Patterson v. Dombrowski

60 N.W.2d 456, 337 Mich. 557, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 423
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1953
DocketDocket 54; Calendar 45,815
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 60 N.W.2d 456 (Patterson v. Dombrowski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson v. Dombrowski, 60 N.W.2d 456, 337 Mich. 557, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 423 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

Ádams, J.

Cecil A. Patterson, plaintiff and appellee, entered into a written contract with Edmund Dombrowski and Ann Dombrowski, defendants and appellants, to build a house for the defendants on property that they owned in the city of East Detroit. Among other things, the • contract provided:

“That the builder shall have full and exclusive possession of said residence and land until the builder has received full payment for-.all sums-due-the builder under this agreement, less any credit for an allowance contained in any work order as hereinbefore provided, and until builder has received *559 final approval of fitness thereof from all necessary governmental agencies, and the final approval of any financing companies, or its agencies, whose inspection and approval is required for the financing of said residence and/or this agreement.”

When plaintiff had finished construction, he notified the defendants that the house was complete and requested the balance due him on the contract amounting to $5,403.50. Defendants refused to pay, claiming that there were a number of defects in construction that would have to he corrected before they would pay the balance. Negotiations failed to produce an agreement and on October 3, 1952, the defendants, using a key that plaintiff had loaned them in order that they might inspect the property, entered the house without the knowledge or permission of the plaintiff, moved their furniture in and changed the lock on the house.

The following morning plaintiff called at the premises, found that the defendants had moved in and made demand for possession of the property, which was refused. Plaintiff was then permitted to remove his tools from the basement. It is conceded by the parties that the defendants used no actual force or violence in taking possession of the property or in detaining the property and that there was no breach in the peace at any time. Plaintiff said, however, that he obeyed the order of defendant Ann Dombrowski to stay out of the house in order to avoid a breach of the peace.

Shortly thereafter, plaintiff instituted suit before a circuit court commissioner of Macomb county alleging that he was lawfully entitled to possession of the property; .that defendants took possession by stealth; changed the lock on the door, and then held and detained the property as trespassers against the rights of the plaintiff. Upon hearing, the circuit court commissioner found for the plaintiff and en *560 tered a judgment that the plaintiff have restitution of the premises. The cause was then appealed to the Macomb county circuit court and heard on stipulated facts. The circuit court affirmed the decision of the circuit court commissioner and the defendants take this appeal.

Proceedings in the circuit court commissioner’s court may be instituted to obtain possession of property where there has been a forcible entry or detainer, the applicable sections of the statute being:

“No person shall make any entry into lands, tenements or other possessions, but in cases where entry is given by law; and, in such cases, he shall not enter with force, but only in a peaceable manner.” CL 1948, § 630.1 (Stat Ann § 27.1975).

“When any forcible entry shall be made, or when an entry shall be made in a peaceable manner, and the possession shall be unlawfully held by force, the person entitled to the premises may be restored to the possession thereof, in the manner hereinafter provided.” CL 1948, § 630.2 (Stat Ann §27.1976).

“The person entitled to the possession of the premises, his agent or attorney, may make complaint in writing and on oath, and deliver the same to a circuit court commissioner of the county in which the premises are situated, or to a justice of the peace of the city or township where the premises are located, or of any adjoining or contiguous city or township, setting forth that the person complained of, is in possession of the lands or tenements in question, describing them, and that he entered into the same with force, or that he unlawfully holds the same by force, or against the rights of the plaintiff, as the case may be: Provided, That justices of the peace shall not have jurisdiction under this chapter, when the place of holding court of a circuit court commissioner is situated in the same township or city, unless such circuit court commissioner shall be absent from the county, or is interested in the case, either *561 as principal, agent or attorney.” CL 1948, § 630.3 (Stat Ann § 27.1977).

Defendants claim that they did not forcibly enter or detain the property and that therefore the circuit court commissioner had no jurisdiction of the subject matter.

As previously stated, the parties conceded that there was no actual force or violence, but plaintiff contends that the defendants employed stratagem and trick to gain access to the property and that under the rule laid in Pelavin v. Misner, 241 Mich 209 (60 ALR 276), an entry by stratagem or trick carried out under false pretenses and followed by possession maintained under threat of force was a forcible entry and detainer. In that case, the person in possession of the property was induced by false representations to come outside the building and was then immediately locked out. "We think that decision is not applicable to circumstances found in the present case, since there were no false representations and no action by the defendants that could be said to ■constitute a trick or stratagem.

Defendants are the owners of the property. Plaintiff voluntarily delivered to them a key to the house to be used for inspection purposes. While their subsequent use of the key to effect an entrance was a use not contemplated by the parties, there is no indication in the record that they obtained the key in the first instance for that purpose. It was used by them to gain entrance to their own building after a dispute developed between the parties over, the construction of the house, but its possession by the defendants was with the full knowledge and approval of the plaintiff.

Eeviewing the decisions of this Court for the purpose of determining the circumstances that will ■constitute forcible entry and detainer, we find that *562 the accepted rule is laid down in the early case of Shaw v. Hoffman, 25 Mich 162, and consistently followed in later decisions. It was there said:

“ ‘The statute was not intended to apply to a mere trespass, however wrongful; but the entry or the detainer must be riotous, or personal violence must be used or in some way threatened, or the conduct of the parties guilty of the entry or detainer must be such as in some way to inspire terror or alarm in the persons evicted or kept out—in other words, the force contemplated by the statute is not merely the force used against, or upon, the property, but force used or threatened against persons, as a means, or for the purpose, of expelling or keeping out the prior possessor.’ ” Quoted with approval in Chylowski v. Steinberg, 193 Mich 547, and Christian v. Am ster, 253 Mich 400.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 N.W.2d 456, 337 Mich. 557, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-dombrowski-mich-1953.