Powell v. Watson
Powell v. Watson
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Mrs. Powell brought this action of ejectment against Watson, to recover the possession of lot 2 in block 3 in the town of Juka.
The defendant pleaded hot guilty, and thereby admitted his possession of the premises demanded. Code, § 2483. At the same time he filed the special plea permitted' by § 2486 of' the code to one sued in ejectment, who desires to deny the fact that he is in possession of the premises sought to be recovered. Where such plea is filed, the code declares : “ But in such case, the title of the plaintiff shall be admitted, and the only question on the trial shall be in relation to the fact of possession.”
The defendant, by his pleading, admitted every material fact necessary to be established by the plaintiff, who would have been entitled to judgment of recovery on motion. Code, § 1548.
The trouble with the case was, that no issue being presented by the pleadings to which the parties were confined, each fell to fighting in the position he deemed strongest to himself, regardless of the fact that there was no enemy in front. The court should have directed one or the other of the pleas to be stricken from the files, even though no action was taken by the plaintiff.. It was essential to the orderly trial of the cause, indeed, giving to the'pleas their statutory effect, there could be no trial, because no issue could be presented while both remained on file. The defendant in the action of ejectment under our statute must elect whether he will admit the title of his adversary, and deny his own possession, or will admit his possession and deny the hostile title ; he cannot rely upon both defenses at one and the same time.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Julia A. Powell v. Robt. H. Watson
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Ejectment. Practice. Pleading. Contradictory pleas. Election. In ejectment, where the defendant files the general issue, the effect of which is to admit his possession under \\ 2483, code 1880, and at the same time interposes the special plea disclaiming possession under $ 2486, which admits plaintiff’s title, even though the plaintiff does not object to the contradictory pleading, the court of its own motion should compel an election, and strike out one of the pleas. If this is not done, and there is a trial a.nd a judgment for defendant on the merits, on appeal, the supreme court will, of its own motion, reverse for this cause alone.