Janson v. Brooks

29 Cal. 214
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 29 Cal. 214 (Janson v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Janson v. Brooks, 29 Cal. 214 (Cal. 1865).

Opinions

By the Court, Sanderson, C. J.

This is an action for a forcible entry and detainer, brought before the constitutional amendments of 1862 took - effect. The plaintiff was nonsuited in the Justice’s Court, and appealed to the County Court, where he was again nonsuited. He now appeals to this Court, and claims that the judgment of the Court below was erroneous.

We do not deem it necessary to discuss the evidence offered by the plaintiff on the direct examination of his witnesses, for the purpose of determining whether it supports or tends to support the allegations of the complaint. It may be conceded that so much of the evidence as was elicited on the direct examination tended to support the complaint, and that in view of that testimony only the nonsuit ought not to have been allowed. But the plaintiff allowed, without objection, the defendant to prove on the cross-examination of his own witnesses a state of facts which in our judgment precludes his right to recover in this form of action. Thus it appears from the testimony of the plaintiff himself (who was not present at the time of the entry) that he received a message from the Sheriff to the effect that he had executed a writ of possession on the premises in favor of defendant Brooks. He also states that upon his return to the premises he was told by the defendant’s servants, who were in possession, putting up a fence, that they were acting for Brooks, and that the Sheriff had been there and pointed out the lines.

William Meyer, the plaintiff’s gardener, who was present at the time the defendant came to the premises, testified that the defendant there told him that his companion', Silverthorne, was a Sheriff; that he asked for Janson, the plaintiff, and said that he ought to be there, as they had come to take possession of the laud in question ; that the Sheriff told him about the men who had come there with him and the defendant, and what he had directed them to do, and also told him to tell Janson that the men were there, by his (the Sheriff’s) orders.

Murray, another of plaintiff’s witnesses, stated, on cross-[216]*216examination that he did not know Deputy Sheriff Silverthorne, but that some one came there with a writ, but did not remember reading or seeing the writ.

Murphy, another, of plaintiff’s witnesses, testified that the Deputy Sheriff put the defendant in possession. In short, we think it is very apparent from the whole tenor of the plaintiff’s evidence that the entry complained of was actually made by the Deputy Sheriff, Silverthorne, under a writ of possession in favor of the defendant Brooks. Such being the case we think that the other .circumstances in evidence tending to show a forcible entry are thereby explained, and the whole case thereby made shown not to be within the true intent and meaning of the Forcible Entry and Detainer Act.

Does forcible entry and detainer lie by a party put out under a'process?

Assuming that the plaintiff was put out by an officer under process not running against him or any one with whom be was in qnivity, the only question upon the, case made by him is as to whether he can avail himself of the present remedy.

There seems to be but little authority bearing directly upon this point. It is insisted on the part of the appellant that in such cases forcible entry and detainer is the proper remedy. In support of this proposition Chiles v. Stephens, 1 A. K. Marshall, 333; Stephens v. Chiles, 1 Id. 334, (the same case); Howard v. Kennedy, 4 Ala., N. S. 592, and Horsefield v. Adams, 10 Ala., N. S. 1, are cited.

In Chiles v. Stephens and Stephens v. Chiles, it was Jreld by a majority of the Court only, without any discussion of the question, that an entry upon premises under a writ of habere' facias possessionem, in the actual 230ssession under an adverse claim of one who was neither party nor privy to the writ, was unauthorized and illegal, and that such 2>erson so dispossessed might maintain a warrant of forcible entry and detainer to regain the possession. The Court was composed of three Judges, one of whom dissented and thought that a.n order of the Court from which the,writ was issued was the proper remedy.

[217]*217The question under- consideration was not involved in the case cited from fourth Alabama. The question there was as to the effect of a judgment in ejectment upon persons in possession who are not parties or privies to the judgment, and claim a possession distinct from that involved in the action, and the case of Chiles v. Stephens was there cited, merely so far as it bears upon that proposition.

In Horsefield v. Adams, the point decided was that if one was unlawfully ejected by means of a writ of restitution in a suit to which he is neither a party nor privy, this furnishes no justification for him to forcibly eject him who is thus invested with the possession. The Court, in conclusion, merely suggests that the remedy of such a party is by suit against the Sheriff for his entry under the writ, or against the plaintiffs in the writ for directing his eviction, or some other proceeding equivalent to a suit,” citing Chiles v. Stephens and Howard v. Holman, already noticed. The two cases from Alabama therefore fail to sustain the proposition of the appellant, for they did not directly or indirectly involve the question under consideration, and to it the minds of the Court were not directed. Hence, so far as authority is concerned, the appellant is forced to rely solely upon Chiles v. Stephens, which case must be read in the light of the Forcible Entry and Detainer Act of that State, which differs materially from ours.

It will be observed that the Court, in Chiles v. Stephens, does not say that the entry of the officer under the circumstances there detailed is forcible, but that it is unauthorized and illegal, and therefore that Chiles could maintain a warrant for forcible entry and detainer. The foregoing language, and the conclusion drawn therefrom, is sustained by the Forcible Entry and Detainer Act of that State, which contains this clause: “ The forcible entry intended by this Act is, and shall be, any entry, with or without multitude of people, against the will or without the consent of the person or 'persons having [218]*218the possession, in fact, of the premises into which such entry shall be made.” Under this provision every entry against the will or without the consent of the party in possession is declared to be a forcible entry, regardless of the question of force. We think the case of Chiles v. Stephens, in view of the difference between the Forcible Entry and Detainer Act of Kentucky and our own,, has no application or force as authority in this State. The conditions are radically different.

This question came directly before the Supreme Court of Tennessee in the case of Scott v. Newsom, 4 Sneed, 457, which was an action of forcible entry and detainer by Newsom against Scott. In that case the land in controversy had been sold under a decree of the Court of Chancery, and purchased by Scott, which sale was subsequently confirmed and the legal title to the land vested in Scott by a decree of the Chancellor, and a writ of possession was issued and Scott put in the exclusive possession of the land by the Sheriff who turned out Newsom who was in the actual possession at the time.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Cal. 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janson-v-brooks-cal-1865.