Clark v. Holcomb

253 P. 897, 31 Ariz. 378, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 227
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1927
DocketCivil No. 2534.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 253 P. 897 (Clark v. Holcomb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Holcomb, 253 P. 897, 31 Ariz. 378, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 227 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

JENOKES, Superior Judge

The appellee, J. T.

Holcomb, filed his bill of complaint in the court below against the appellants praying that they be enjoined from causing to be issued and executed a writ of restitution in that certain cause in said court wherein appellants Sam Clark, Y. C. Quiroz and Manuel Quiroz recovered judgment against said J. T. Holcomb for the possession of lot No. 5 in block No. 9, Clarkston town site, Pima county, Arizona. We will hereinafter refer to that cause as the "possessory action," and to appellee, Holcomb, *380 as “plaintiff” and appellants Clark and Quiroz as “defendants.”

A temporary restraining order was issued which, upon final hearing, was made permanent, and it is from the final decree percnanently enjoining the issuance and execution of the writ of restitution that defendants prosecute this appeal.

The allegations of the complaint upon which the lower court granted the injunction are briefly and in substance as follows: Eecites the judgment in the pos-sessory action, the appeal by plaintiff to the Supreme Court (ante, p. 18, 250 Pac. 252), and the affirmance thereof. That since the date of the said judgment in the possessory action the defendants have been ousted of any rights in or to said premises by deed of patent from the United States to the judge of the superior court of Pima county, Arizona, as trustee of Eowood town site, conveying said premises to him, whereby he became the owner thereof. That defendants instituted an action against the said judge of the superior court of Pima county as such trustee to quiet title in themselves to said premises, in which action the judgment was that defendants (plaintiffs therein) take nothing. That if issuance of the writ of restitution be not restrained and enjoined, the buildings and improvements on said premises will be destroyed and removed, to the immediate and irreparable damage of plaintiff. That plaintiff is duly and regularly a town-site settler and claimant upon and for said premises and the owner of the improvements thereon, and is lawfully entitled to remain in possession of said premises. By his supplemental complaint the following further allegation is made: That since the filing of the original complaint plaintiff has become and is now the owner in fee of said premises by deed from the town-site trustee.

*381 The temporary restraining order was issued without notice to the defendants, and before filing an answer to the hill of complaint the defendants moved to dissolve such temporary restraining order and to dismiss the bill for want of equity upon its face, which motion was denied by the trial court. The defendants then answered, pleading the judgment in their favor in the possessory action, and further denied that the facts pleaded by plaintiff entitled him to the injunctive relief prayed for.

The situation out of which the appeal in this case arose grew out of a controversy between the defendants on the one side and various claimants of lots in the Rowood town site in Pima county, Arizona. Defendants had located certain mining claims near Ajo in Pima county and established the town site of Clarkston thereon, leasing lots in said town site to various people. In the possessory action plaintiff (defendant therein) was held to be an as-signee of one of such lessees, and that action was brought by defendants to obtain possession of the said lot from plaintiff. In the meantime a movement was started to establish the town site of Rowood, which included within its exterior boundaries the mining claims of defendants. In a proceeding instituted by the United States Land Department the defendants’ said mining claims were held to be void, and in an action of ejectment brought by defendants against the trustee of the said Rowood town site the town-site location was upheld by this court upon appeal. (See Clark v. Jones, Trustee, etc., 30 Ariz. 535, 249 Pac. 551.) During this controversy the plaintiff stopped paying rent to the defendants, but continued to occupy the premises, and after patent issued to the trustee of the Rowood town site he succeeded in obtaining from the said trustee a deed to the lot in question, and, using such deed as the basis of his petition, now asks the court to uphold *382 his possession and enjoin the issuance of the writ of restitution in the possessory action.

The question raised by this appeal is whether or not the plaintiff was entitled to the relief granted upon this state of facts, or, to state it hypothetically, may a tenant about to be dispossessed by process under a judgment in an action by his landlord for possession of the demised premises come into equity and enjoin the enforcement of the judgment by showing that subsequent thereto he has acquired a title to the said premises paramount to that of his landlord?

It is well settled that, in an action by a landlord against his tenant for the possession of the demised premises, the latter, if in undisturbed possession thereof, is estopped to deny the title of the former as it existed in him at the time of the inception of the tenancy, subject to certain exceptions which have no application,here. 35 C. J. 1224, par. 565. This is expressed in the time-worn rule that “a tenant is estopped to deny his landlord’s title.” 1 Tiffany, Landlord and Tenant, 435. And not only is the tenant precluded from showing that there is an outstanding paramount title in a third person, but also that there is such a title in himself. Id. 464; 35 C. J. 1245, par. 600. The rule applies to the same extent in equity as at law, and the tenant cannot avoid the effect of the estoppel by bringing a proceeding in equity to restrain the action by the landlord. 1 Tiffany, Landlord and Tenant, 451.

In the possessory action brought by defendants against plaintiff, the title to the premises was not brought in issue by the pleadings. As a matter of fact, at that time, the paramount title was in the United States, appellants having entered the premises as a mining claim. Plaintiff, the defendant in that action, could not, as we have seen, have pleaded the paramount title of the United States as a defense to *383 that action, and did not attempt to do so. But now, having acquired such paramount title, as he claims, by mesne conveyance from the trustee of the town site, he pleads it as the sole basis of the injunctive relief which he seeks here.

Professor Tiffany in his work on Landlord and Tenant, which we have cited, questions the soundness of the decisions of “the strongest courts” in holding that a tenant who has acquired the paramount title may not set it up as against his landlord in an action of ejectment. He says:

“In the case of summary proceedings, the not infrequent statutory provision that no question of title shall be tried in such proceedings would necessarily preclude such a defense. But the applicability of such a rule in connection with an action of ejectment, though supported by the decisions of the strongest courts, is, it is submitted, open to serious question. That the tenant should not be permitted to assert title in a third person in such an action is a most reasonable and necessary rule, since otherwise he would procure the possession, as against the lessor, without any right thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
253 P. 897, 31 Ariz. 378, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-holcomb-ariz-1927.