There was no reason why the parties should have got themselves into difficulty in this case. It appears that the plaintiff sued the defendant for unlawfully entering upon his lands, at various times, and doing him damage. He described his lands by metes and bounds, which included a certain strip of land in the actual possession of the defendant. How, it was not necessary for the defendant to put in a plea of title covering this strip of land. The plaintiff could not maintain any action in a justice’s court for an unlawful entry upon land in the possession of the defendant. The question of title arising upon the trial, by the plaintiff’s own showing, would have been a sufficient protection to the
I agree with the learned justice, at special term, that the plea of title did not go to the entire cause of action. The complaint set forth several unlawful entries upon the plaintiff’s premises. As many of them as were made upon the strip of land in dispute, were justified by the plea of title; but there was no such justification as to the residue, and no reason can be assigned why the justice could not proceed and try him.
But I am of opinion that the plaintiff might have obviated the difficulty before the justice, by amending his complaint, and confining the alleged trespasses to the other parcel of the lands. It seems he did so confine them by his proofs on the trial. A new assignment, by a formal replication, is doubtless abolished by the Code, and could not in that form have been interposed to the defendant’s plea of title. This was so decided in this court. (Stewart v. Wallis, 30 Barb. 344.) But I am of the opinion that the plaintiff may have the full benefit of the old replication, by simply amending his complaint/' Surely, the justice may permit an amendment, or peimit the' plaintiff to withdraw, a claim put forth in his'"complaint.
Instead of amending his complaint, or withdrawing his claim for the trespasses alleged to have been committed upon his small strip of land in controversy, the plaintiff acquiesced in a dismissal of the complaint, and afterwards brought his action into the Supreme Court, upon the same state of pleadings. It was stipulated upon the trial, in that court, that the cause had been brought there from the justice’s court. But independent of such a stipulation, I think the plaintiff must fail to recover his costs. If it is regarded as an original action in the Supreme Court, (and I think it was improperly dismissed by the justice,) then it was necessary for the plaintiff to recover fifty dollars damages, in order to recover costs. If it is regarded as an action properly removed by a plea of title from a justice’s court, then doubtless the plaintiff has failed to recover any damages in- hostility to the title set up by the defendant, and for that reason the defendant is entitled to costs, (Code, § 61. Burhans v. Tibbits, 7 How. Pr. 74) The order appealed from should be affirmed, with $10 costs.
Order affirmed.
Morgan, Bacon, Foster and Mullin, Justices.]