By the Court,
Dixon, C. J.This is an action of trespass quare clausum fregit commenced before a justice of the peace prior to the passage of the code. The defendants pleaded not guilty, and gave notice that they should insist upon and give in evidence that the defendant Smith had a pre-emption right to the premises in question, under and by virtue of chapter 84 of the laws of 1855, entitled “An act for the protection of swamp and overflowed lands in this state, and to grant pre-emption rights thereon.” That the several supposed trespasses mentioned in the declaration were acts lawfully done by him by virtue of said pre-emption, and that the defendant Woolsey acted as his servant, &c. With this notice the defendant tendered the bond required by section 53 of chapter 88 of the Revised Statutes of 1849; and the justice certified the cause to the circuit court. Upon trial in that court the plaintiff recovered judgment, and the defendants appealed to this court. Upon the plaintiff’s motion, this court struck out the bill of exceptions for irregularity. The cause was then argued upon the record, as it stood without the bill of exceptions, when it was insisted by the defendants’ counsel that the defendants’ notice did not contain such an averment of title to lands in the. defendant Smith as ousted the justice of jurisdiction and authorized him to transfer the cause to the circuit court, and that the circuit court acquired no jurisdiction.
*511We are compelled to disagree with counsel. The statute provided that every action “ where the title to lands should in'anywise come in question ” should, upon the defendants’ complying with its provisions, be transmitted to the circuit court. "The 10th section of the chapter also provided that no justice should have cognizance of any action where the title to real property should come .in question. The right of pre-emption set up in the notice was a species of inchoate title. Under it Smith had a vested right to the lands, Veeder vs. Guppy, 3 Wis., 533, and was entitled to the absolute, and exclusive possession. Under a stalute precisely like our own it has been frequently held in New York, that the question of the right of possession in the public or a private individual of the locus in quo as a public or private road or easement was a question of title which a justice of the peace could not try. Heaton vs. Ferris, 1 John., 146; Striker vs. Mott, 6 Wend., 465; Saunders vs. Wilson, 15 id., 338; Whiting vs. Dudley, 19 id., 373. Smith could have maintained ejectment. The thirteenth section of the act declared that the certificate of pre-emption should “be sufficient evidence of title, to enable the person making the same to maintain any suit or suits, action or actions, against any person or persons, in any court of competent jurisdiction, for any trespass or injury done to such lands, or any part thereof, or to any buildings or improvements thereon, or to the timber, grass, grain, or other products growing or' being thereon, or any proper action or proceeding to recover possession thereof.”
The cause was properly certified to the circuit court, and the judgment of that court must be affirmed.