I am constrained to dissent from the opinion of my associate, Judge FRANK. As I read it, it proceeds on a theory that is incorrect in principle and sweepingly destructive of precedents. I shall therefore develop the case from my viewpoint.
[1] This is a straight action at law in ejectment. The petition and the judgment are in the form provided by statute and conform to the precedents. This appeal lies within the jurisdiction of this court under the constitutional provisions relating to appeals in causes involving title to real estate. It may not be amiss to direct attention to the historical background of the action of ejectment.
More than a century before Blackstone wrote his Commentaries, the title of lands, in England, was tried in ejectment; a "mixed action" as Blackstone termed it, based upon four points, viz., title, lease, entry, and ouster or amotion from the possession. The trial then stood upon the merits of the title only, which was thus brought into question in an "oblique" manner and it became the principal question at issue. The existence of lease, entry and ouster was fictional, was employed for convenience, and was not contested, and was not required to be proved. [2 Cooley's Blackstone (4 Ed.), star pp. 197-206.]
It was early provided by statute in Missouri (R.S. 1825, Vol. 1, p. 343) that in all actions in ejectment the plaintiff should state, instead of the fictitious suggestion of lease, entry and ouster, that he is legally entitled to the possession of the premises, and aver the ejectment and trespass of the defendant; and the defendant might in his defense plead not guilty, or plead his title according to the truth; and it should be sufficient for the plaintiff on the trial to show that he is, and was at the time of the commencement of the suit, entitled to the possession of the premises and that the defendant was in possession thereof at the commencement of the suit. In the next general revision of the statutes (R.S. 1835, pp. 234-235) it was provided (Sec. 1) that actions of ejectment may be maintained when the plaintiff islegally entitled to the possession of the premises; (Sec. 5) that it shall be sufficient for the plaintiff to aver in the declaration that on some date therein to be specified he was entitled to the possession of the premises, describing them, and being so entitled to the possession thereof, that the defendant afterwards, *Page 1045 on some date to be stated, entered into such premises, and unlawfully withholds from the plaintiff the possession thereof, to his damage in a sum to be stated. These statutes have come down through all subsequent decennial revisions without change and now are, respectively, Section 1365 and 1370, Revised Statutes 1929. A general denial was sufficient for joinder of issues.
[2] It thus appears that ejectment is extraordinary, if not unique, in that the issues and proof may be broader than as indicated by the pleadings; unique, also, in that perforce of the statutes (1365 and 1370) the plaintiff must go beyond the issues so tendered, in the petition and prove he was, at the time of ouster, legally entitled to the possession of the premises. So that in nearly all conceivable instances a straight action in ejectment necessarily involves title to real estate as a basic element upon which right to possession rests. And I wish to emphasize the fact that through all the years of Missouri's statehood down to 1897, when by statute the action to try and determine title was enacted (present Section 1520), ejectment was the only action provided by law for the trial and determination of title to real estate.
[3] Taking the instant case: How then can it be maintained, as it is sought to be in the opinion to which I am responding, that title is not involved here because the "petition asks a judgment for possession only?" The statute provides that if plaintiff prevail "The judgment shall be for the recovery of the premises, the damages assessed and the accruing rents and profits," etc. (Sec. 1380).
The answer pleads the general issue and sets up an equitable claim of title in defendant as the defenses. Absent a prayer for affirmative relief the action remained one at law. [Hall v. Small, 178 Mo. 629, 77 S.W. 733; Koehler v. Rowland, 275 Mo. 573, 204 S.W. 217.] Whereas, if the answer had contained a prayer for affirmative relief, the cause would have been changed to an equity suit. [Pitts v. Pitts, 201 Mo. 356, 100 S.W. 1047; Bouton v. Pippin, 192 Mo. 469, 91 S.W. 149.]
The greater portion of the authorities cited in said opinion are cases which conversely, by contrast, support the position I am endeavoring to maintain and hence they require no comment.
The legal effect of the allegation touching ouster as contained in the petition is that prior to, and at the time thereof, plaintiffs' right to possession had not accrued. Hence it follows that the defendant, at the date of ouster, had what the law terms "possessory title." The ouster was what at common law was called "ouster by deforcement" (Blackstone, supra) and as against such previous possession plaintiffs' paper title, if any, could not withdraw to itself, as an incident thereof the legal possession of the premises, as it would have done in case of vacant and unoccupied lands. In other words, the *Page 1046 plaintiffs, in such a state of the record, had to prove their legal right to possession, and did so prove it by the introduction in evidence of their title deed from the admitted common source of title, in order to make out a prima facie right to possession; for in such case, in the absence of such showing, the title is presumed to be with the defendant's prior possession, and the defendant had need to do nothing in the first instance when attacked. [Dunn v. Miller, 96 Mo. 324, l.c. 334-336, 9 S.W. 640.]
The line of cases upon which said opinion is made to rest, though the opinion does not trace it back so far, originated shortly after the adoption of our Constitution of 1875; original Section 12 of which provided for appeals to this court, in cases involving title to real estate, from the St. Louis Court of Appeals as created by that section.
A very early case of that type was State ex rel. v. Court of Appeals, 67 Mo. 199, originating in 1876 and decided in 1877. In that case a writ of mandamus was sought to compel the Court of Appeals to grant an appeal to this court from that court's decision, rendered on appeal, denying the alleged right of the relator to appeal therefrom to this court, as was then permissible in suits involving title to real estate, in a suit to perpetually enjoin a sale, under execution, of certain real estate upon the ground that such sale would cast a doubt upon plaintiff's title. This court denied mandamus on the ground that the suit was not one involving title to real estate, within the meaning of the Constitution (Sec. 12, not changed by Amendment of 1884 with respect to Supreme Court's jurisdiction except to make it sole), saying: "The result of the litigation may affect the title to real property, as would every suit in which a judgment would be rendered which would be a lien on real estate, but it cannot be said to involve the title." In Dunn v. Miller, supra, Judge BRACE, who in the interim had written many cases wherein he applied the rule as it had been applied in said Court of Appeals case, supra, and who also wrote many cases of that general type thereafter, apparently sought to make clear in the Dunn case the distinction, as respects appellate jurisdiction, in speaking to a motion to remand the cause to the Court of Appeals, for want of jurisdiction. In denying the motion he pointedly said in part (l.c. pp. 334-336):
"It is beyond dispute that an action at law in ejectment is a case within the meaning of the phrase `involving title to real estate' in Section 12, Article VI, supra. The object of the action is the recovery of the possession of real estate. The means by which it is accomplished, showing title or right to possession, the object of this action, the recovery of the possession of real estate, is the same; the means by which it is sought to be accomplished the same, i.e., by showing that thepossessory title which Dunn had, or his right to be then in possession, is superior to the paper title of Miller by means of *Page 1047 which that right of possession was withdrawn from him. The adjudication in this case, then, involves the possession of Dunn, his right to that possession and the right of Miller to that possession; in other words, the title of both Dunn and Miller, as they were adjudicated in the ejectment suit, are involved in this as they were in that; and to the same extent that title is involved in (nearly) every ejectment suit. The term `possessory title' has not been inconsiderately used. Ejectment is a possessory action. Title to real estate is involved in ejectment only as an incident to possession upon which the action is based. The title is presumed to be with the possession."
Judge BRACE, in closing his discussion of appellate jurisdiction, there said: (l.c. 336)
"In practice it ought not to be difficult to distinguish a case analogous to such a mixed action operating directly on thepossession and the right to possession of real estate, andthose purely personal actions in which it is sought to establish a right in or to real estate by which, as aconsequence, the right or title may be affected, as indicated in State ex rel. v. Court of Appeals, 67 Mo. 199." (Italics mine.)
The well-considered and leading case in the other line of cases referred to above is Nettleton Bank v. McGaughey's Estate,318 Mo. 948, 2 S.W.2d 771, which involved a probate court sale and was held not to involve title to real estate. The author stated (l.c. 955) that "It is the judgment sought or rendered in every instance which is determinative of jurisdiction; and that when the pleadings or record, as the case may be, are consulted it is for the sole purpose of ascertaining the direct operative effect of the judgment — which must be directly to take title from one and give it to another." The author had previously from elements stated in the disjunctive extracted the rule "that to involve title within the meaning of the Constitution a judgment must adjudicate a title controversy." The author gave illustrations of the various classes of cases which do not involve title controversies, and of other classes which do. Among the latter he instanced "Ejectment, actions to remove a cloud on title, or to quiet title, or to set aside a conveyance, etc." It is correct, then, to say that in the instant case the judgment adjudicated a title controversy. The plaintiffs must recover, if at all, upon the strength of their own title, and not because of the weakness or want of title in defendant. [Mo. Dig. Ejectment, 9, 3.] Also, if the equitable defense set up in the answer is supported by the facts, plaintiffs could not recover. [Reynolds v. Hood,209 Mo. 611, 108 S.W. 86.] And it is the law that a judgment against a defendant's equitable defense will bar the same. [City of St. Louis v. Schulenburg, etc., Co., 98 Mo. 613, 12 S.W. 248; Smith v. Kiene, 231 Mo. 215, 132 S.W. 1052.] *Page 1048
Judge FRANK'S opinion in the present case would overrule the opinion rendered in this division of the court in Williams v. Maxwell, 82 S.W.2d 270, because the title was not mentioned in the petition or the judgment, just as it was not mentioned in the case at bar. I think the Williams case was correctly decided, and also that it is supported by the Nettleton Bank case which holds that the operative effect of the judgment is to be gathered from the pleadings on the record, which, as I understand that statement, includes the proof. In our statutory form of ejectment there must necessarily be proof relating to title. "In the ejectment suit the judgment itself affects the title to the land and can be satisfied only by a surrender of its possession." [Turney et al. v. Sparks et al., 158 Mo. 365, 366, 59 S.W. 73.]
The Tooker case, 336 Mo. 592, 80 S.W.2d 691, has no similarity to the instant case and hence is of no present concern.
As it appears to me the inevitable conclusion is that this court has appellate jurisdiction of this appeal and should decide the same.