The plaintiffs iu error in their petition allege, and in argument insist on various grounds of error, but from the view we take of the case, it will be necessary to consider only one of them.
Was this a case, in which the title to the land, in the warrant mentioned, would properly come in question on the trial thereof? If it was, and if the relation of landlord and tenant did not exist between the plaintiffs and defendant, the justice had no jurisdiction to try the case. Upon this question he has no discretion, the statute is imperative, it is his duty to dismiss it. If the defendant would raise this question before *135the justice he must set forth in his answer to the action, in writing, the facts showing that such title will come in question on the trial, and verify the same by his own affidavit or that of his agent or attorney, and'in such answer he may also state any other proper manner of defence. When the defendant has clone this if the plaintiff would prevent the dis-mission of his action he, or his agent, or attorney, must file an affidavit denying the truth of the facts alleged in the affidavit filed by the defendant. But if the plaintiffhas filed such counter-affidavit, and it appears on the trial of the cause that the title to the land is properly in question between the parties, and that the relation of landlord and tenant does not exist between them, then it becomes the duty of the justice to dismiss such action.
But where no such answer of title is filed, the justice has jurisdiction of the cause, and the defendant in his defence will not be permitted to dispute the title of the plaintiff to the premises in question. Code, ch. 50 § 50 p. 12; Acts 1872-3, ch. 226 § 34; Acts 1881, ch. 8 § 50 p. 12. Before the act of Legislature passed February 27, 1864, Acts 1864 chapter 23, no authority existed to institute or prosecute before a single justice a warrant of unlawful entry and detainer. By the provisions of that act this jurisdiction was conferred on a single justice, and all the difficult, and intricate questions which may arise in any action of ejectment, or writ ot right, might be raised before him on the trial, and in the first instance had to be decided by him. The unlimited right in any case to appeal to the circuit court, where a new trial was had, afforded a tedious and expensive remedy to the parties. By sections 211 and 212 chapter 50 of the Code — this jurisdiction is continued to a single justice, with the same right of appeal — but guarded from abuse by the twelfth subdivision of section 50 of chapter 50 of the Code, which has been continued in force by the Acts 1872-3 chapter 226 section 34, and by the Acts 1881 chapter 8 section 50 sub-division 12. The practical effect of these enactments is to place it within the power of .a defendant to confine the jurisdiction of a single justice to cases of unlawful entry and detainer, where the defendant is not permitted to dispute the plaintiff’s title; or where no claim of title on the part of the defendant *136can properly arise in tlie trial of the cause. For if by his answer, the defendant shows, or if on the trial it appears; that the title to the laud will properly come iu question between the parties, the justice cannot proceed with the cause, but must dismiss it, and where such answer of title is not made, the defendant is not permitted to dispute the plaintiffs’ title. It is not pretended iu this case that the relation of landlord and tenant ever existed between the plaintiffs and defendant. It is contended by the plaintiffs in error, that they were lawfully in possession of the premises in controversy, and being so lawfully in possession, they were forcibly and unlawfully dispossessed thereof by the defendant, and that this is their sole cause of action; and that even if they had iro title, and if the defendant had perfect title to said premises, still they are entitled to recover possession of said premises because of her said forcible and unlawful entry. This proposition is more specious than sound, for if the premises assumed be unfounded, tlxe conclusion will be fallacious. It assumes that the possession of the premises in question, was not in the defendant, at the time said writ of possession was executed, but that it was in the said B. F. Mount, and that by executing said writ of possession against him., that the possession of the defendant to said premises, if any such she had, was thereby divested, and transferred to the said plaintiffs, and that the said defendant in contemplation of law, was by the act of the officer executing said writ turned out of the possession of said premises, and deprived of her right to possess and enjoy her own property. 'Whether she had a separate estate in fee simple in said land, and therefore the sole right to the control and possession of said land, were questions proper to be considered in determining whether the said writ of possession and all proceedings under it, were not, as to her, mere nullities, and whether the pretended act of dispossessing her said husband, B. F. Mount, was not, as to her, such an act of lawlessness, as could in no event, deprive her of the right to re-claim her own property whenever she was able to do so without a breach of the public peace. The only title Which the plaintiffs appear to have had to the said land was the deed of the said Walter Sands conveying to them all the right, title and interest of saidB. F. Mount therein. *137If, as tlio defendant claims in lier answer, it be true that the land belonged to her in fee simple as her separate estate, then said B. F. Mount had ho interest therein, and the plaintiffs by said deed from said Commissioner Sands acquired no title thereto. If said land at the time said sale under said decree to said plaintiffs so belonged to the said defendant, the said B. F. Mount could neither sell or lease the same, or do any other act to deprive her of the possession and enjoyment of said land without her consent. If under such circumstances, her said husband undertook to lease her said land from a stranger, he could acquire no possession by his' lease, nor' could he at'the expiration of his lease, surrender to bis pretended landlord a possession which he has never acquired, nor could the landlord recover from him a possession which he never had, and which he never transferred to his tenant. Whether such a state of facts exists or not, are questions of title to be determined at the 'trial. It is true that if a husband should undertake to lease his wife’s lands from a stranger, that he could not resist his said landlord’s action, but it will scarce^ be contended, that the judgment recovered against him, could be satisfied out of his wife’s lands, or that it could confer upon him any right to the possession thereof.
While it is true that the tenant can not dispute his landlord’s title to the leased premises under which he entered, the converse of the proposition is equally true, that the landlord can only recover from his tenant the property demised to him. In the case under consideration it appears from the record, that the defendant was not a party to the said chancery suit, under the authority of which the said commissioner Sands sold and conveyed to the plaintiffs said two hundred acres of land; nor was,she a party to the said lease made by said plaintiffs to said B. F. Mount; nor to the said warrant of unlawful entry and detainer brought, by said plaintiffs against Mount, under which said writ of possession was issued and executed; nor was she holding said land in privity with her husband and therefore she is not in any manner bound by any of them or by their proceedings under them.
By lief answer, she denies that the plaintiff has any title to said land; she claims, that she is the owner in fee simple *138of one hundred and sixty-two acres out of the two hundred acres in the warrant mentioned, and disclaims all title to the residue thereof, that the same is her sole and separate property, and shows whence her title was derived, tracing it back through successive alienations to 1865, and that she and those under whom she 'claims have been in possession of said property for ten years. If the premises were in fact the separate estate of the defendant in fee simple; if she was no party to said chancerty suit, nor to the said warrant of unlawful entry and detainer, against her husband, and said writ of possession was against the husband alone, and the defendant was by the officer executing said writ against her husband, turned out of her house into the road, she was not thereby in contemplation of law out of possession of her land, nor were 'the plaintiffs thereby in possession thereof as against her, for if she had perfect title to the land, such title drew with it the constructive possession thereof. This record shows that all these facts appeared on the trial of the plaintiffs'" appeal, in the circuit court, and in our opinion they are sufficient to show, that the title, to at hast one. hundred and sixty-two acres of the land in the said warrant mentioned, would properly have come in question between the said parties on the trial of the warrant of unlawful entry and detainer. When these facts so appeared it was evident to the circuit court that the justice had no jurisdiction to proceed further with the trial, and it did right in dismissing the cause and any other proceedings had therein; and it was -the duty of the circuit court sitting only in the character of an appellate court for the purpose of trying said appeal to dismiss the warrant at the plaintiffs’ costs. We are therefore of opinion that there was no error in the judgment of the circuit court in dismissing said cause at the plaintiffs’ costs. And it appearing to this Court, that for the reasons hereinbefore stated, the justice did not have jurisdiction to try the said warrant and that the same ought to have been, dismissed, it is considered that the judgment of the circuit court dismissing the said warrant be affirmed, without prejudice to the fight of the plaintiffs to institute aud prosecute against the said defendant any actions at law or suit in equity which they may he advised is noces-*139sary to determine their rights to said land. And it is further considered that the appellee recover against the appellants her costs in this Court expended, and thirty dollars _ damages.
Affirmed.