40 N.Y.S. 714 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
The defendant testified that he owned all the articles taken, and the plaintiff, who was sworn in his own behalf, did not testify that he had any title or right of possession to any of the articles. The learned trial judge instructed the jury that the defendant had no right to enter the house and remove his property without the consent of the plaintiff or of his wife, to which instruction the defendant excepted. The case was tried and submitted to the jury on the theory that, in case it was found that the defendant entered the house and removed his own property without the consent of the person in charge thereof, he committed a trespass and was liable in damages therefor. It is well settled that the owner of personal property, which has been wrongfully taken from him, does not commit a trespass by entering upon the realty of the wrongdoer and taking his own property, unless he commits a breach of the peace or uses unnecessary force. (Webb v. Beavan, 6 M. & G. 1055;
Many cases to the same effect are cited in Moak’s Underhill on Torts (359 et seg.) in 19 American and English Encyclopsedia of Law (1093), and in Pollock on Torts (4th ed. 346), title Recaption. The rule rests on the theory that, where a person places the goods of another upon his own premises, he gives to the owner of them an implied license to enter for the purpose of taking them. In McLeod v. Jones (supra) it was held that this rule extended to and covered cases where the goods had been taken in the first instance by permission. It was said: “ In other cases a right or license to enter npon land results or may be inferred from the contracts of the parties in relation to personalty. Permission to keep or the right to have one’s personal property upon the land of another involves the right to enter for its removal.”
In the case at bar it was conceded that all of the property, excepting the drafting board and its supports and one mirror plate, was taken by this plaintiff wrongfully, if not feloniously; and that, as to the drafting board and the mirror, he held them as the defendant’s agent and for his use; and that the relation of master and servant, out of which the right of this use arose, which had once existed between them, had been terminated. It follows that as to the property
All concurred, except Ward, J., not sitting.
Judgment and order reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.