Deering v. Riley

38 A.D. 164
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 38 A.D. 164 (Deering v. Riley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deering v. Riley, 38 A.D. 164 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

O’Brien, J. :

Under the old system at common law there was included in the judicial determination of controversies the wager of battle, in which,• as in issues joined upon a writ of right, the decision rested upon the result of personal contest. That was the law in this State until it was abolished by statute in 1786. In the more rational methods of procedure which have superseded the ancient forms, there are still oftentimes observable many features' that may be likened to the ancient judicial combat. Thus, in the present case, the' defendants, who' make no claim of title and do not assert possession based on any right, still defend their possession by attempting to parry the thrusts of their adversary, and at the same time most vigorously assail at every possible vulnerable point the different positions taken by their antagonist, who enters the arena endeavoring to drive out an . intruder who-has'unjustly taken possession of liis lands. On this record, should the defendants succeed, it would be a signal triumph for “ Squatter Sovereignty.” Having in mind the respective posi-. tions occupied by the combatants, we may proceed to give a more detailed account of the contest, with our decision of the controversy.:

The defendants contend that the plaintiff cannot recover for the . reason that his pleading does not set forth a proper cause of action in ejectment,.nor a cause of action under which he can obtain damages for the withholding of the property, and that, being either a tenant in common or a joint tenant, he cannot possibly recover on . his pleading. And section 1500 of the Code of Civil Procedure is - cited in support of this contention. That section provides: “'Where': two or more persons are entitled to the possession of real property'■ as joint tenants or tenants in common, one or more of them may, maintain such an action to recover his Or their undivided shares in ; the.property in any case where such an action might be.maintained": by all.” . ' - : ;

It is urged that under this provision of law it ivas necessary for. [168]*168the plaintiff to allege and prove who are the owners of the other two-thirds of the locus in quo, the nature of their interests, and facts which would entitle them: to unite with the plaintiff in maintaining an action of ejectment. This section does not relate to pleading at all. ■ All that is necessary in declaring in ejectment is'a statement of the real names of the parties to the action, a description of the premises sufficiently certain to enable the sheriff to deliver possession, a statement of the interest the plaintiff claimed in the premises,, that the plaintiff was in possession or was entitled to possession, that the defendant unlawfully entered' and dispossessed the plaintiff or those under whom he claims .the premises and withholds the possession, and (since the Revised Statutes), sufficient allegations to show that the plaintiff is entitled to rents and profits or damages. Section 1.500 of the Code of Civil Procedure is stated by a compiler of that-Code (Throop’s ed. 1880) to be new in form, and to have been designed to settle a conflict between Cole v. Irvine (6 Hill, 634), on the-one hand, and Jackson v. Bradt (2 Caines, 169) and Kellogg v. Kellogg (6 Barb. 116) on the other, in accordance with the' presumed intent of the final clause of the ■ amendment made in 1867 to section 118 of the Code of Procedure, which is, that any person claiming title or a right of ’ possession to real estate may be made a party plaintiff. or defendant, as the case may require, in an action to recover'tthe possession of real estate. Neither of these Code provisions requires that joint tenants or tenants in common must unite in an action, of ejectment, and section 1500,, in its strictest construction, imports only that where two or more-persons are joint tenants or tenants in common, an action of ejectment to recover an undivided share cannot -be supported unless the-action might be maintained by all owning the shares. Whatever ■may be the effect of this section in reconciling the conflict of decision mentioned, it has served only to introduce embarrassment and confusion into the action of ejectment. The conflict in the cases referred to has ceased to be a subject of any practical consequence. It arose-out of. the provision of the Revised Statutes abolishing writs of right,, and making the-action of ejectment the one great-inclusive remedy for the recovery of both the property right and the possession of real, .estate. When such writs of right were abolished and the action of ejectment became the sole remedy, cases arose in which it became [169]*169necessary to consider who might maintain ejectment when it was resorted to as a substitute for the writ of right. That writ was brought after the ordinary possessory remedies were lost by lapse of time or otherwise, and in it the right of possession could be established only by showing an absolute right of property. It would not lie to recover any estate less than a fee simple. There was a statute of twenty-five years running against the maintenance of an action for a writ of right. The limitation in ejectment was twenty years, and the question arose as' to who might maintain an action of ejectment where it took the place of a writ of right. Now a writ of right could not be sustained by two tenants in common. .Each tenant in common had to sue in his own right. (Cole v. Irvine, supra.) But in the action of ejectment, “ there never in this State was any difficulty in tenants in common uniting in the action;' and as their right to unite did not depend upon the statute which received a construction in Cole v. Irvine, there is no necessity, as there is no reason, for applying the principle there decided.” (Kellogg v. Kellogg, 6 Barb. 132.) In Jackson v. Bradt (supra), which was decided in 1804, Kent, J., said that it had- become immaterial whether tenants in common declared on joint or separate demises, Section 1500 seems to have been devised to reconcile a supposed conflict of authority, which, if it ever existed, is absolutely unimportant at the present day. Tenants in-common and joint tenants could unite in ejectment, and one tenant in common could recover his property right in that action; and this section should not be construed as imposing upon him additional burdens in enforcing his right. Its requirement is fully satisfied when in a given case the proof shows that the plaintiff is entitled to possession as a joint tenant or as a tenant in common, and that those in whom the. title to the other undivided interests rests may prima facie maintain an action to recover possession of those interests.

The situation of the record here discloses that when the Bloomingdale road was closed in 1861, the fee of the bed of the road was in Lawrence, Schieffelin and Buckley,- as tenants in common, or their heirs at law, grantees or devisees. Lawrence’s interest passed to the plaintiff, who commenced his action in 1891. On the record, those who may claim under Buckley and Schieffelin may enforce [170]*170tlaeir rights^ and it is entirely immaterial how those rights were • derived, it being shown that the conveyance from. Buckley, Law-.: 'rence and Schieffelin, in 1809, to Brass; did not include the roadway in Bloomingdale road. We do not think it was necessary for the plaintiff to make proof of the names of the. individuals who now own the two-thirds interests, or to try their title.

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Bluebook (online)
38 A.D. 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deering-v-riley-nyappdiv-1899.