Hoffstetter v. Blattner

8 Mo. 276
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 15, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 8 Mo. 276 (Hoffstetter v. Blattner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoffstetter v. Blattner, 8 Mo. 276 (Mo. 1843).

Opinion

Tompkins, Judge,

delivered, the opinion of the Court.

This was an action of forcible entry and detainer, commenced on the 9th day of November, in the year 1841, by Jacob Blattner, the appellee, against the said Gabriel Hoffstetter and John Strasser, before a justice of the peace: Strasser was acquitted before the justice, and Ploffstetter found guilty. Hoffstetter appealed to the Court of Common Pleas, where judgment was rendered against him, and security was given in his appeal bond for two hundred and fifty-six dollars for damages, besides rent at thirty-two dollars per month.

On the trial of the cause, Blattner, the defendant in error, produced as a witness one Moser, who stated, that he had rented, since the month of March preceding, the house about which this suit was commenced, from Blattner: it is the same of which Hoffstetter and Strasser then had possession; lhat he left the house on the first Thursday in November; he left some things in the house; he locked the house, and gave the keys to Blattner; when he left the house-he nailed the windows down, and made every thing secure about the house; he went back on Friday for some of the things he had left; on Saturday he went after the remainder of the things, and then it was he first saw two men in the house, and one of them was Gabriel Hoffstetter; he asked them how they got in, and they said that Strasser opened the house in the night, and in the morning they were put into possession; he saw one of the windows broken; that Blattner owned the house, and he rented it from him.

On his cross-examination he stated, that he rented the house from Blattner; that he had a lease in writing at twenty-five dollars per month; that Blattner owned the house, and he sold it to Blattner; that he did not recollect at what time he sold it to him. Being asked whether he sold Blattner the whole house or his interest in it, and the question being objected to, he answered, “ I sold Blattner the property; I built the house, and paid for it; Mr. Strasser worked upon the house; Mr, Strasser was a partner of mine in building this house; I never paid [279]*279any thing for the work he did on the house; I did not sell the house to Blattner to cheat Mr. Strasser; Strasser never lived in the house as the tenant; Strasser boarded with me in Second-street, and did not pay me; Strasser never slept in the house on Fourth-street, that I know of; I never did threaten to shoot Mr. Strasser; when I moved into the house, Mr. Strasser was hot there; sometimes he was in the house, sometimes with his wife while the house was building.” The remaining part of the testimony is very little more than a repetition of what he had before stated. He, however, stated further — “the one pane of glass up stairs was not broken when he left the house; that he did not rent the house of Blattner when he first occupied it, because he owned it; that he lived there all the time till November.”' The testimony of Moser was objected to, because the instruments of writing therein mentioned were not produced, and because said testimony contained evidence of title.

Stoffield, a witness on the part of the plaintiff, Blattner, testified also, that Moser left the house on the third or fourth day of November. He left some lumber in the house, and the plaintiff gave the keys to the witness, who removed the lumber and went through the house, locked all the doors, and nailed down the windows. This was done on the 5th day of November, and on the next day the witness went down with the plaintiff to the house, and found the two families in it. There was an old iron key in the house, newly filed, and one pane of glass was broken. Moser had been living in the house ever since it was built. He did not see Hoffstetter in the house. He saw no person there but some women. He knew that Jacob Blattner, the plaintiff, never lived in the house or on the premises in question. McGlosky, a witness of Blattner, the plaintiff below, defendant in error, stated that he had leased the premises in question on the 1st of November, for one year, from Blattner: the lease was then set out. The witness said he did not arrive in St. Louis till the ninth, and finding the house occupied, he and Blattner annulled the lease.

The plaintiff here closed his evidence. The defendant then moved the court to instruct the jury that the plaintiff could not recover on the evidence given:

1. Because at the time of the alleged forcible entry, viz., on the 6th November, McGlosky had a lease of the whole premises, and Blattner had no right of possession.

2. Blattner never had any actual possession of the house or premises, by occupancy or otherwise, before the commencement of this suit.

3. Because it appeared, from the evidence, that Moser and said Strasser were partners in the house, and consequently both entitled to possession.

4. Because there was no evidence of any violence committed by the defendant in his entry upon the premises.

5. Because the house was vacant at the time of said entry.

6. Because there was no evidence that any demand of possession was made of ••the defendant before the commencement of the suit, by any person authorized to take possession.

7. Because there was no evidence of right of possession in Blattner.

[280]*280The defendant’s motion was overruled, and exceptions taken to the decision of the court on the motion.

The defendant, plaintiff in error, then proved, that when he moved into the house it was empty; it was done in the morning, at no unusual time of the day, or, as one of the witnesses expressed it, he saw nothing about the proceedings of Hoffstetter, in going into the house, to excite his surprise; that he knew nothing of the difficulties between the parties. Strasser was in company, and had a key with which the door was unlocked. A lease from Strasser to Hoffstetter was also proved.

Hoffstetter also offered-to prove, that on the 20th of June, 1840, he was tenant in common of said premises with said Moser, under a lease for fifty'years, from the city of St. Louis, and that he, Strasser, had built the house thereon. 1 Strasser, it appeared from the lease above given in evidence, had leased one-half of the premises to Hoffstetter.

The Court of Common Pleas excluded this evidence.

Another witness of the defendant proved that Strasser occupied the house a short time after it was built, and before Moser took possession. This witness stated, that Moser came to the house, and told Strasser to let him occupy the whole house as a boarding-house. Strasser refused, and Moser threatened to shoot him if he did not go away and give up the whole house. Moser drove off Strasser from the house. The house was finished in the Fall of 1840. This witness was present at the time Hoffstetter went into the house on'6th November, 1841. No other evidence deserving notice was given.

The court instructed the jury as follows :—

' 1st: If they believed that the plaintiff was in possession of the house mentioned in the complaint, on the 4th day of November, 1841, and that the defendant entered and took possession of the same clandestinely, by means of a false key, although no force was in fact used, or by breaking the window, this amounts to a forcible entry in contemplation of law.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Mo. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffstetter-v-blattner-mo-1843.