Alderson v. Miller
Alderson v. Miller
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court:
This is a supersedeas to a judgment of the Circuit court reversing a judgment of the County court in favor of the plaintiff in error Aiderson, upon a summons for unlawful detainer sued out against him by tile defendant in error Miller. Such a proceeding involves no question of title, the question being whether the plaintiff is, as against the defendant, entitled to the possession, although for the purpose of determining who is so entitled to the possession, the title may be given in evidence. In the case under consideration, it does not appear that Miller gave any evidence of title on the trial. He seems, from the statement in the first bill of exceptions, to have rested his right to recover upon his character of landlord, seeking ‘“'restitution of possession from a tenant holding over after the expiration of his term. The questions made by the bills of exception arise upon the supposition that the parties stood in the relation towards each other of landlord and tenant. On the trial Miller gave in evidence, as the bill of exceptions states, a writing purporting to be a lease, whereby Aiderson rented from him the land for the term of one year, and bound himself to render up peaceable possession at the end of the term; and proved that at the end of the term he demanded a surrender of the leased premises, which was refused by Aiderson. The latter thereupon offered to read in evidence a decree which is set out in the bill of exceptions, and after reading said decree, he also upon the same state of proof offered in evidence a deed to himself for the land in controversy from George Aiderson and John Anderson, dated the 16th of December 1829. The deed describes the land as part of a survey of twenty-eight thousand two hundred and eighty and a half acres, made for aud granted to Henry Banks, and sold by the attorney of said Banks to the said G. Aiderson and J. Anderson. To the reading of the copy of the decree and the deed in evidence Miller objected; but as the defendant in the court below stated that he expected to prove the lease referred to was procured through mistake or fraud, and that he had himself title to the land; and that said decree and deed were necessary items of proof to establish said facts, the court overruled the objection, and permitted the decree aud deed to be read as evidence: to which decisions the said Miller excepted.
The general rule that a tenant should not be permitted to contest his landlord’s title, is too well settled to require the citation of any authorities to sustain it. The rule rests upon principles of justice and good faith. The tenant enters under his landlord, and acquires ‘“‘possession by admitting his title. It would be a breach of good faith to attempt to hold a possession so obtained, by impeaching the landlord’s title. In most cases at law the plaintiff’s action may be defeated by showing that the right to the subject in controversy is in a third person. In a writ of right the constructive seizin conferred by a grant could be defeated b3 proof of a valid outstanding title in a third person; and in ejectment the lessor of the plaintiff must, in almost every case, show a good title against all persons. The exception in favor of the landlord as against his tenant, is a departure from the strict rule of law. But a principle adopted to promote justice and good faith, must not, as was said by C. J. Tilghman in Hamilton’s lessee v. Marsdon, 6 Binn. R. 45, be used as an instrument of fraud and violence. In that case the tenant, to prove adverse title, was permitted to show that being in possession under a lease from a third person, the plaintiff in the ejectment came with others armed and threatened to turn him out of the premises, unless he took a lease from him, which he did. So in the case of Miller v. McBriar, 14 Serg. & Rawle 382, a person in possession was induced by the plaintiff who exhibited a patent, to enter into an agreement called a lease. The tenant offered to prove that the patent was procured by fraud. Gibson, C. J., said that a tenant may impeach his landlord’s title whenever he can show that he was induced to accept the lease by misrepresentation and fraud, and the exhibition of a title founded in forgery to induce a person alreachy in possession to accept of a lease, was an act of an unequivocal character; and the evidence was admissible to show that the agreement was obtained bj“ imposition and deceit. To the same effect is the case of Brown v. Dysinger, 1 Rawle’s R. 408, where a lease was unfairly obtained from a ^’person in possession of the land. The case of Ball v. Lively, 2 J. J. Marsh. R. 181, establishes the same proposition. In that case the defendant in possession against whom there had been a judgment and recovery in ejectment for part of the land in his possession, was induced by a person who had no authority to enforce the judgment, to take from him a lease, which recited that the plaintiffs in ejectment had recovered the whole of the premises. The court decided that if a person in possession of land be induced by fraud to become lessee of one having no
The proof being legal, and offered for the purpose set out in the bills of exceptions, the order in which it was offered was of no importance. In view of the object avowed, it would seem that they should have *been first offered as showing an actual possession under claim of title before he surrendered possession and reentered under the lease, and then to introduce the evidence of fraud and imposition. If any reason had existed to induce the court to believe that these papers were offered merely to produce an improper impression on the jury, and that it was not intended to follow them up by evidence tending to prove fraud or imposition, the court perhaps might have required the party to reverse the order of his proof. These are matters occurring in the progress of a trial, which must be left in a great measure to the control of the court which is supervising it. If not followed by any evidence tending- to prove the fraud and imposition, the jury can he instructed to disregard it.
It was insisted that the decree should not have been admitted because it does not show on its face that it referred to the land in controversy. It is not necessary to determine that question upon this bill of exceptions. It was proof that such a decree was rendered, and whether the party offering it showed by other evidence, as he might have done by the admission of the adverse party, that the deed and decree referred to the same twenty-eight thousand two hundred and eighty and a half acres of land in Greenbrier does not appear. It does not appear that any motioii was made to instruct the jury to disregard this evidence becauseinot followed up by other evidence necessary to make it available. The objection seems to have been rested rather upon the time of offering the proof, than upon the admissibility of the proof in a different stage of the trial. A verdict was found and judgment rendered, without any exception to the rulings of the court in any other particular; there was no motion fora new trial; the facts proved were not spread on the record. The presumption therefore is that the defendant below *did show a previous possession under title which he never had surrendered, and so showed a better right to the possession than his adversary; or if he did surrrender possession and re-enter under the alleged lease, that it was procured through fraud.
It seems to me that there was no error in the judgment of the County court, and that the Circuit court, instead of reversing, should have affirmed it.
Judgment of the Circuit court reversed, and that of the County court affirmed.
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