Foss v. Van Driele

Graves, J.

Yan Driele commenced summary proceedings before a circuit court commissioner to obtain possession of a lot in tbe city of Grand Rapids and tbe action was appealed to the circuit court. Tbe case was there tried before a jury who found in complainant’s favor and tbe defendant brought error.

Tbe case made by complainant was that be let tbe premises by oral lease to Mrs. Foss, in January, 1879, and that she entered under tbe lease and paid rent until tbe middle *203of April, 1880, and then refused to make further payment and also refused to quit after regular demand and notice.

The family was composed of three persons besides a hired girl: Mrs. Foss, a daughter in ill health, and a son, Charles De Yan, aged thirty years. These persons were joint inmates of the house from the beginning and formed one household. It was claimed by defendant that the lease from complainant was to her son Charles, and that he furnished all the rent which was paid, and that in negotiating with complainant and in looking over the premises prior to the lease, and in paying rent, she merely acted in part as agent for her son and in part as an interested member of the household. And there was evidence which tended to establish this position. There was also evidence tending to prove that the son was in fact the head of the family and that the possession of the others was included in his possession, and in reference to legal proceedings to get possession was not separable therefrom.

It further appeared that on the 8th of March, 1880, Francis B. Gilbert brought ejectment against the said Charles De Yan for the same premises and claimed them in fee, and that on the 1st of May thereafter he recovered judgment, and two days later took a writ of possession which was delivered to the sheriff for execution on the day of issue. The officer attended by Gilbert called to execute the writ, and thereupon De Yan, the defendant in that case, together with Mrs. Foss, submitted to the officer’s authority and entered into an arrangement with Gilbert and agreed to hold under him. A lease was immediately made in writing and Gilbert subscribed it the next day. The evidence, which is not disputed, shows that the eviction was complete and that the attornment to Gilbert was not a voluntary act in any such sense as to make it a wrong against complainant. Fishar v. Prosser Cowper 217; The Home Life Ins. Co. v. Sherman 46 N. Y. 370; Morse v. Goddard 13 Met. 177. Fiad the attornment been really voluntary the transaction would have been exposed to different considerations.

*204The substantial controversy is between the complainant and Gilbert, the family of which Mrs. Foss is one member having no possession except as given by Gilbert and held under him, and the real dispute is in respect to the adverse titles of Gilbert and complainant, and it is impossible to determine it in this kind of proceeding. Bennett v. Robinson 27 Mich. 26. The appropriate remedy is ejectment. We cannot assume that a different state of facts may not be shown and consequently cannot make a final disposition of the case. The other points are not material.

The judgment is reversed with costs and a new trial granted.

The other Justices concurred.