Affirming.
On October 10, 1891, C.J. Simpson obtained a patent for 100 acres of land in Harlan county, and on March 19, 1904, he conveyed the land to his son, C.C. Simpson. C.C. Simpson built a shack on one corner of the land and put a tenant in it. Thereupon Arithea Howard, who claimed that this part of the land lay within her boundary, brought an equitable action on April 7, 1911, against Simpson and obtained an injunction restraining him from trespassing upon her land. He filed an answer and counterclaim setting up his title to the land and praying that his title be quieted. In obedience to the injunction granted the plaintiff he vacated the land and Arithea Howard continued in possession. The case was finally heard on September 28, 1920, and judgment was entered dismissing the plaintiff's petition and also dismissing the defendant's counterclaim upon the ground that neither had shown title to the land. From that judgment Simpson appealed to this court and the judgment was here affirmed on November 27, 1923. Smith v. Howard, 201 Ky. 253. For four years previous to that time Arithea Howard had rented the land in controversy to a tenant who cultivated the land in corn and used the shack to store his fodder and other property. After the decision of this court was rendered Howard by his tenant, McKinley Belcher, went upon the land and took possession of the shack, the doors of which were carefully wired up. He threw out of the house the fodder of Arithea Howard's tenant and moved into it. Thereupon on December 20, 1923, she sued out a warrant of forcible entry against Belcher. While Belcher was thus living in the house Simpson claimed that Arithea Howard's tenants entered on part of the other land that was in his possession and on December 28, 1923, sued out a warrant of forcible entry against Arithea Howard and her tenants. *Page 818 On final hearing in the circuit court judgment was entered in both cases in favor of Arithea Howard. Belcher and Simpson appeal.
No question of title is involved. On a warrant for forcible entry the only question is the possession at the time the entry was made. There is no dispute in the evidence that Arithea Howard by her tenant had been cultivating the land for four years and using the shack to store the fodder and property of the tenant. The fodder of the last crop was in the house and the doors were securely fastened when Simpson by his tenant forcibly entered and took possession of the shack. Unquestionably this was a forcible entry upon Arithea Howard's possession. It is not material that she had gotten possession by reason of the injunction in the original action. The only question material here is, was she in possession at the time the entry was made?
Arithea Howard being in possession of the property when the forcible entry was made in the shack remained in possession, except so far as she was then ousted. Her possession of the remainder of the property was not broken by the forcible entry into the shack. She was in possession before and remained in possession. Therefore the writ of forcible entry against her and her tenant taken out by Simpson was properly dismissed. Richie v. Owsley, 131 Ky. 63.
The two cases were submitted to the jury under instructions that are unobjectionable. The jury found for Arithea Howard in both cases and their finding is fully warranted by the evidence.
It is true that the circuit court in its judgment in the original action properly might have restored to Simpson the possession of the land he had when that action was begun and so put the parties in the situation in which they were then. But this he did not do. He left the parties as they were at the time the judgment was entered and the affirmance of that judgment in this court had no effect on the possession of the property. Howard v. Whitaker, 61 S.W. 355; Derrington v. Childers, 156 Ky. 452.
Judgment affirmed. *Page 819