Castro v. Tewksbury

11 P. 339, 69 Cal. 562, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 689
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1886
DocketNo. 8285
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 11 P. 339 (Castro v. Tewksbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Castro v. Tewksbury, 11 P. 339, 69 Cal. 562, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 689 (Cal. 1886).

Opinion

Belcher, C. C.

This is an action of forcible entrv. The premises involved are situated in Contra Costa County, and consist of a hundred acres of land, with a dwelling-house thereon.

The plaintiff recovered a verdict for restitution of possession and damages in the sum of seven hundred dollars, which were trebled in the judgment.

The defendant moved for a new trial, which was denied, and then appealed from the judgment and order.

Two questions only need be considered:—

1. The alleged entry, whatever may have been its character, was made on the ninth day of June, 1880, and was into the dwelling-house, and not upon any other part of the premises. Did the plaintiff at the time of the entry have such possession of the house as was necessary to enable him to maintain an action of this character ?

In this state, in order to maintain an action of forcible entry, the plaintiff must show:—

1. That he was in the actual and peaceable possession of the property entered upon;

2. That the defendant, by some kind of violence or circumstance of terror, entered into or upon the property, and so turned the plaintiff out and took and held possession of it himself; or,

3. That after making a peaceable entry the defendant, by force, threats, or menacing conduct, turned the plaintiff out and took the possession. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 1159, 1172.)

Speaking of what was a sufficient possession to main[564]*564tain the action, this court said in Hoag v. Pierce, 28 Cal. 187:—

“If the possession of the plaintiff was not actual and of sufficiently long standing to become to a legal intent peaceable, then he was not in a condition to maintain his action.” In Treat v. Stuart, 5 Cal. 113, the court said: “The plaintiff in an action of forcible entry and unlawful detainer must show an actual, peaceable possession in himself at the time of the entry”; and in House v. Keiser, 8 Cal. 500, which was an action brought under the act concerning forcible entries and unlawful detainers, the court said that “a party who desires to avail himself of the summary remedy provided by this act must bring himself clearly within its provisions. He must show a possession, actual, peaceable, and exclusive; a mere scrambling or interrupted possession, or the exercise of casual acts of ownership over the premises, is not sufficient.”

And in that case it was held that one who in the morning entered upon a portion of a tract of land in the possession of another, and inclosed it with a fence and put a house on it before sundown, did not acquire such a peaceable possession as to enable him to maintain forcible entry and detainer against the possessor, who, at sundown of the same day, destroyed the house and fence and drove him away.

So in Voll v. Butler, 49 Cal. 74, it was held that an action of forcible entry and detainer cannot be maintained upon a scrambling possession.

As between two parties struggling for possession, neither can maintain an action of forcible entry and detainer against the other until he has acquired an actual possession which has ripened into a peaceable occupation.

Here it clearly appears from the record that the defendant Emily S. Tewksbury claimed, and had claimed for several years, that the whole property was the property [565]*565of the estate of her deceased husband, of which she was the executrix; that one Alberto, with his family, had occupied the dwelling-house, with about an acre of land surrounding it, by permission of Mrs. Tewksbury, since 1877, and that a few days before the 9th of June he notified her that he was going to leave because Castro was troubling him, and that he wished her to send some one to take possession; that she requested him to remain till the 9th, when she would send some one, and he did so; that between seven and eight o’clock on the morning of the 9th the plaintiff went to the house and asked Alberto if he was going to move, and being answered in the affirmative, said the house was his and he was going to put his things there.

According to the plaintiff’s testimony, Alberto then told him: “He knew I was the owner of the place, and to take it, as he was going for a wagon. No one was present then except Moitozo.” Moitozo contradicted the plaintiff. He certified that when the plaintiff said the house was his, “Alberto replied that if it was he did n’t know it; that he got possession through Mrs. Tewksbury, and was going to give possession to her. He did not say that Castro could have the house, or anything to that effect.” And this statement was confirmed by both Alberto and his wife.

The plaintiff then went away, but shortly after returned, bringing some articles of furniture, and followed by his wife and six daughters. They all went into the house, and remained in or about it, but did not interfere with Mrs. Alberto, who was engaged in her household work; nor with Alberto, who was there most of the time, getting his things ready to remove.

At about eleven o’clock in the forenoon the defendants Cashman and Rollins arrived at the house, being sent there by Mrs. Tewksbury to take possession for her. They found Castro outside, and Alberto, his wife and children, and some of the Castro children, inside. Al[566]*566berto then formally turned over possession of the house to them for Mrs. Tewksbury, and began to move out his furniture. From that time until eight o’clock in the evening of the same day, Castro and his family and the men remained at the house. There was some wrangling, and according to the plaintiff’s testimony, some demonstrations of violence toward him; but this was denied 'by the defendants. At eight o’clock in the evening a constable appeared at the house, and told Castro that ‘ he had a warrant issued by a justice of the peace at San Pablo, for the arrest of him and all his family. “Then I went in,” the plaintiff says, “ and told my family that .we were arrested, and to go out; the constable said there was a wagon, but I said we would rather go on foot, and he said all right.”

They then went to the office of the justice of the peace, the constable not accompanying them, and when arrived there were permitted to go away on their own recognizance. They then returned to their own house, and found the articles which had been carried to the Alberto house lying in front of it. The complaint on which the warrant was issued was for a forcible entry, and was written by the attorney of Mrs. Tewksbury, but without her knowledge, and it did not appear who signed or swore to it.

Castro never returned to the Alberto house, and he had no possession of it except as briefly above stated.

In our opinion, the testimony fell far short of showing such actual and peaceable possession of the house in the plaintiff as was necessary to enable him to maintain an action of forcible entry.

2. Was the plaintiff entitled to maintain an action for a forcible entry upon the hundred acres of land, and to recover as damages the value of the wheat and barley crops standing thereon ?

As to this land, the record shows that it was the northern half of a tract of two hundred acres, which was in[567]*567closed as one field many years before by the husband of Mrs. Tewksbury, and was claimed by him during his life, and afterward by her as the property of his estate. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
11 P. 339, 69 Cal. 562, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castro-v-tewksbury-cal-1886.