M'Kinly v. Holliday
M'Kinly v. Holliday
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought to recover the value of improvements made upon the defendant’s land. The defendant had
The plaintiff had notice of the defendant’s better title before he made the improvements for which this suit is brought.
The judge charged the jury, that the statutes allowing pay for improvements to those who are turned out of possession by an action of ejectment, are unconstitutional.
The subject of the constitutionality of these acts of assembly, has been several times before this court, and although they have been commented on very much at length, yet a definite and satisfactory adjudication..has not been made. To say that the act of 1805, c 42, shall be construed according to its literal import, and to give it effect to the whole extent that the- legislature seem to have intended, would doubtless, be to impair the obligation of the contract which the State makes with every grantee of land. If a party who is in possession of another man’s land, under an entry which may have cost him but a few cents, can make whatever improvements he may choose, notwithstanding he may know of the existence of the better title, and when turned out by an ejectment, may recover for the value of all such improvements, it is easy to' see that he may in this way often become owner of the land, as a compensation for his tresspass upon it; and although the legislature may not directly deprive the true owner of his land, and give it to another, yet in this way they may do the same thing indirectly.
It is not, however, now contended, that this extended operation can be given to these acts, but that the legislature had the power to give the party an action at law for so much as he could before have obtained in a court of equity. This principle is undoubtedly correct, and is fully conceded by Judge Overton in Townsend vs. Shipp’s heirs, Cooke’s Rep. 300, and is not denied by Judge Whyte in Nelson vs. Allen and Harris, 1 Yer. Rep. 383. The only difference of opinion in those two cases is, as to the extent of relief a court of equity would give a party who had made improvement’s on another man’s land. In the case of Townsend vs. Shipp, the court held, that if one take possession of land under a title believ
Take this to be the true principle upon which a court of equity acts, and it would follow, that as the possessor would be entitled under particular circumstances to a diminution of the recovery for rents and prq|its, the legislature might give him an action to recover that directly, which a court of equity would indirectly award. But although we cannot concur in the principle laid down by the court in Townsend vs. Shipp before referred to, to the whole extent there assumed, still we think the grounds assumed by judge Whyte are too restricted* At the last term of this court in the case of Jones and others vs. Perry and others, 10 Yer. Rep.
Upon the whole, if the court had charged the jury according to the principles established in this opinion, the verdict ought to have been for the defendant, and therefore the court will not reverse the judgment when another trial will produce the same result.
Judgment affirmed.
Ante page 59.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.