Foster v. Black

176 P. 845, 20 Ariz. 64
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1918
DocketCivil No. 1595
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 176 P. 845 (Foster v. Black) 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
Foster v. Black, 176 P. 845, 20 Ariz. 64 (Ark. 1918).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

The appellant, as plaintiff in the lower court, brought an action of forcible entry and detainer against the appellees to recover from them a small portion of what is known and recorded as the Watch mining claim. The case was tried by the court without a jury.

On the issue in this kind of case, and the only issue involved —the right of actual possession — the material facts found were that one of the predecessors in interest of plaintiff, in the year 1912, located and monumented the Watch mining claim, “by six substantial posts projecting at least four feet above the surface of the ground, one at each corner of said claim and one at the center of each end-line thereof”; that the appellant and her predecessors in interest had, each year thereafter up to the date of the trial in January, 1917, done and performed $100 worth of work and improvements upon the claim; that in July, 1916, the appellees went upon a small portion of the said Watch mining claim, and have ever since [66]*66been, and are now in the actual possession of said fraction of the claim; and that appellees have no title to the premises other than bare possession. It is also found as a fact that the appellant was not in the actual possession of the premises in dispute at the time the appellees entered thereon, nor has the appellant ever been in the possession of said premises except as possession might be implied from her ownership of said Watch mining claim.

As conclusions of law, the court found that the Watch mining claim was not a valid subsisting mining location, and that plaintiff was not entitled to the exclusive possession of the surface ground thereof, and particularly to the possession of the premises occupied by appellees; that the appellees were squatters upon the open and unappropriated domain of the United States; that they were not guilty of forcible entry; and that the appellant was not entitled to restitution. Judgment against the appellant was duly entered, from which she prosecutes this appeal.

Much of the evidence, which is quite voluminous, was devoted to trying the question of title to the mining claim, it being assumed by both parties, and apparently acquiesced in by the court, that if the appellant and her predecessors in interest had never discovered mineral in place on the mining claim, her title would fail, and consequently her right of possession would be defeated. All this evidence is outside of the issue. Our statute (Civ. Code 1913, par. 1536) reads: “On the trial of any case of forcible entry, or of forcible detainer, the only issue shall be as to the right of actual possession ; and the merits of the title shall not be inquired into. ’ ’

In Bishop v. Perrin, 4 Ariz. 190, 35 Pac. 1059, the court, in speaking of this provision, said: “In forcible entry and detainer, the right to present and immediate actual possession is the only question for adjudication. ’ ’

It was not a question as to who had the better title, for the merits of the title may not be inquired into. The question was, Who was entitled to the possession? Which one of the contending parties had the right of actual possession ? In actions of this kind, even the owner of real property may be dispossessed if he forcibly or unlawfully takes possession of the same.

The recorded notice of location and the deeds to plaintiff were competent evidence to show the extent of the claim and [67]*67possession of the plaintiff, but not to show title. Likewise, evidence of the monuments placed upon the property was competent evidence of the extent of the claim and right of possession of the plaintiff, but not to prove title in her. Acts of dominion and control, such as doing annual assessment work, were properly admitted in evidence as tending to show actual possession. Beeler v. Cardwell, 29 Mo. 72, 77 Am. Dec. 550, and extended note, p. 552; R. C. L. 1177, § 35; Texas-Mexican Ry. Co. v. Cahill (Tex. Civ. App.), 23 S. W. 232.

The question is whether, in an action of this kind, one who locates a piece of the public domain, by monumenting the same so that its exterior boundaries may be easily seen and known, and causes a notice of such location to be recorded as required under the mining law, and thereafter yearly causes $100 worth of representation work to be done, has by these acts acquired the actual possession and the right of actual possession of the ground included within the limits of his location as against one claiming no other right than a squatter upon the public domain, who enters thereon without the permission and against the will of the locator. If, by such acts, the locator is in contemplation of law in the actual possession of the mining claim and the whole thereof, then the entrance thereon by any third party would be a mere trespass, and would amount to an unlawful entry upon the possession of the locator, and to an unlawful detainer if he remained there.

With reference to the character of possession and the acts of dispossession in the action of forcible entry and detainer, in Felber v. Thorpe, 19 Ariz. 594, 173 Pac. 1058, we said:

“A ‘forcible entry’ or an entry where entry is not given' by law within the meaning of said chapter 5 is defined by paragraph 1526, C. C. A. 1913, as ‘an entry without ‘the consent of the person having the actual possession. ’ On the trial of any ease of forcible entry . . . the only issue shall be as to the right of actual possession; and the merits of the title shall not be inquired into. Paragraph 1536, C. C. A. 1913. The expression ‘actual possession’ has been defined by the courts in numerous cases. See title Actual Possession, 1 Words and Phrases, 164. A féw definitions are, to wit:
“ ‘Actual possession is in possession of the character required by the character and situation of the land.’ Allaire v. Ketcham, 55 N. J. Eq. 168, 35 Atl. 900.
[68]*68“ ‘Possession, of land is actual when there is an occupancy according to its adaptation and use. ’ Morrison v. Kelly, 22 Ill. 609, 74 Am. Dec. 169.
“ ‘Actual possession is a question of law and fact, and its determination must largely depend upon the situation of the parties, the size and extent of the land, and the purpose for which it is adapted. ’ Johnston v. Albuquerque, 12 N. M. 20, 72 Pac. 9.
“ ‘By “actual possession” as used in a Statement that forcible entry is high-handed invasion of the actual possession of another is meant that he shall be in actual use and enjoyment of the land for such purpose as it is capable of, and not that the prosecutor shall be actually present at the time.' State v. Newbury, 122 N. C. 1077, 29 S. E. 367.”

In that case we held that an actual inclosure was not necessary to actual possession; that if the ground was used for the purpose to which it was adapted, it would constitute “such actual possession as the statute contemplates and protect itself against encroachment by others having no better right.”

In English v. Johnson, 17 Cal. 107, 116, 76 Am. Dec. 574, the question involved was the acts necessary to constitute actual possession of a mining claim, and the court said:

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Related

Walkeng Mining Company v. Covey
352 P.2d 768 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1960)
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203 P. 554 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
176 P. 845, 20 Ariz. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-black-ariz-1918.