Plaintiff-appellant sued defendant-appel-lee in the Landlord and Tenant Branch of the Municipal Court for possession of improved real estate at 27 Logan Circle, N. W. In- her complaint plaintiff described herself as the “lawful owner of the property” and alleged that the premises were in possession of defendant “who holds them as a tenant at will which in law in fact [sic] is a tenant of the plaintiff.” The grounds upon which possession was sought were described as follows: “1. The right of the owner to possession and use of her property as she sees fit and proper; and 2. The right to collect all proceeds therefrom that may be realized in rents and other money values for her own use.”1 it was also alleged that a notice to quit had been served upon defendant as required by law.
Instead of answering defendant moved to dismiss on the ground that no landlord and tenant relationship existed between the parties and hence that the Municipal Court was without jurisdiction over the case. The trial court held a hearing on the issue of whether defendant was a tenant at will of plaintiff and, after hearing plaintiff’s testimony and receiving various documents offered by her, found that there was no relationship of landlord and tenant between the parties and sustained the motion to dismiss the complaint on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction over the action. Plaintiff appeals from the order of dismissal.
The action is one of a long series of suits filed by plaintiff involving ownership of this property which have been in the various courts of the District of Columbia and in the Supreme Court of the United States for nearly 20 years.2 We are confined, *205however, in the present case to the narrow issue of whether plaintiff has established that there was a relationship of landlord and tenant between herself and defendant. We have concluded that defendant was not a tenant at will of plaintiff and that since no, other landlord and tenant relationship between the parties was pleaded or proved and no other ground established for the exercise of the jurisdiction of the Municipal Court it follows that the trial court was correct in dismissing the complaint.3
As has been pointed out on numerous occasions, the jurisdiction of the Municipal Court ov.er summary suits, such as was brought here, to recover possession of real property is limited to cases arising under two statutes. One pf such statutes, Code 1940, 45 — -910; is limited explicitly to actions by landlords against tenants.4 The other statute, known as the forcible entry and detainer statute, is codified- in Code 1940, 11 — 735, which is a part of the chapter prescribing the jurisdiction of and procedure in the Municipal Court.5 As contrasted with these two forms of action, the action of ejectment (which by Code 1940, 45 — 910, supra, must be brought in the *206District Court) may be commenced by any claimant to property against anyone occupying the premises, either in person or by tenant or against any person exercising acts of ownership adversely to the plaintiff.6
Construing the forcible entry and detain-er statute, the Supreme Court has said:
“Considering the terms of the act of Congress, the settled construction, before the passage of that act, of the statute of Massachusetts from which it appears to have been taken, and the general course of decision in this country under statutes on the same subject, the reasonable conclusion is that, in order to sustain this form of proceeding, the conventional relation of landlord and tenant must exist, or have existed, between the parties.” 7
Plaintiff insists that the Municipal Court had jurisdiction of her action because defendant was her tenant at will. We have carefully studied her .briefs and various papers submitted in connection therewith. Her theory so far as we have been able to determine it is that in one of the earlier cases involving the property — Ballard v. Spruill, 64 App.D.C. 60, 74 F.2d 464 — :the court in 1934 set aside a sale by trustees under a deed of trust given to secure indebtedness on the property and ordered that in an accounting plaintiff be credited with the rent actually collected. Plaintiff apparently urges that this made one or more of the parties to the original suit her tenant and that in consequence various subsequent occupants of the property, including defendant, became her tenants by operation of law. She has not shown the connection if any between defendant and the various previous occupants.8 Conceding that under some of the old English cases a-tenancy at will might arise under á variety of circumstances, for instance, if one goes into possession under a void conveyance,9 such cases are not controlling in this jurisdiction because they do not fall within the definition of estates at will established by statute in the District of Columbia. This definition is as follows, Code 1940, 45 — 822:
“An estate at will is one held by the j oint will of lessor and lessee, and which may be terminated at any time, as herein elsewhere provided, by either party; and such estate shall not exist or be created except by express contract: Provided, however, That in case of a sale of real estate under mortgage or deed of trust or execution, and a conveyance thereof to the purchaser, the grantor in such mortgage or deed of trust, execution defendant, or those in possession claiming under him, shall be held and construed to be tenants at will, except in the case of a tenant holding under an unexpired lease for years, in writing, antedating the mortgage or deed of trust.”
It is obvious that plaintiff has failed to bring defendant within this statutory definition of a tenant at will. She has herself expressly disclaimed that defendant is in possession as a result of an agreement with her. On the contrary, she testified in the trial court that defendant did not obtain possession through her and that she hasn’t *207had possession of the property since the original foreclosure proceedings nearly 20 years ago. It is equally obvious that defendant is not a tenant at will of plaintiff under the proviso in the statute quoted above because there was no evidence that he was the grantor in a mortgage or deed of trust or execution defendant or held under a person answering any of those descriptions. On the contrary, it appears that she was the grantor under a mortgage or deed of trust. Had she remained in possession she might have become the tenant at will of the purchaser. The fact is that plaintiff has not sought to bring herself within the clear provisions of the,statute; she has relied entirely upon her claim that she still owns the property and hence that any occupant, regardless of how he obtained possession, is her tenant at will. Such is not the law.
Affirmed.