Walton, J.This is an action founded on R. S'., c. 104, § 43, known as the betterment law. It is as follows :
"When any person makes entry into lands or tenements, of which the tenant in possession, or those under whom he claims, have been in actual possession for six years or more before such .entry, and withholds their possession from such tenant, he shall have a right to recover of him so entering, or of his executor or administrator, in an action of assumpsit for money laid out and *514expended, the increased valué of the premises by reason of tbe building's and improvements made by the tenant, or those under whom he claims, to be ascertained by the principles hereinbefore provided.”
The case is before the law court on report. The court is to determine whether upon the evidence reported, and the facts admitted, the action is maintainable. If maintainable, it is to stand for trial. If not, the plaintiff is to become nonsuit.
The only objection' to the maintenance of the suit is that the plaintiff had not been in the actual possession of the premises for six years before the entry of the defendants which is relied upon to maintain the suit. It appears that the plaintiff acquired his title to the premises in May, 1876; that in November or December following-, Mrs. Doane, claiming title adversely to the plaintiff, entered and took possession of the promises and held it till the following May or June, when the plaintiff again entered and regained his possession; that in January, 1881, the defendants entered and took possession of the premises; and it is this entry of January, 1881, on which the plaintiff relies (so stated in the report) to maintain his suit. The fact that Mrs. Doane entered in November or December, 1876, claiming-title adversely to the plaintiff, and occupied up to May or June following-, before the plaintiff re-entered and regained the possession, is admitted. It is so stated in the report.
We must therefore regard it as an admitted fact that the plaintiff had not been in the actual possession of the premises, continuously, for six years immediately preceding the entry on which he relies for the maintenance of his action. ITow, then, can the action be maintained? We think it can not. True, the plaintiff and his grantor had been in the actual possession of .the premises for more than six years when, in 1876, the plaintiff’s possession was interrupted by Mrs. Doane; and if the plaintiff had yielded to that interruption, and had brought his action against Mrs. Doane, we see no reason why it could not have been maintained. But he did not yield to that possession. He re-entered; and apparently by force and against the will of Mx-s. Doane, who claimed to own the premises.
*515And Ms action is not against Mrs. Doane, but .against two other persons (husband and wife) who, so far as we can discover from the evidence reported, are in possession under-Mrs. Doane, or a title derived from her. And the plaintiff does not rely upon Mrs. Doane’s entry in 1876 to maintain his. suit; but upon the entry of the defendants in 1881. It is so. stated in the report. Now, it being an admitted fact that the-plaintiff had not been in the actual possession of the premises, for six years, continuously and immediately before the entry - of the defendants on which he relies for the maintenance of his. suit, the only question is whether such a possession by him and. his grantor for six successive years or more before the interruption in 1876 took place, is sufficient to support the action. Clearly not. And for two reasons. First, his action is not against Mrs. Doane. If the plaintiff relies upon the entry of' Mrs. Doane in 1876 to support an action, it must be an action against her. Her entry can not be relied upon to support an action against other parties. It is true that these defendants, appear to have been upon the premises -with her in 1876-7 ; but it does not appear that the entry was by them, or that they-claimed any right, title, or interest in the premises at that time. On the contrary, it is admitted that the entry was by Mrs. Doane, and that she was the one who held the premises adversely to the plaintiff till the May or June following. And, secondly, we think the six years " actual possession,” mentioned in tli© statute, means the six years immediately preceding the entry on which the plaintiff relies to support his action. "Not the language only,” said the court, in Kelley v. Kelley, 23 Maine, 192, "but the spirit of the statute, required that such actual possession for the term of six years or more before the-commencement of such action, should he immediately preceding, and not at some remote period.” That was said of a claim for betterments made in an action brought by the owner to recover possession of his land. But the possession of the tenant which will sustain a claim for betterments in such an action, is the same as that which will sustain an action for betterments brought by the tenant when he is dispossessed without a judgment of the *516-court. If an action is brought against the tenant to dispossess ihim, he can enforce his claim to betterments by way of defense. ■If he is dispossessed by an entry without suit, then he may Ihimself bring an action to enforce his claim. But, in either ■ case, the character of the possession, which will support his • claim to betterments, is the same, and must have continued for 'the same length of time. The only difference is that, in the one ■case it is computed from the commencement of the action, and in the other from the entry. In either case, the six years actual possession must immediately precede the event which secures to ■the tenant a valid claim for betterments. Consequently, upon •the evidence reported, and the facts admitted, we think this .action is not maintainable.
Plaintiff nonsuit.
Appleton, C. J., DaNfobti-i, Virgin and Svmonds, JJ., concurred.
Peters, J., did not sit.