83 Mass. 133 | Mass. | 1861
The sale of the ticket to the plaintiff, under the circumstances stated in the bill of exceptions, was' a license to him to enter the hall of the building in possession of the defendant as its temporary lessee, and to remain in it during the concert which was to be given there. But the license was revoked immediately upon the entrance of the plaintiff into the hall and before he had taken his seat. By remaining there afterwards, and refusing to depart upon request, he became a trespasser; and the defendant had a right to remove him by the use of such degree of force as his resistance should render necessary for that purpose. It is not alleged that in the exercise of this right the force used was at all excessive, or more than was requisite to .effect his removal in a reasonable manner from the premises..
A paroi license by the owner of real estate, to enter or do any particular act upon it, may commonly be revoked at any time before the object and purpose for which it was conceded has been fully availed of, or wholly accomplished. Ruggles v. Lesure, 24 Pick. 187. Hewlins v. Shippam, 5 B. & C. 221. This general proposition is not contested by the plaintiff; but he claims that, as the contract under which his license was derived was either wholly or in part executed, and as he was in the actual enjoyment of the privilege conferred upon him at the time when the defendant undertook to revoke it, the right of revocation was lost and could no longer be asserted. This claim is founded upon the clear and well recognized distinction between a mere license which neither passes any interest nor alters or transfers property in anything, but only makes an action lawful which would otherwise have been unlawful, and a license coupled with a grant, or arising from a sale of property to be taken and carried from the land where it is situate or upon which it is placed. Thomas v. Sorrell, Vaughan, 330. In the latter case it is irrevocable so far as the contract is executed. Thus where the parties entered into an oral contract that the