Upon application of the plaintiff the judgment was vacated and the cause was continued until the next term of court, when it was dismissed upon the voluntary application of the plaintiff. In January, 1904, the Bank of Topeka acquired Reid’s title and rented the land. The tenant, without the knowledge or consent of the bank, abandoned it. On September 4, 1904, M. C. Sadler, finding it thus without an actual occupant, took physical possession. On February 11, 1911, the bank brought ejectment against her (M. C. Sadler). The court found the facts substantially as above stated and rendered judgment for the bank, from which this appeal is taken.
In Deming v. Douglass, 60 Kan. 738, 57 Pac. 954, it was held that a plaintiff in ejectment who had voluntarily dismissed his action, after the judgment upon a first trial had been set aside under the statute allowing a second trial as a matter of right, was to be regarded as having thereby permanently abandoned his claim. This precedent, if followed, compels an affirmance of the decision of the trial court in the present case. We are asked to reexamine the soundness of the doctrine there announced, but do not regard that course as necessary or called for. The matter relates to policy rather than principle. There is no inherent hardship or injustice in compelling a plaintiff, after the results of a
Within the authority of the decisions cited, the plaintiff in the first ejectment action, having voluntarily dismissed it after one judgment had been set aside on her own application, made as a matter of right, could not maintain a new action, reasserting the same claim. Nor could she better her situation, and acquire a right to assert her claim by way of defense, by taking possession of the land when it was left without an actual occupant through the departure of the tenant without the knowledge of the landlord. (Nicholson v. Hale, 73 Kan. 599, 85 Pac. 592; Buehler v. Teetor, 84 Kan. 281, 114 Pac. 387; Buckner v. Wingard, 84 Kan. 682, 115 Pac. 636.)
The appellant contends that the record does not affirmatively show the vacation of the first judgment to have been procured by invoking the statutory right to a second trial in ejectment — that so far as shown in I this proceeding a new trial may have been granted be-I cause of errors committed in the former one. The [journal entry in the first action, after reciting the [rendition of judgment for the defendants, proceeds: [“and thereupon upon application of said plaintiff, notice
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The Bank of Topeka v. M. C. Sadler
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- 2 cases
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- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. 1. Ejectment — First Trial Set Aside — Case Dismissed — Further Action Barred. Following Deming v. Douglass, 60 Kan. 738, 67 Pac. 964, it is held that a plaintiff in ejectment, who has voluntarily dismissed his action, after a judgment upon a first trial had been set aside under the statute (now repealed) allowing a second trial as a matter of right, is regarded as having thereby permanently abandoned his claim, and can maintain no further action thereon. * 2. - Right of Action Lost — Not Restored by Taking Possession of Land. One who has in that manner lost the right to maintain such an action can not, by taking possession of the land while temporarily without an actual occupant, acquire the right to assert his claim of title by way of defense. 3. Order — Granting Second Trial in Ejectment — Recitals of Record. A recital in the record of an ejectment action, that a judgment upon a first trial was vacated for good cause shown, upon application of the unsuccessful party, notice thereof being entered on the journal, is to be interpreted, in the absence of anything further to indicate the contrary, as showing that the judgment was vacated upon a demand made as a matter of right.