100 So. 240 | Ala. | 1924
The suit was to recover damages for an assault and battery alleged to have been committed by defendant's agents upon plaintiff while he was at defendant's commissary. The trial was had on the second count of the complaint to which demurrer was overruled. The assignment of error challenging the ruling on demurrer is not insisted upon. Georgia Cotton Co. v. Lee,
The second, third, and fourth assignments of error challenge the sustaining of demurrers to pleas A, B, and E. Demurrers were overruled to pleas C and D. The insistence of appellant is that the latter pleas were drawn under section 7827 of the Code of 1907, while the pleas to which demurrers were sustained are not so drawn.
A rule of good pleading long prevailing is that whatever the parties respectively allege in their subsequent pleadings must be referred to, fortify, and support, respectively, the complaint or declaration of the plaintiff and the plea of the defendant. The observance of this rule is imperative to prevent an entire change of the "foundation of the action and of the defense" by "successive stages of the pleadings" and thus defeat the primary object of pleading. That is to say, the replication must so answer the plea as to support the complaint, and the rejoinder must so answer the replication as to support the plea. In the same manner, the surrejoinder must support the replication, "the rebutter the rejoinder, and the surrebutter the surrejoinder." The result of this rule, as said by Mr. Gould, the process being thus conducted, is that which is last pleaded on either side necessarily goes in support of what was first pleaded on the same side. Ex parte Hines, Sir. Gen. (Hines v. McMillan),
We take as illustrations pleas D and E; the latter was eliminated by demurrer, probably on the ground that defendant's commissary was a public place for the retail sale of goods, wares, and merchandise usually sold to the public in such commissaries, and that plaintiff had the right to go there to buy (smoking tobacco, as he says in his replication), even though he had been previously warned not to do so or not to come upon the defendant's premises.
The merchant, as proprietor of a commissary, or a storekeeper has the right to withdraw the express or Implied invitation to trade from such persons as he may desire, and thereafter if such persons come into his store or commissary he may eject them by the use of no more force than is reasonably necessary, under the circumstances of the particular case, if such persons refuse to leave after notice and a reasonable time in which so to do. There is slight analogy in Ashworth, Adm'r, v. A. G. S. R. R. Co., ante, p. 20,
The rule is stated in 2 R. C. L. p. 557, § 36, as follows:
"The right of a person to protect his property necessarily includes the right to eject persons trespassing thereon. To permit all persons at their will to enter and to remain in the house or the close of another, would practically destroy the dominion of the owner over his property, and would render it almost useless as well as worthless. Such has never been the law, and so long as there is such a thing as individual ownership of property, it is not probable that it ever will be. However, in an action for assault and battery a plea of justification, based on the right of the defendant to eject a trespasser, is good only where it appears that the force used in effecting the ejection was no more than that which was reasonably necessary under the circumstances of the particular case."
The right of the occupant of a house or store — and other public or semipublic places — to control it and admit whom he pleases to *270 enter and remain therein, and to expel therefrom "any one who abuses the privilege which has been given," is well supported by the authorities. Of the exercise of this right, it is said in 2 R. C. L. p. 559, § 37:
"* * * While the entry by one person on the premises of another may be lawful, by reason of express or implied invitation to enter, his failure to depart, on the request of the owner, will make him a trespasser and justify the owner in using reasonable force to eject him. The most common cases involving the right of an owner to eject one from his premises who entered lawfully are those where a person enters a hotel or business place or the conveyance of a common carrier, and while therein forfeits his right to remain by his misconduct or failure to comply with the reasonable rules and regulations. On the forfeiture of his right he becomes a common trespasser and may be forcibly ejected on failure to depart after a request to do so. Where the nature of the business of the owner of property is such as impliedly to invite to his premises persons seeking to do business with him, he may nevertheless in most instances refuse to allow a certain person to come on his premises, and if such person does thereafter enter his premises he is subject to ejection although his conduct on the particular occasion is not wrongful."
In 5 C. J. p. 632, § 27, the text is that a lawful owner or occupant of premises, or one claiming title and rightfully in possession, may retain possession and use such force as may appear to be reasonably necessary to remove therefrom the trespassers as intruders, after allowing them a reasonable time to depart after notice so to do. Jones v. Bynum,
Every license of this kind, by which one is permitted, without a consideration, to go upon or pass over the lands of another, is revocable in its very nature, its dependence being "upon the mere will of the person by whom it is created or granted." Motes v. Bates,
There was error in sustaining demurrer to Plea E.
It is unnecessary to consider the other questions presented. They may not arise on another trial.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded. Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and MILLER, JJ., concur.