Cromie v. Hoover

40 Ind. 49
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 40 Ind. 49 (Cromie v. Hoover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cromie v. Hoover, 40 Ind. 49 (Ind. 1872).

Opinion

Buskirk, J.

The appellee, on the 23d day of March, 1867, filed his complaint in the Tippecanoe Circuit Court, against the appellants, in which he averred that he was the owner and entitled to the possession of certain described real estate in Tippecanoe county, and that the appellants held possession thereof without right, and had for four months last past kept the plaintiff out of possession.

To this complaint Cromie answered, denying his possession of the property in controversy, except a portion thereof, about one hundred feet square, on which his ice-houses were erected, and averring that as to the parcel thereof of which he was so in possession, prior to the 1st day of February, [50]*501867, with .the knowledge and consent of said plaintiff, he stored a large quantity of ice thereon, which ice, at the time it was so stored, said plaintiff well knew, was to be used as an article of merchandise, and was not to be removed until the time for selling ice during the ensuing„season, which time had not arrived when this suit was commenced.

The defendant Burroughs answered by the general denial.

To the answer of Cromie the appellee demurred, but his demurrer was overruled, and he excepted, and replied-by the general denial.

On the 20th of March, 1868, the appellee commenced a second suit against the appellants, in the same court. In his complaint in this suit he avers that, on the 19th day of November, 1867, the appellants, without leave, and wrongfully, entered on the lands described in the complaint in the first suit, and tore down three valuable frame buildings situated thereon, and carried off the lumber of which the same had been constructed, to the damage, etc.

At the April term, 1869, of said court the two causes were, by consent of parties, consolidated,' the complaint in the second suit to be known as paragraph second.

The appellants separately demurred to the second paragraph, which demurrer the court overruled, and appellants excepted.

The appellants thereupon filed their additional answer in two paragraphs, the first in denial, and the second paragraph is limited to the second paragraph of the complaint, and in it the appellants admit their removal.of the buildings, as stated in the second paragraph of the complaint, but aver that the said buildings were their property, and that being in the peaceable possession of the real estate on which they were located, they peaceably removed the same, as they had the right to do.

Thereupon the appellants filed their affidavit for a change of the venue, on account of local prejudices, which was granted, and the venue was changed to the Carroll Circuit Court, which was in a different circuit. The appellants ex[51]*51cepted to the case being changed out of the circuit. This question the appellants again presented in the Carroll Circuit Court, but it was overruled, and they excepted. Thereupon the appellee replied in denial of the second paragraph of the answer.

The appellee, by the leave of court, filed an amendment to the first paragraph of the complaint, in which he alleged that the lands described in the original complaint were contiguous to the Wabash and Erie Canal, were suitable for storing ice, and that he could and would have stored ice to the value of five thousand dollars during the month of February, 1867, had he not been prevented by the wrongful holding of the defendants; that the ice had melted before the suit was brought, and had not afterward formed. This amendment the appellants moved to strike out, but the court overruled the motion, and they excepted.

The parties then agreed that the pleadings, subsequent to the complaint, be considered as refiled after"the making of the amendment.”

The cause went to trial before a jury. The court submitted to the jury an agreed statement of facts and certain interrogatories, which were answered. The jury found for the plaintiff; and assessed his damages on the first paragraph of the complaint at four hundred and twenty-five dollars, and for the removal of the buildings at six hundred and sixty-five dollars.

The appellants moved the court for a new trial, assigning therefor four reasons; first, because the damages were excessive ^second and third, that the verdict was not sustained by the evidence, and was contrary to law; fourth, error of law occurring at the trial, in the admission of the lease from Hoover to Mousch in evidence; second, the refusal to instruct as-asked; third, in the giving of certain instructions; fourth,.in submitting the interrogatories to the jury.

The court overruled the motion, and rendered judgment on the verdict.

The appellants have assigned for error, first, overruling [52]*52the demurrer to the ’second paragraph of the complaint; second, the Tippecanoe Circuit Court erred in changing the venue to the Carroll Circuit Court; third, the Carroll Circuit Court erred in refusing to remand the cause to Tippecanoe Circuit Court; fourth, the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial.

The objection' urged to the second paragraph of the complaint is, that it does not contain an allegation that the buildings torn down belonged to the plaintiff We think the objection is untenable. It was averred that the real estate upon which the buildings were located belonged to the plaintiff. It is true, as maintained by the appellants, that it frequently occurs in this age of trade, that one person owns the land and another the improvements, but such is not the general rule. We think that an allegation that a person owns real estate implies that he owns the buildings erected thereon.

We will consider the second and third assignments of error together. These assignments present for our decision the question of whether the Tippecanoe Circuit Court erred in changing the venue to a county out of the circuit.

In the case of Miller v. The Toledo, Wabash, and Western R. W. Company, 33 Ind. 535, we decided, upon mature consideration, that a change of venue, in a civil action, might be made to a county in a different circuit or district. We adhere to the ruling in that case. In our opinion, the Tippecanoe Circuit Court committed no error in changing the venue to the Carroll Circuit Court, and, consequently, that the Carroll Circuit Court committed no error in refusing to remand the cause to the Tippecanoe Circuit Court.

This leaves for our decision the question of whether the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial. This assignment of error presents for our examination several questions, which will be disposed of in their order.

It is, in the first place, insisted that the appellants were entitled to a new trial, because the court erred in admitting [53]*53in evidence a written lease executed by the appellee to one John P. Mousch, which Mousch, in the spring of 1866, assigned to the appellant Cromie, and under which Cromie'and Burroughs, as his agent, held possession of the property described in the complaint.

We are of the opinion that such lease was properly admitted under both paragraphs of the complaint. By the first paragraph of the complaint, the plaintiff sought to recover the possession of the real estate. The controverted question was, whether the possession of the defendants was wrongful. The defendants claimed under and by virtue of the lease in question. The lease, in express terms, stipulated when the term should commence, and when it should end.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Ind. 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cromie-v-hoover-ind-1872.