102 S.E. 786 | S.C. | 1920
April 12, 1920. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The plaintiff sued in tort for wrongful entry into her house. The magistrate found for the plaintiff $25.
The Circuit Court reversed that judgment and ordered judgment for the defendant.
The plaintiff has appealed therefrom.
The following are the circumstances in the case:
The plaintiff is a negress. She rented a house to Wilson, and he was in arrears of rent for $46. Wilson had in the house a lot of furniture which he had bought from the defendant, and upon which he owed $26.25, and Wilson held the furniture on a "written lease" from the defendant which was not of record. Wilson abandoned the house and *39 instructed the defendant to take the furniture. The defendant did take the property "over the protest" of the plaintiff, but without a breach of the peace, and carried it away. The plaintiff, Lark, had notice of the existence of the written lease.
These are the facts found by the Circuit Court. There is testimony tending to support the finding, so the finding is conclusive.
As matter of law the Court concluded that the furniture did not belong to Wilson in his own right, and it was, therefore, not subject to distress for rent.
Conceding so much of fact and law to be true, it yet remains to inquire if the defendant's servant committed a wrong when he entered the plaintiff's house to enforce a right against personalty situate in the house over the protest of the owner of the house.
Mr. Cooley assigns three reasons why there should not be a forcible entry upon a peaceable possession. Cooley on Torts, p. 323.
Even though the entry in the instant case did not break the peace, yet it was made without right, for it was made against the protest of the owner, and with manifestation of force.
The entry was in violation of a statute enacted 600 years ago. Section 4064, Code of Laws.
The judgment, therefore, of the magistrate was right, and that of the Circuit Court was wrong. The one is affirmed, and the other reversed. *40