Murry v. Burris

42 N.W. 25, 6 Dakota 170, 1889 Dakota LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court Of The Territory Of Dakota
DecidedFebruary 12, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 42 N.W. 25 (Murry v. Burris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court Of The Territory Of Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murry v. Burris, 42 N.W. 25, 6 Dakota 170, 1889 Dakota LEXIS 14 (dakotasup 1889).

Opinion

Tripp, C.J.

This is an action of forcible entry and detention brought to recover possession of a quarter section of land with the buildings and improvements thereon, situated in the county of Lawrence, Dakota.

The complaint contains two causes of action, or states its cause of action in two counts. In the first, plaintiff alleges an unlawful entry by force and violence, and an unlawful entry by fraud and stealth, with unlawful detention. In the second he alleges unlawful entry by fraud and stealth, and the unlawful detention of the premises. The defendants answer without objection to the form and substance to the complaint, and deny generally the allegations of each count, and plead in substance that the defendants are lawfully possessed of the premises, as tenants of one O’Neill, who is the owner thereof by purchase from the plaintiff; and they further plead that an action of ejectment is now pending in the district court of Lawrence county, between said O’Neill as plaintiff and said Murry as defendant, to determine the title to the premises in controversy in this action. The answer is verified, and demands that the action be certified to the district court. The plaintiff replies, denying generally the allegations of the answer. The case was tried to a jury, and a general verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff; and a motion for a new trial having been denied, and a judgment directing the removal of defendants from the premises having been entered, defendants bring the cause here for review.

[173]*173A large number of errors are assigned by the appellant, but we shall only notice those pertinent to the discussion of the case, in the view we have taken of the issues raised by the pleadings and determined by the verdict of the jury.

After the plaintiff had introduced evidence tending to establish possession of the premises, and an unlawful entry by the defendants, the defendant O’Neill, being a witness in his own behalf, was asked by his counsel: Question. “ Prior to the time you say you were dispossessed in March, how long had you been in the actual possession of that ranch, and from whom did you receive the possession ? ” To which question the plaintiff objected as immaterial, and which objection being sustained by the court, the defendant made the following offer: “ Defendants now offer to prove by the witness Peter O’Neill that, prior to the 18th day of March, 1883, he had been continuously in the quiet, peaceable and lawful possession of the ranch in question, and was occupying the house thereon by himself and employees since the 15th day of November, 1882, and that on or about the 18th day of March, 1883, the plaintiff, John W. Murry, during the temporary absence of defendant O’Neill, and his employee William Jones, in Deadwood, took possession of the house and premises with force and arms, and held them for a few days in that manner, when he, O’Neill, regained peaceable possession of the house.” This offer was objected to as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial. The court sustained the objection and rejected the testimony; to which defendants excepted. Subsequently certain testimony was admitted on the part of the defendants tending to show that the plaintiff, Murry, had conveyed the premises to the defendant O’Neill in November, 1881, and that O’Neill had leased the-premises back to Murry for one year, ending November, 1882; and that in November, 1882, after the expiration of said lease, the plaintiff, Murry, had quit and surrendered up the possession of said premises to the defendant O’Neill, and that the defendant O’Neill had thereafter and up to the 18th day of March, 1883 (the date of the alleged unlawful entry), held the peaceable and uninterrupted possession of said premises; and that such possession was consented to and acquiesced in by Murry; but that on the 18th day of March, 1883, Murry forcibly entered upon the [174]*174premises and ejected the defendant’s (O’Neill’s) tenants, and that some days thereafter the defendants had peaceably regained possession, and had thereafter continued to hold the same.

The court, upon motion of plaintiff and against the objection of defendants, struck out all that portion of the evidence relating to defendants’ possession prior to March 18, 1883, and this ruling of the court was assigned as error.

The defendant also offered in evidence the deed from Murry to O’Neill, and the lease from O’Neill to Murry which were, upon plaintiff’s objection, ruled out by the court, and to this ruling the defendants duly excepted.

Did the court,err in striking out the evidence relating to the possession of the premises by defendant O’Neill prior to March 18, 1883, and in rejecting the offer of the defendants to prove the same ?

This will depend upon the construction to be given to our statute of forcible entry and detainer, under which this action is brought. That portion of the section of our statute upon which this action is founded is contained in the Justices’ Code, and reads as follows: Sec. 34. This action is maintained (1) where a party has by force, intimidation, fraud, or stealth, entered upon the prior actual possession of real property of another and detains the same; (2) where a party, after entering peaceably upon real property, turns out by force, threats, or menacing conduct, the party in possession; or, (3) where he by force, or by menaces and threats of violence, unlawfully holds and keeps the possession of any real property, whether the same was acquired peaceably or otherwise.” The plaintiff contends, under the literal reading of the first division of this section, that any person is liable to this proceeding who enters upon the prior actual possession of another ” by force or by fraud or stealth, no matter what his interests or rights may be in the property entered upon, and no matter what otherwise may be the character of the possession entered upon ; that a person’s own property may be entered upon by another without color of right, and, if the owner subsequently succeed in regaining possession without committing a breach of the peace, yet the unlawful intruder may invoke the aid of the courts and recover the possession from the lawful owner, whenever that possession was regained [175]*175by fraud or stealth or force amounting to a breaking of the close. If this is the construction to be given our statute, which is the one which seems to have been followed by the lower court, then there was no error in rejecting the offer, and in striking out the evidence as to the prior possession of the defendant.

Statutes of forcible entry and detainer are of very ancient origin; they date far back into the fourteenth century; they succeeded the wager of battle ; they were criminal in character, and were designed to prevent redress of private wrongs by means calculated to disturb the peace and good order of society, in the use of force and violence of a nature to inspire terror and incite personal conflict. These statutes were highly penal in character, and were enforced by indictment of the grand jury or by complaint before a magistrate, and terminated, when unfavorable to the offender, in a fine to the king, and an ouster from the premises unlawfully entered, as a punishment for the offense, and not as a determination of any right of the parties. No title passed or was affected by these proceedings, which were generally summary in character and were prosecuted in the name of the sovereign.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 N.W. 25, 6 Dakota 170, 1889 Dakota LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murry-v-burris-dakotasup-1889.