Hope v. Cason

42 Ky. 544, 3 B. Mon. 544, 1843 Ky. LEXIS 70
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 6, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 Ky. 544 (Hope v. Cason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hope v. Cason, 42 Ky. 544, 3 B. Mon. 544, 1843 Ky. LEXIS 70 (Ky. Ct. App. 1843).

Opinion

Chief Justice Ewino

delivered the opinion of tlie Court.

This is an action of trespass quare clausum fregit, brought by Hope against Cason. The declaration contains two counts: the first sets out the abuttals of the land ; the second alledges, in substance, that the defendant, with force and arms, broke and entered a certain ■dioelling house of the plaintiff, situate and being in the ■County aforesaid, and then and there in the possession of the plaintiff, and ejected and expelled him and his family from the possession, use, occupation and enjoyment of the same, and kept him out, &c. and then and there broke open the doors, &c. and cast and threw out of said house, the plaintiffs goods, and put the goods of another person in, &c. To each of the counts the defendant pleaded liberum tenementurn.

To the first plea, the plaintiff replied that he had purchased the land from the defendant by parol contract, [545]*545and paid him the purchase money, and was put into possession by him, and was and had been in possession of said close for a long time in his own right, and holding the same as his own freehold, -and the defendant in his own wrong, and without the cause alledgedj entered upon his possession, &c. To the second plea, he replied, that the said dwelling house in the second plea mentioned, was not the dwelling house of the defendant, but was then and there and now is the dwelling house of the plaintiff, and the defendant entered, and of his own wrong committed the trespasses charged in the declaration.

When a purchaser by parol contract haspaid the consideration & beenletinto possession, and is in. the enjoyment thereof, and has not renounced thecontract,vendor cannot enter upon him, or maintain an action for the possession, ■without notice to quit.

The defendant demurred to the replication to the first plea, which was sustained by the Court, and joined issue on his replication to the second plea.

On the trial of this issue, the defendant’s counsel was permitted to introduce their testimony first, also to open 'and conclude the argument, which was excepted to by the plaintiff’s counsel; and after the defendant had introduced his title papers to a tract of land in the county, and proved that he had a dwelling house upon it, the plaintiff’s counsel offered to prove, that the trespasses complained of in the second count, were committed in a different house in the county, of which he was possessed, from that to which the defendant had shown title, which was objected to by the defendant’s counsel, and the objection sustained by the Court. The Court also instructed the jury, at the instance of the defendant’s counsel, that if they believed from the evidence, that the defendant had, at the time of committing the supposed trespasses., title to a dwelling house in the county, that they should find for the defendant, which was also excepted to. And a verdict having been found for the defendant, and judgment rendered thereon, and motion for a new trial overruled, the plaintiff has appealed to this Court.

There are several legal questions arising on this record, which we will dispose of in the order in which they occur. And the first is, whether the replication to the first plea is good. And this brings up the question, whether the vendee, by parol, who has paid the consideration, and been let into the peaceable possession b,y the vendor* [546]*546has such a right to the possession as will enable him to maintain trespass guare clausum fregit against the vendor. Or whether a replication of such purchase is a good answer to a plea of liberum tenemenlum.

We have in our researches been able to fined no case expressly in point with the question stated. That a tenant for a term of years unexpired, or a tenant from year to year, may maintain such action against his landlord, and reply his tenancy, in answer to the plea of liberum tenemenlum, is unquestionable : but as a parol contract for land is not valid under our statute of conveyances, for a longer term than five years, nor enforcible under our statute of frauds, if for a longer term than one year, has the vendee such right to the possession, as to entitle him to the action, who holds under a parol purchase?

That he is invested with many rights, by virtue of his purchase and possession, is well established. He cannot be made responsible for rents — be has a lien in equity for his improvements — also for the consideration paid, and within the reason of the principle settled by this Court, in the case of Harle vs McCoy, (7 J. J. Mashall, 318,) and Trotter vs Sanders et al. (Ib. 321,) he may successfully defend himself against trespass or ejectment brought by the vendor. In the case of Harle vs McCoy, supra, the appellant, the defendant below, had been put into the possession under an executory purchase from McCoy, whose bond he held for a title, but had not paid the -consideration. McCoy brought trespass and ejectment against him, and this Court determined that his possession was lawful and rightful, and “he consequently should not be deemed a quasi trespasser, and subjected, as such, to the vexation, costs and damages incident to an action of ejectment, which can be maintained only against a wrong doerand further decided, that Harle, the purchaser, was not subject to the action until he had refused to surrender the possession “on a sufficient demand or notice to quit, or been guilty of some positive act, which rendered his possession wrongful in fact, or in contemplation of law, such as a denial, disavowal or renunciation of the contract, and a mere refusal to pay would not, of itself, be sufficient.” Now, a bond for a [547]*547title is a mere equity, and could afford no legal protection to the defendant. It was not, in the case cited, nor could it be relied on as such, but was permitted to be used only as evidence of the defendant’s rightful entry and possession under the plaintiff, and to repel all imputation of trespass or wrong in his holding. If an executory purchaser, who was let into possession without title, at all available at law, is a rightful possessor and cannot be sued as a wrong doer, without demand or notice, so also does it seem right and proper, that a parol purchaser, who is let into possession under his purchase, should be treated as a rightful possessor, and not as a wrong doer, and we think that no action will lie against him until he has had reasonable notice to quit. Until he has been advised of the disavowal of the contract on the part of the vendor, he is no wrong doer in morality or law.

Where a Vendor by parol has no right to enter on his vendee, without giving notice to juit> his entry is a trespass. A replication of apossession in virtue of a parol pin-chase from defendant, is good to the plea of liberum tenementum.

[547]*547What notice shall be deemed reasonable in such a case has not been settled. It was left open in the case cited. But it seems to us that the notice, to be reasonable, ought to be as long as that required to be given to a tenant from year to year. The Teason which requires notice to be given to the tenant applies with equal force to the parol purchaser. If time to gather his crop or make preparation to remove, be but just as to one, it is equally just and reasonable, and more so, as to the other, The one when he takes possession, knows that he.

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Related

Harrison v. Hord
51 Ky. 471 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1851)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Ky. 544, 3 B. Mon. 544, 1843 Ky. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hope-v-cason-kyctapp-1843.