Opinion
No. 27701.
February 18, 1929. Suggestion of Error Overruled March 4, 1929.
1. INFANTS. Permitting amendment of declaration by minor so as to further prosecute suit in name of next friend held not error ( Hemingway's Code 1927, section 572).
In action of ejectment by minor in her own name, permitting amendment of declaration so as to further prosecute suit in name of her next friend held not error, under Hemingway's Code 1927, section 572 (Code 1906, section 775), relating to amendments.
2. TENANCY IN COMMON. To justify ejectment action by tenant in common, plaintiff must have been turned out of or denied possession by cotenant.
To justify action of ejectment by tenant in common against cotenant, plaintiff must have been either actually turned out of possession of land by defendant, or defendant's possession must have been evinced in such way as to amount to total denial of right of plaintiff to possession.
3. TENANCY IN COMMON. Receipt by cotenants' lessee of all rents and profits and this claim of exclusive right of possession constituted ouster, authorizing directed verdict for plaintiff.
Receipt by lessee of cotenants of all rents and profits of land as well as possession of all timber cut and sold from it, where lessee, during period of lease, claimed exclusive right of possession and use of land, constituted an ouster of plaintiff, authorizing directed verdict in her favor in ejectment action.
APPEAL from circuit court of Lawrence county, HON. J.Q. LANGSTON, Judge.
Brady, Dean Hobbs, for appellant.
The legal effect of the lease from the adult heirs made the possession of appellant, for the two-year term, the possession of these owners, and, therefore, for the lease term he stood in their shoes, as to appellee, a cotenant. Therefore, it became necessary, under sec. 1843, Code of 1906, being sec. 1476, Hem. Code 1917, for appellee to prove an actual ouster of her by appellant or suffer a nonsuit. See Harmon v. James, 7 S. M. 111; Corbin v. Cannon, 31 Miss. 570.
The most that can be said from plaintiff's standpoint is that there are circumstances from which an ouster might be inferred. On the contrary, there are many facts from which the only inference to be drawn is that ouster did not take place. Therefore, all these facts and circumstances should, at least, have been submitted to the jury. The court, however, took away from the jury its exercise of this prerogative.
G. Wood Magee, for appellee.
There is no ground for the appellant to complain about the judgment for the value of the timber he cut from the land. He had no contract with the minor cotenant who was the plaintiff in the court below, and the judgment was for the value of this cotenant's part of the timber. In all events appellant is liable to this minor for her interest in the timber. We submit that, inasmuch as the contract has long since expired and that appellant has now no further rights at all under said contract, that this appeal ought to be dismissed, and that the judgment of the lower court for the value of the timber taken by appellant ought to be affirmed and the judgment allowed to stand.
Brady, Dean Hobbs, in reply for appellant.
In Cahn v. Wright, 108 Miss. 420, 66 So. 782, there was a suit for possession of land in an unlawful entry and detainer court, in which proceeding appellee obtained a judgment for possession of the land and compensation for use and occupancy thereof. The appellant appealed from this judgment after which appellee surrendered possession of the land. A motion was made to dismiss because there was no longer any controversy. This court there held as follows: "Assuming that the question here sought to be litigated can be raised by motion to dismiss, the motion must nevertheless be overruled, for the reason that possession of the land was not the sole question litigated in the court below. Appellant, as appears from instructions granted and refused, sought to recover, in addition to the possession of the land, compensation for the use and occupancy thereof, as she had the right to do under section 5049 of the Code. Motion overruled."
Appellee, the owner of a one-fourth undivided interest in the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter, section 24, township 7, range 21 east, in Lawrence county, brought ejectment in the circuit court of that county against appellant, the lessee of appellee's three sisters, who owned the balance of the undivided interest in the land, and to recover the sum of three hundred and fifty dollars for the use and occupation of the land by appellant, and for waste alleged to have been committed by appellant in denuding the land of all its timber. The court directed a verdict for the appellee on the ejectment issue, and submitted to the jury the question of liability of appellant for use and occupation of the land, and waste. The jury returned a verdict in favor of appellee, assessing her damages at one hundred and twenty five dollars. Judgment was accordingly entered in favor of appellee, and, from that judgment, appellant prosecutes this appeal.
Appellee owned a one-fourth undivided interest in the land involved, while her three sisters each owned a one-fourth undivided interest therein. Her sisters leased the land to appellant for the years 1927 and 1928. By the terms of the lease, appellant obligated himself to redeem the land from its sale for state and county taxes; to clear, fence, and place the land in a good state of cultivation, and to pay the taxes thereon for the years 1927 and 1928; to repair the dwelling house; for which he was given the right to cut and remove and sell off merchantable timber on the land, except such as might be needed to repair the dwelling and fence the land — appellant to have the entire proceeds of the sale of the timber, and all the rents and profits from the land during the two-year period. Appellant went into possession of the land under the lease, and had been in possession of it for about fifteen months when this cause was tried. Appellant had, during that time, received and appropriated to his own use the entire rents and profits of the land, and denuded it of practically all of its timber, which he had sold, and appropriated the entire proceeds to his own use.
Appellee brought the action of ejectment in this case in her own name. She was a minor at the time the action was brought, and was at the time of the trial of the cause. Over appellant's objection the appellee was permitted to amend her declaration so as to further prosecute the suit in the name of her next friend, Dink Bass. That action of the court is assigned by appellant as error.
Section 775, Code of 1906 (section 572, Hemingway's Code of 1927), provides, among other things, that the circuit court shall allow all necessary amendments in any pleadings or proceedings at any time before verdict, so as to bring the merits of the controversy between the parties fairly to trial, and allow all errors and mistakes in the name of any party to be corrected. Under that statute, the court committed no error in permitting the amendment complained of. McCarty v. Key, 87 Miss. 248, 39 So. 780; Kelly v. Continental Casualty Co., 87 Miss. 438, 40 So. 1; McCue v. Massey, 90 Miss. 124, 43 So. 2; Jones v. Clemmer, 98 Miss. 508, 54 So. 4; American Ry. Exp. Co. v. Roby, 129 Miss. 120, 91 So. 499.
Appellant assigns and argues as error the action of the court in directing a verdict in favor of appellee on the ejectment issue. A tenant in common, who has been ousted of possession of land by his cotenant, may bring ejectment to be restored to possession jointly with such cotenant. But to justify such an action, the plaintiff must have been either actually turned out of possession of the land by the defendant, or defendant's possession must have been evinced in such a way as to amount to a total denial of the right of the plaintiff to possession. 7 R.C.L., section 94, p. 879. The receipt by the defendant of all the rents and profits of the land, claiming them as his own, and his refusal, upon demand, to let the plaintiff enter possession, constitute a sufficient ouster of the latter by the former. Harmon v. James, 7 S. M. 111, 45 Am. Dec. 296.
Appellant, while testifying as a witness in his own behalf, admitted that he received and appropriated to his own use the entire rents and profits of the land, as well as the proceeds of all timber cut and sold from it, and, further, that during the period of the lease he claimed the exclusive right of possession and use of the land. We think this constituted an ouster of appellee, authorizing the action of the court in directing a verdict in her favor on that issue. Appellant argues that the verdict was excessive. We do not think so. There was ample evidence to justify the jury in fixing appellee's one-fourth interest in the rents and profits of the land, and the damage by waste, at one hundred and twenty-five dollars.
We do not think the other assignments of error raise questions sufficiently grave to call for a discussion by the court. We find no merit in them.
Affirmed.