Thompson v. Smith

28 Cal. 527
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 28 Cal. 527 (Thompson v. Smith) 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
Thompson v. Smith, 28 Cal. 527 (Cal. 1865).

Opinion

By the Court,

Sawyer, J.

This is an .action under the Act relating to forcible entries and detainers, to recover possession of one hundred acres of land in the vicinity of the City of San Francisco. The answer denies the forcible entry and detainer charged, and denies possession of the whole, but admits possession of a part of the demanded premises, describing said part by metes and bounds, and claims that said possession was quietly, peacefully and rightfully obtained.

Plaintiff alleges the monthly value at fifty dollars.

The Court found a forcible entry and forcible detainer, and two hundred and fifty dollars damages. Judgment was thereupon entered for restitution of the demanded premises, and for the damage found.

There was no forcible entry at the time of the interview with Thompson, for, according to all the testimony, defendant’s entry had taken place several days before, and he was then actually in possession. If there was any forcible entry, it was at the time of the transactions between defendant and Weeks; and admitting that there was force at that time, it is not clear that the entry had not before that time been peaceably accomplished. The defendant had himself actually been upon the premises several hours manifesting an intent to hold the property. Weeks found him upon the premises waiting [531]*531for his teams and lumber an hour before the alleged force was employed, and at that time he informed Weeks that he claimed the premises under a lease from Bayerque, and was going to put up a house. It is at least doubtful whether the acts at the time the lumber arrived constituted a forcible entry within the meaning of the Act. But however this may be, there is no shadow of testimony to extend the entry of defendant and ouster of plaintiff to the whole premises described in the complaint. Plaintiff retained possession of his cabin. His servants were not turned out of that, or in any respect molested in its enjoyment. Such is the plaintiff’s testimony, and there is nothing to the contrary. Nor does his possession, such as it was, appear to have been disturbed in any of the other portions of the hundred acres claimed, beyond the immediate vicinity of the particular spot where defendant erected his house. For aught that appears, plaintiff is still in the quiet and undisturbed possession of all besides. Nor does it appear to what extent defendant claimed possession under his lease. The evidence which the defendant himself offered on that point was ruled out on objection of plaintiff. The complaint alleges damages resulting from an entry upon, and detention of, the whole of the land claimed. The testimony as to the value of the premises and damages is applicable to the whole, and the finding and judgment award damages for the detention, as well as restitution of the whole. Clearly, if the plaintiff was only ousted from a part, he was not entitled to recover damages for the detention of the whole. In these respects there is no conflict in the evidence, and it does not support the findings. A new trial must, therefore, be had.

The defendant offered in evidence a patent of the United States, and the conveyance under it, for the purpose of showing the good faith of the entry and to define the limits of the possession of defendant’s lessor. Plaintiff objected and defendant excepted. Defendant had introduced evidence tending to show that at the time of defendant’s entry, his lessor, Bayerque, and not plaintiff, was in possession. In connection with such evidence we think those documents were admissible to [532]*532prove the extent of the possession, which the evidence before introduced tended to prove. (Hoag v. Pierce, Ante 187.) It may be that for the want of sufficiently definite testimony on that point, the Court found against possession in Bayerque. If the plaintiff relied upon an unlawful entry and a forcible detainer after such unlawful entry, and not upon a forcible entry, then it was necessary to inquire into the good faith of the entry by defendant, for under the Act of 1850, which controls this action, “ it is not every peaceable entry, where the right of entry does not, in fact, exist, that constitutes an unlawful-entry within the meaning of the statute. There must be some ingredient of fraud or wilful wrong on the part of the party making the entry.” (Dickinson v. Maguire, 9 Cal. 48.)

In discussing the meaning of the term unlawful entry, as used fin the Act relating to forcible entries in Janson v. Brooks, ante, we approved of the following language of Mr. Chief Justice Cope, in Buckman v. Whitney: “We regard it as applying only in those cases where the entry is mala fide as well as wrongful, and beyond this its provisions cannot with any propriety be extended.” We think the construction put upon the Act upon this point in those cases correct. In this case, then, if the plaintiff relied upon an unlawful entry as distinguished from a forcible one, and a subsequent forcible detainer —and there was a count, though insufficient, framed upon that theory—the patent and subsequent conveyances were admissible, not for the purpose of establishing title, but to show that the entry was made in good faith under claim and color of title, and therefore not unlawful within the meaning of the term as used in the Act under which the suit was brought. But if the plaintiff relied upon a forcible entry, then these documents were inadmissible. He doubtless claimed on both grounds. We think, however, that upon the pleadings as they now stand the plaintiff must recover, if at all, on the ground of a'forcible entry. 1

• The evidence to show a distinct, peaceable, exclusive possession of plaintiff as against Bayerque, defendant’s lessor, as distinguished from what has sometimes been called a “ scram[533]*533bling possession,” is not so clear as desirable in cases for forcible entry.

The claim that the plaintiff’s possession had continued through Osborne from 1855, in view of the other testimony in the case, appears to us to be but a flimsy pretext. Such possession as the plaintiff had resulted from his own acts since his return from a seven years’ residence in the mountains, without reference to his former lease for an indefinite period of time, made ten years ago to Osborne. The evidence and claim connected with the Osborne lease, however, in our judgment, afford a clue to the objects of the plaintiff. Upon a review of the evidence—and it is all in the record—it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that the plaintiff was himself acting in bad faith and endeavoring to acquire and maintain a possession by unlawful means; that he hoped, by putting up a few boards—which, to expedite the work, he had previously framed and fitted for the purpose—that he might enter, as he did, upon land which had been for a longtime under the actual control and dominion of other parties, and in a single afternoon put up a cabin, without floor or other convenience for habitation, put a man in to sleep merely, while going elsewhere for his meals, and thereby acquire possession of a hundred acres of land; that he might, through Osborne, by means of the old lease of which the parties long in possession and exercising dominion over the land had never heard, connect the possession so acquired with his possession ten years before, and thereby, with the aid of the Statute of Limitations, secure the land against the parties, whoever they might be, holding the actual title.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Cal. 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-smith-cal-1865.