Davis v. Pou

108 Ala. 443
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 108 Ala. 443 (Davis v. Pou) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Pou, 108 Ala. 443 (Ala. 1895).

Opinion

COLEMAN. J.

The facts stated in the bill show that Benjamin Davis and his wife Julia E. Davis, appellant, executed a valid mortgage in the year 1887, conveying certain lands as a-security for a debt, to the New England Mortgage Security Company, the law day of which was fixed at some time prior to June, 1892, that the mortgage was regularly foreclosed in June, 1892 and the [444]*444mortgagee became the purchaser. It further shows that appellant, Julia Davis, rented the lands to William Pou for the year 1892. It also avers that after the foreclosure of the mortgage, in the year 1892, the purchaser at the mortgage sale notified the tenant Pou of the mortgage, the foreclosure and its purchase and claim for accruing rent. It further shows that without surrendering possession to his landlord, Pou attorned to the purchaser ■ and agreed to pay it rent and paid it. The bill further avers that in January, 1893, Julia E. Davis instituted a suit before a justice of the peace for an unlawful detainer of the land, and damages for the detention thereof, and recovered judgment for the possession and rent as damages for the detention, for the year 1893, and 1894 to the date of trial. The bill also avers and shows that Julia E. Davis, the plaintiff in the unlawful detainer suit, and respondent in this cause, was and is wholly and totally insolvent. The facts here stated, and which by the demurrer are admitted to be true, show that William Pou, in law, became the tenant of the New England Mortgage Security Company, and became legally indebted to it for rent, that Julia E. Davis has recovered a judgment against him as damages for an unlawful detention of the lands held by him after the foreclosure, and attornment to the purchaser. The averments of the bill show that by the foreclosure sale all right, title and interest as well as right of possession, in and to the land, and the right to the rents or to damages of the landlord Davis, who was the mortgagor, for an unlawful detention were terminated, by the sale and foreclosure of the mortgage, and that all these interests were vested in the purchaser. The bill avers that these facts were properly pleaded in the unlawful detainer suit, and on appeal in the circuit court, and were properly presented in the record on the appeal to the court of final resort. On this point the pleadings of the bill are principally conclusions, but as there are no objections to the bill on this account, we shall consider the averment as well pleaded and true. How far the proof when offered may sustain the bill as to these questions, can not now be considered, as the case is here on demurrer and the averments must be considered as true.

The condition of William Pou, the tenant, as shown by the bill is, that a judgment has been rendered against [445]*445Mm in favor of an insolvent plaintiff under facts and circumstances which clearly show that there was no liability to the plaintiff for damages, and that plaintiff had sustained no injury, and that these facts were all properly pleaded and presented in defense of the unlawful de-tainer suit. This consequence resulted from the character of the action instituted against him by Julia Davis, that of unlawful detainer before a justice of the peace, and the rules of law which prevail in that action. Section 3389 of the Code declares that “The estate or merits of the title can not be enquired into on the trial of any complaint exhibited under this chapter.” The chapter is that which confers jurisdiction upon justices of the peace to try actions for “forcible entry and unlawful de-tainer,” and section 3391 of the same chapter, prescri bes that double rent as damages may be recovered in the action of unlawful detainer before a justice of the peace. Part 3, Title 3. Chapter 7 of the Code of 1886. Construing the foregoing section (3389) we have held that where a tenant is sued, by his landlord from whom he acquires possession for an unlawful detainer, the tenant cannot de-fendagainst either the possession, or claim for damages for detention, on the ground that the title of his landlord has terminated, or been extinguished; nor is the tenant permitted to show as a defense, that he acquired ownership and title and the right of possession from his landlord during the rental term, or that the right of the landlord, on any account, expired subsequent to the date of the contract of lease or renting. — Pou v. Davis, 18 So. Rep. p. 8, and cases cited. This case is reported as Pugh v. Davis, instead of Pou v. Davis. It is the same case. Neither the statement of facts of the case, nor the opinion show that damages were recovered for the unlawful detention, but the record is full, and contains all the pleas and the evidence and shows a recovery of damages as averred in the bill. The decisions under this chapter go to the full extent of holding, that when a plaintiff in an unlawful detaiuer suit shows prior posession, a letting, and possession of the tenant under the letting, and that the term of the lease has ended and .lawful demand and refusal, the case is conclusively made out, and there is no defense. See the report of this same case, Pou v. Davis, supra and authorities cited. Haying [446]*446a perfect legal defense against the plaintiff’s right to the possession of the land as well as damages for use and occupation during the detention, which could be made in an action of ejectment, but a defense which by reason of the statute, cannot be made to the action of unlawful de-tainer before a justice of the peace, the tenant William Pou filed the present bill, in which are set up all the facts, and prayed the court for an injunction to enjoin the issue of the writ of possession and also the issue of execution upon the judgment. The court granted the injunction and at a hearing overruled the demurrer to the bill for want of equity, and refused to dissolve the injunction. From this ruling the respondent appeals to this court, and the question is whether the complainant is entitled to the relief granted. The writer entertains the opinion that the bill has equity and that complainant is entitled to relief and under any phase of the case, so far as it seeks to enjoin the enforcement of the judgment recovered for damages for the unlawful detention of the lands, and this upon the broad equity, that he is without adequate remedy in a court of law. Had the landlord Davis sued in ejectment and claimed damages for use and occupation, it is manifest, that the defendant could ■ have shown the expiration of his landlord’s title either as resulting from his own act or by operation of law, and hence defeated the action entirely. It is well settled . that such a defense does not involve the denial of the landlord’s title. — English v. Key, 39 Ala. 113 ; Fariss v. McCurdy, 74 Ala. 162 ; Otis v. McMillian, 70 Ala. 46, Strauss v. Harrison, 79 Ala 324; Nicrosi v. Phillipi, 91 Ala. 299 ; Taylor Landlord & Tenant, §§ 707, 708; Herman on Estoppel, §§ 867, 868; Bigelow on Estoppel , (5th Ed.) p. 517. It is equally clear that if the landlord had sued in a separate action for the recovery of damages, for use and occupation as for damages,' merely for an unlawful detention, not suing for possession of the lands, the defendant could have made his defense good. A bai-lee may exonerate himself from liability to his bailor by showing a delivery of the property to the true owner. ■■So a debtor is justified in paying a demand to the true owner. The burden is on him to show that the delivery or payment was made to the rightful owner.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sherrill v. Garth
161 So. 482 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1935)
Boyette v. Bradley
100 So. 647 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1924)
Archer v. Sibley
78 So. 849 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1918)
Hill v. Harris
60 So. 917 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1913)
Mayer v. Kornegay
50 So. 880 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1909)
Illinois Steel Co. v. Budzisz
119 N.W. 935 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1909)
Taylor v. Bell
129 Ala. 464 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1900)
Davis v. Williams
130 Ala. 530 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1900)
Howard v. Jones
123 Ala. 488 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 Ala. 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-pou-ala-1895.