Vinson v. Flynn

43 S.W. 146, 64 Ark. 453, 1897 Ark. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 27, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 43 S.W. 146 (Vinson v. Flynn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vinson v. Flynn, 43 S.W. 146, 64 Ark. 453, 1897 Ark. LEXIS 88 (Ark. 1897).

Opinions

Battle, J.

This action was instituted by Dock Flynn against T. C. Vinson to recover damages. He alleges that he and his family were residing on a place known as the “Upp Place,” as tenants of the defendant, and that the defendant unlawfully and maliciously entered and ejected him and his family from the place, and threw his goods and chattels in the road, to his damage in the sum of $500.

Tne defendant denied these allegations, and alleged that the term of plaintiff as tenant had expired, and that he had refused, after legal notice and demand, to deliver possession of the place to his landlord, the defendant, and that his family and goods were removed from the place, by the constable of his township, in obedience to legal process, in a prudent and careful manner, without the slightest insult or injury to his family, or damage to his goods.

The facts, as shown by the evidence adduced in a trial before a jury, were substantially as follows: In September, 1892, Vinson rented the “Upp Place” to Flynn for the term of two years. After the termination of the lease, in 1894, Vinson demanded possession of the place, in writing, and Flynn refused to comply with his demand. He (Vinson) thereupon consulted two or more persons as to his right to sue for possession before a justice of the peace. They advised him that he could not do so. Not content with their advice, he applied to a justice of the peace, who, after an examination of the statutes, informed him that he had jurisdiction in such cases. He thereupon instituted an action against Flynn for the place before the justice of the peace,'and sued out a writ therein, directed to the constable of the township, and commanding him, if the plaintiff gave security according to law, to' deliver possession thereof to Vinson without delay. Vinson gave security as required, and the constable executed the writ in his presence, by turning Flynn and his family, consisting of a Avife and three children (one a babe), out of the house upon the premises, and by removing their goods and chattels off the place. This was in January, 1895. The Aveather at the time and place was cold, and snow was upon the ground. One witness testified that the goods and chattels were handled roughly by the constable, and were thereby injured, but others testified to the contrary.

Evidence was adduced in the trial, over the objections of the defendant, which tended to show that Flynn acquired, before he was dispossessed, a claim of some kind to a part of the “Upp Place,” the demised premises.

The court, over the objections of the defendant, instructed the jury as follows:

“2. If you find from the proof, by a preponderance, that the plaintiff was unlawfully dispossessed, you will find for the plaintiff.

“3. If you find for the plaintiff, he is either entitled to actual damages, or actual and punitive damages, according to whether you find the unlawful act was or was not done with malice. The damages you assess must not exceed the amount claimed in the complaint, in such an amount as may be sustained by the proof.

“4. Malice, in the sense in which the word is used in civil actions, is not confined to spite or hatred, but consists of a violation of law to the prejudice of the plaintiff, done willfully, or done with indifference as to whether it is right or wrong, and from being actuated by improper motives.

“5. A justice of the peace has no jurisdiction to issue writs of possession for real estate; and if he does issue such writ, it is void and without authority of law.

“6. The burden is upon the plaintiff to prove malice, but malice may be inferred from circumstances proved; and if you find from the evidence, by a preponderance, that the defendant acted from improper or indirect motives, and without authority of law, malice on the part of the defendant may be inferred.

“7. ‘Punitive damages’ means such an amount as it is called ‘smart money,’ or punishment for maliciously violating the legal rights of another; and if you find from the evidence that the defendant wantonly and maliciously, in utter disregard of the rights of the plaintiff,- forcibly put him out of possession of the premises, then you may assess his damages at such sum as will be a punishment to him, and deter others from like actions. And in fixing the amount you may consider the vexation and injury to his feelings, his inconvenience, on account of the wrong done the plaintiff.”

The plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment against the defendant for $150, and the defendant appealed.

At common law no civil action can be maintained against the landlord by the tenant for forcibly taking possession of his land, which constituted the demised premises, at the expiration of the tenancy, unless there was an excess of force, and then only for the excess. There was no remedy by which he could be compelled to restore the possession forcibly taken. The law in this manner held forth strong temptations to the landlord to retake his land by force from the tenant refusing to deliver the same after the term of his lease had expired. Such actions were calculated to provoke breaches of the peace. To prevent this the statute was enacted which prohibits all persons from taking possession of land and detaining or holding the same/except where an entry is given by law, and then only in a peaceable manner.; and to protect the actual possession, not to determine the rights of property, provides the remedy of forcible entry and detainer. To restore the possession to him- who has been turned out by force, as he held it before, until the right to the possession can be adjudicated, this remedy is designed; its object being, as said by Mr. Justice Eakin, “to prevent any and all persons, with or without title, from assuming to right themselves with strong hand after the feudal fashion, when peaceable possession cannot be obtained, and to compel them to the more pacific course of suits in court, where the weak and strong stand upon equal terms.” Littell v. Grady, 38 Ark. 584; Hall v. Trucks, ib. 257; McGuire v. Cook, 13 Ark. 448; Anderson v. Mills, 40 Ark. 192; Johnson v. West, 41 Ark. 535; Logan v. Lee, 53 Ark. 94.

But a party who was in possession of land without right, and has been turned out by the owner, has no civil remedies, except those provided by statute. They are designed for the protection of his possession against force. If he abandons them, and seeks to recover damages for a trespass, then he must rely on his right and claim to the property which has been injured. The owner who has dispossessed him is then remitted to his title, and can use it to show that he has not been injured, and is not entitled to redress.

In New York the statutes at one time provided redress for dispossession by force, by an indictment for forcible entry and detainer. In People v. Leonard, 11 Johns. 508, the court said: “This was a trial for a forcible entry and detainer. The complainant, on opening his case, proposed to confine his proof to his possession only; but the judge ruled that the complainant must prove in himself an estate in fee, or an estate for years, at least; that the title was in question, and that the complainant must give the like evidence of title as was required in ejectment. Admitting the complainant must give the like evidence of title as is required in ejectment, he offered to show what would have entitled him to recover in ejectment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 S.W. 146, 64 Ark. 453, 1897 Ark. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vinson-v-flynn-ark-1897.