When the record shows that the case was tried below by the court
without a jury, and there is no special finding of facts and no
agreed statement of facts, but only a general finding, this court
must accept that finding as conclusive, and limit its inquiry to
the sufficiency of the complaint and of the rulings, if any be
preserved, on questions of law arising during the trial.
No mere recital of the testimony, whether in the opinion of the
court or in a bill of exceptions, can be deemed a special finding
of facts within the scope of the statute.
In Missouri, in an action of unlawful detainer, the defendant
put in evidence a lease of the property by the then owner, who had
since died, which had been assigned to him. The plaintiff offered
evidence of a judgment canceling and setting aside that lease,
which was admitted under objection, and the admission excepted to.
Held that the ruling was right.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 148 U. S. 72
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
On February 6, 1886, defendant in error commenced an action of
unlawful detainer before a justice of the peace in Montgomery
County, Missouri. The complaint charged an unlawful detention by
the defendant, since January 2, 1886, of a tract of land of 800
acres situated in that county. By certiorari, under the provisions
of the state statute, the case was removed to the Circuit Court of
Montgomery county, and thereafter, upon application of the
defendant, on the ground of diverse citizenship, from that court to
the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of
Missouri. There, the case was tried without the intervention of a
jury, and on January 30, 1889, a judgment was entered in favor of
the plaintiff for the restitution of the premises, for double
damages, amounting to $5,940, and for $220 per month, double rent,
from and after the entry of judgment. The opinion of Judge Thayer
is found in 37 F. 319. To reverse such judgment, the defendant sued
out a writ of error from this Court.
The first matter to be considered is whether the record is in
such shape as to present any question for determination. The case
was tried by the court without a jury, and the journal entry shows
simply a general finding that the defendant is guilty in manner and
form as charged in the complaint, the amount of damages sustained
by the plaintiff, and the value of the monthly rents and profits,
and thereon the judgment for restitution of the premises, double
damages, and double rent. There is no special finding of facts, and
no agreed statement of facts. Obviously, therefore, inquiry in this
Court must be limited to the sufficiency of the complaint and the
rulings, if any be preserved, on questions of law arising during
the trial. Sections 648 and 649 of the Revised Statutes, while
committing generally the trial of issues of fact to a jury,
authorize parties to waive a jury and submit such trial to the
court, adding that "the finding of the court upon the facts, which
may be either general or special, shall have the same effect as the
verdict of a jury." But the verdict of a jury settles all questions
of fact. As said by Mr. Justice Blatchford in
Lancaster
Page 148 U. S. 73
v. Collins, 115 U. S. 222,
115 U. S.
225:
"This Court cannot review the weight of the evidence, and can
look into it only to see whether there was error in not directing a
verdict for the plaintiff on the question of variance, or because
there was no evidence to sustain the verdict rendered."
The finding of the court, to have the same effect, must be
equally conclusive, and equally remove from examination in this
Court the testimony given on the trial.
Insurance
Co. v. Folsom, 18 Wall. 237;
Cooper v.
Omohundro, 19 Wall. 65. Further, section 700
provides that
"when an issue of fact in any civil cause in a circuit court is
tried and determined by the court without the intervention of a
jury, according to section six hundred and forty-nine, the rulings
of the court in the progress of the trial of the cause, if excepted
to at the time, and duly presented by a bill of exceptions, may be
reviewed by the supreme court upon a writ of error or upon appeal;
and, when the finding is special, the review may extend to the
sufficiency of the facts found to support the judgment."
Under that, the rulings of the court in the trial, if properly
preserved, can be reviewed here, and we may also determine whether
the facts as specially found support the judgment; but if there be
no special findings, there can be no inquiry as to whether the
judgment is thus supported. We must accept the general finding as
conclusive upon all matters of fact, precisely as the verdict of a
jury.
Martinton v. Fairbanks, 112 U.
S. 670.
It is true if there be an agreed statement of facts submitted to
the trial court and upon which its judgment is founded, such agreed
statement will be taken as the equivalent of a special finding of
facts.
Supervisors v. Kennicott, 103 U.
S. 554. Doubtless also, cases may arise in which,
without a formal special finding of facts, there is presented a
ruling of the court, which is distinctly a ruling upon a matter of
law, and in no manner a determination of facts, or of inferences
from facts, in which this Court ought to and will review the
ruling. Thus, in
Insurance Company v.
Tweed, 7 Wall. 44, where on the argument in this
Court counsel agreed that certain recitals of fact made by the
trial court in its opinion, or "reasons for judgment," as it was
called, were the facts in the case, and
Page 148 U. S. 74
might be accepted as facts found by the court, it was held that,
as they could have made such agreement in the court below, it would
be accepted and acted upon here, and the facts thus assented to
would be regarded as the facts found or agreed to upon which the
judgment was based, and upon an examination it was further held
that they did not support the judgment, and it was reversed. But
still, as was ruled in
Flanders v.
Tweed, 9 Wall. 425, this Court is disposed to hold
parties to a reasonably strict conformity to the provisions of the
statute prescribing the proceedings in the case of a trial by the
court without a jury, and no mere recital of the testimony,
whether, in the opinion of the court or in a bill of exceptions,
can be deemed a special finding of facts within its scope.
Norris v.
Jackson, 9 Wall. 125.
See also the case of
Alexandre v. Machan, 147 U. S. 72, in
which the rule, as applicable to suits in admiralty, was reviewed
and similar conclusions were reached.
Beyond the ordinary matters of the record, which, for the
reasons above stated, present no matter for consideration here,
there was duly prepared and allowed a bill of exceptions, which
recites all the testimony given at the trial, certain requests for
declarations of law, and the action of the court thereon, the
opinion filed in deciding the case, the motion for a new trial, and
the opinion on the overruling of such motion. By this bill of
exceptions, one ruling, in respect to the admission of testimony,
is clearly preserved. In order to fully understand the question, a
brief recital of the transactions as shown by the testimony is
necessary.
On September 24, 1877, Edwin H. Farnsworth, the owner of the
premises, made a written lease thereof to Thomas R. Summers for a
term of eight years, commencing January 1, 1878, and ending January
1, 1886. The lessee transferred this lease, with the approval of
the lessor, to Godfrey Lehnen, the father of the defendant. The
defendant took possession during the running of this lease, with
the consent of his father. Farnsworth died on April 27, 1879,
having devised this property to his only child, the wife of the
plaintiff. The lease having expired the first of January, 1886, on
the 23d of
Page 148 U. S. 75
January in that year, plaintiff served notice upon the defendant
that he demanded the possession of the premises, and on the 6th of
February the suit was brought. The defendant, to justify his
holding over the first of January, 1886, introduced in evidence
what purported to be a copy of a lease made by Farnsworth, April 7,
1879, twenty days before his death, to Sarah A. Kempinski, for a
term of ten years, commencing January 1, 1886, and a lease from
Kempinski to the defendant Lehnen and his father, dated October 15,
1885, for a term of fourteen months, also commencing January 1,
1886. In rebuttal, plaintiff offered a certified copy of the record
of a suit commenced in the circuit court of Montgomery County,
Missouri, by Barbara Dickson and Newton Dickson, her husband,
against Sarah A. Kempinski and A. Kempinski, her husband, in which
suit there was a decree of the circuit court ordering and adjudging
that the lease made by Farnsworth to Sara A. Kempinski be
cancelled, set aside, and held for naught, which decree, on review
by the supreme court of the state, was affirmed. To the admission
of this testimony the defendant objected on the ground that it was
incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, which objection was
overruled, and exceptions were taken. This objection was based upon
this section of the forcible entry and detainer statute: "The
merits of the title shall in no wise be inquired into, on any
complaint which shall be exhibited by virtue of the provision of
this chapter." Rev.Stat. 1879, sec. 2443; 2 Rev.Stat. 1889, sec.
5111.
But if the lease is competent evidence to defeat the landlord's
right of recovery, testimony tending to show that that lease is of
no validity ought surely to be competent in rebuttal, and it has
been held in Missouri that the tenant may defeat an action for
unlawful detainer, brought by the landlord after the expiration of
the lease, by proof that the title, since the execution of the
lease, has passed away from the landlord to some other party to
whom the tenant has attorned. Thus, in
Pentz v. Kuester,
41 Mo. 447, 449, the court ruled that
"though the tenant could not dispute the title of the landlord,
not set up a paramount title or an adverse possession
Page 148 U. S. 76
against either the grantor or grantee, nor the court inquire
into the matter of title in general, it was still competent for the
defendant under the statute to show that the plaintiff's title and
right of possession had been transferred to himself since the
demise."
The same doctrine was affirmed in
Gunn v. Sinclair, 52
Mo. 327;
Kingman v. Abington, 56 Mo. 46;
Higgins v.
Turner, 61 Mo. 249. Not only are these decisions in point,
but, turning to the forcible entry and detainer statute, we find,
after sections giving to heirs, devisees, grantees, assigns,
executors, and administrators the same remedies as the ancestor,
devisor, grantor, assignor, or intestate was entitled to by virtue
of the statute, this section: "Evidence for proof of rights under
derivative titles, provided for by this chapter, shall be
admissible in actions instituted under this chapter." Rev.Stat.
1879, § 2457; 2 Rev.Stat. 1889, § 5123. In other words,
these various persons can, in an action of unlawful detainer, offer
evidence to establish their derivative titles from the original
lessor. On the same principle, these decisions referred to permit
the tenant who has attorned to parties claiming such a derivative
title to introduce evidence of the transfer and attornment to
defeat an action brought by the original landlord, and surely if he
may offer testimony to prove a transfer of title away from the
landlord, the latter may introduce testimony to show that the
alleged transfer was of no validity, a mere pretense. Suppose,
after the execution of a lease, the landlord dies, and at the
termination of the lease his only son and heir at law should bring
an action of unlawful detainer, and the tenant in defense should
introduce what purported to be a will made by the landlord,
devising the real estate to some third party, and the record of the
proper court probating that will, together with an attornment to
such devisee; within the cases cited, such testimony would be
competent. Would it not also be clearly competent for the heir, in
rebuttal, to introduce a final decree from a competent court, in a
suit between himself and the devisee, adjudging that will a
forgery, and setting aside its probate? None of this testimony
impeaches the lease or challenges any rights created
Page 148 U. S. 77
by or under it. It is simply "evidence for proof of rights under
a derivative title," evidence which, in terms, is authorized by the
section last quoted. There was no error in admitting this
testimony.
To obviate the objection that there is no finding of facts or
agreed statement thereof, counsel for plaintiff in error insist
that there is really no dispute as to the facts, no conflict in the
testimony as to any substantial question, the only difference being
as to a subordinate and unimportant matter, and that therefore it
is the same as though the facts had been agreed upon or found.
Further, they suggest that in the opinion delivered by the trial
judge, there is a narration of the facts we have heretofore
recited, together with others, and then this statement preliminary
to the discussion of the legal questions: "Thayer, district judge,
after stating the facts as above," and claim that such statement is
equivalent to a finding of the facts as previously recited.
But the burden of the statute is not thrown off simply because
the witnesses do not contradict each other and there is no conflict
in the testimony. It may be an easy thing in one case for this
Court, when the testimony consists simply of deeds, mortgages, or
other written instruments, to make a satisfactory finding of the
facts, and in another it may be difficult, when the testimony is
largely in parol, and the witnesses directly contradict each other.
But the rule of the statute is of universal application. It is not
relaxed in one case because of the ease in determining the facts,
or rigorously enforced in another because of the difficulty in such
determination. The duty of finding the facts is placed upon the
trial court. We have no authority to examine the testimony in any
case, and from it make a finding of the ultimate facts. Neither in
this case can that be said to be wholly an inconsequential matter
upon which the witnesses differ. It may not be of controlling
importance, yet it bears largely on the question of the good faith
of Lehnen in taking the lease from Kempinski. With reference to the
language of Judge Thayer, it is obvious that no such significance
as is claimed can be given to the words "after stating the facts as
above." Reading the prior statement,
Page 148 U. S. 78
it would seem to be only a succinct recital of the material
testimony in the case.
Norris v.
Jackson, 9 Wall. 125.
But even if we waive all these objections, and take this
statement as intended for and equivalent to special findings of
facts, or regard the declaration of law asked by the defendant --
that the court declares the law to be that under the evidence the
plaintiff is not entitled to recover -- as bringing properly before
us the question whether there was any evidence to sustain the
general finding for the plaintiff, and thus enter into an
examination of the testimony, still we see no error in the
conclusion of the court based thereon. The decree of the state
circuit court, affirmed as it was by the supreme court,
conclusively establishes the nullity of the lease from Farnsworth
to Kempinski, at least as between the plaintiff and Kempinski. It
will be noticed from the allegations in the complaint that the
lease was not set aside and cancelled by reason of anything
transpiring since its execution. The defects existed in the
inception of the instrument -- defects which rendered it void from
the beginning and which, when presented to the court, compelled an
adjudication of its invalidity. The charge in the complaint was
"that the said Farnsworth, at the time of the execution of said
agreement, was not capable of entering into said contract or any
contract, and was incapable of transacting his ordinary business or
managing his property by reason of weakness and imbecility of mind
produced by disease and old age, and that defendant A. Kempinski
fraudulently took advantage of the imbecility and helpless mental
condition of said Farnsworth and induced and procured him to
execute the said lease to his [the said Kempinski's] wife."
And the conclusion of the supreme court was that the lease was
"either the product of a mind incapable of comprehending its force
and meaning or of a weak one imposed upon." It is true the last
alternative stated by the court suggests an instrument only
voidable; but in view of the charge in the complaint and the
testimony as disclosed in the opinion of the supreme court, it
cannot be held that there was any error in the conclusion reached
by Judge Thayer that the
Page 148 U. S. 79
"lease in question never was a valid instrument." Being in
itself invalid -- a nullity from the beginning -- it could not be a
foundation for a right in Lehnen, the defendant, as against his
landlord. Nor can it be held that because the decree in the circuit
court was appealed to the supreme court and a supersedeas bond
given pending such appeal, the lease to Kempinski had force and
vitality. Whatever effect the appeal and supersedeas may have had
upon the decree, they did not give validity to a void instrument.
Though in form a lease, the writing was in fact no contract. That
was its condition before the suit was begun, and there never has
been a time when it had any life and force. The decree did not
create, it only established, the fact of its invalidity, and the
affirmance of the decree reached back to the very inception of the
instrument, and was a final adjudication that from the first it was
not binding.
Neither can the contention of the plaintiff in error be
sustained, that he was holding over under the
bona fide
belief that he had a right to do so, and therefore that such
holding over was not "willful" within the meaning of the statute,
for there is no finding or suggestion in the opinion of the trial
court to the effect that Lehnen was acting in good faith in what he
did. On the contrary, the testimony tends to show that he was
cognizant of the fraud perpetrated by Kempinski, for he was a
witness on the trial in the state circuit court, and that he
knowingly took the lease with the view of assisting in the
accomplishment of the intended wrong. Certainly, in the absence of
a finding to the contrary, we should not feel warranted, from an
examination of the testimony, in coming to the conclusion that the
acts of Lehnen, the defendant, were characterized by good faith;
nor are we satisfied that good faith would take the case out of the
scope of the Missouri statute; for by section 2433, Rev.Stat. 1879,
and section 5102, 2 Rev.Stat. 1889, it is provided that "the
complainant shall not be compelled to make further proof of the
forcible entry or detainer than that he was lawfully possessed of
the premises, and that the defendant unlawfully entered into and
detained or unlawfully detained the same," and that would seem
to
Page 148 U. S. 80
be the legislative interpretation of what was meant by
"willfully holding over."
It is unnecessary to comment further upon the testimony. We see
nothing in it justifying us in holding that the circuit court erred
in its conclusions, and therefore the judgment is
Affirmed.