Fears v. Merrill

4 Ark. 559
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1849
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ark. 559 (Fears v. Merrill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fears v. Merrill, 4 Ark. 559 (Ark. 1849).

Opinion

Walker, J.

Oh the 28th day of November, 1840, Merrill, the defendant, executed to Nelson W. Hill his covenant, by which he became bound to convey to Hill, or his assigns, eighty acres of land, provided the said Hill should, when due, pay to Merrill $100, for the payment of which he had executed his writing obligatory, to Merrill, due twelve months after date. On the 30th of April, 1841, Hill bargained said land to the plaintiff Fears, and thereupon, at the instance of Fears, executed his covenant to Edmund Fears, an infant son of the plaintiff, binding himself to convey to Edmund by deed. The contract made by the plaintiff with Hill was made with a full knowledge that Merrill held a lien on the land for $100, it being the residue of the price agreed upon for the land, and that about the time of his purchase he entered upon the land with the knowledge and consent of both Hill and Merrill. At the time Fears entered on the land it would not have rented for any price : he so improved it that after the first year it would have rented for $25 or $30 per annum. On the 16th of March, 1846, Merrill demanded of Fears possession, and on the same day filed his declaration and sued out his writ of ejectment.

These facts being presented to the circuit court, sitting as a jury, upon the plea of not guilty, the court found the issue for the plaintiff, Merrill, and assessed damages to $100, upon which judgment was rendered for possession of the land and the damages so assessed. Fears filed his motion for a new trial upon the ground that the court decided contrary to law, and without sufficient evidence; that the damages assessed were excessive, and contrary to law and evidence: which motion the court overruled.

The case presents a question of some importance when we consider the vast amount of real estate conveyed under contracts of like legal effect in this State. The several assignments of errors may be considered as substantially embraced in two propositions: 1st. Can the vendor of land, who sells and gives to his vendee an obligation to convey to him in fee simple, upon the payment of the purchase money, and gives immediate possession of the land, after the payment becomes due, maintain an action of ejectment against the vendee for the possession of the land, and if so, under what circumstances? 2d. If the action be maintainable, when does the right of action commence, and what should be the measure of damages ?

Ejectment is a possessory action, and, in cases like this, in order to maintain it, the plaintiff must, at the commencement of his suit, have both the legal and the possessory right in himself. (1 Chitty Pl. 87.) In this case the vendor had parted with his equitable title and right of possession, and consequently, until, by operation of law, or the acts of the parties, these essential requisites were re-united, no action could be maintained. This must depend upon the validity and existence of the contract by which the vendee acquired his right of possession. So long as that contract remains in force the vendor holding the naked legal title can maintain no action, for it would be the heighth of absurdity to allow one to maintain an action for that to which he was not entitled. It, therefore, becomes important to ascertain how and under what circumstances the contract may be considered as rescinded, whereby the vendor re-acquires his right to possession and with it his right of action.

Ejectment was originally a mere action of trespass to recover damages sustained by a lessee for years, when ousted of his possession. In time it became a favorite possessory remedy for the the recovery of real property, and particularly as between landlord and tenant, where the tenant held over after his term had expired. But, in all actions in ejectment, whether to regain possession after the term of lease has expired, or where possession is given under an executory contract for the purchase, and in all other cases where the entry is peaceable, the action cannot be maintained until the tenant in possession is placed, either by his own wrongful act, or by notice to quit, and refusal, in the attitude of a trespasser. Hence, in the case of Rightonthc demise of Lewis vs. Beard, 13 East, 210, Lord Ellenbokough, in delivering his opinion, says: “ That, after the lessor had put the defendant into possession, he could not, without a demand of the possession again, and a refusal by the defendant, or some wrongful act by him to determine his lawful possession, treat the defendant as a wrong doer and trespasser, as he assumes to do by his declaration in ejectment.” So in 3 Starkie, p. 1612, it is laid down that “a vendor, who has let his intended vendee into possession, cannot recover the premises by ejectment without proof of demand of possession, for until then the possession is lawful.” In Tilling-hast’s Adams on Ejectment, p. 107, it is said that the party in treaty for purchase being lawfully in possession, cannot be ejected until such lawful possession is determined, either by demand or possession.” So that it is essential to the maintainance of the action, not only that the plaintiff should hold the legal right and the right of possession, but that the defendant should stand, in contemplation of law, at least, a wrong doer or trespasser. Notice is indispensably necessary in order to place him in that attitude towards the vendor, and to enable the vendor to avoid the contract and reclaim his possession, unless the vendee, by his own wrongful act, has placed himself in the attitude of a wrong doer, as by denying the title of him who holds the fee, or claiming under adversé title; but a mere neglect to pay the purchase money when due is not sufficient for that purpose.

In the case of Haile vs. McCoy, 7 J. J. Marshall, 318, McCoy .sold to Haile and gave his bond for title to the land; Haile bound himself to pay for it at a future day, and entered upon the land; after the money became due, McCoy sued Haile in ejectment to regain possession; Chief Justice Robertson, in delivering the opinion of the court, said : “ The law will not presume his possession unlawful, and hence reason and analogy seem to forbid that he should be subject to a suit for a wrong of which he had not been guilty in fact, or by construction of law, unless he had refused to surrender on a sufficient demand or notice to quit, or had been guilty of some positive act which rendered his detention of possession wrongful in fact or in contemplation of law : —such, for example, as a denial of the appellee’s title, or a disavowal, or a renunciation, of the contract; a mere failure to pay would not, of itself, be sufficient.”

An occupant under an executory contract is a quasi tenant at will, and though he could not be evicted without a previous demand of possession, he is not entitled to six months notice to quit. (4 Dana R. 337. 10 Yerg. R. 513. 1 Greenl. R. 95.) So in the case of Dennis vs. Harder, 3 B. Mon. 175, it is said possession given under a contract purchase is a quasi tenancy, and, without previous notice, express or implied, of the vendor’s intention to avoid the contract and reclaim possession, he cannot take or reclaim possession in ejectment. (9 John. R. 330.) If a vendee, who purchases land on a credit and receives a bond for title when he has paid the purchase money, fails to pay according to the terms stipulated, the vendor may consider the contract at an end, and lawfully sell to a third person. (4 Smedes & Marsh. R. 594. 5 Peter’s Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ark. 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fears-v-merrill-ark-1849.