12 Vt. 273 | Vt. | 1840
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— From the request made to the court to instruct the jury, it would appear that some importance was attached to the time during which the cattle were in the possession of the plaintiff. The time during which they remained in the plaintiifs possession is of no importance. The manner in which they came there was of more consequence. The right of the owner of personal chattels to enter on the possession of another to reclaim property, may depend entirely on the manner in which the possession was obtained. The controversy between these parties, was, as to the ownership of the cattle, and probably neither of them supposed that the decision of the suit would depend on the enquiry,
The case of Taylor v. Fisher, Cro. Eliz. 246, relied on by the plaintiff’s counsel, will be found not to militate against the principles before mentioned. In that case, the defendant relied upon a license from the plaintiff’s wife to enter and take the goods, without stating how they came into his possession, and the license failing, for want of authority in the wife to grant it, the justification failed. It is to be observed that the goods, claimed by the defendant,-in that case, were in the house of the plaintiff, at the time the defendant purchased them, and inasmuch as tire defendant did not set forth, in his plea, how they came there, or whether it was without fault of the owner, the plea was ill.
It was urged, in the argument, and a passage was read from Blackstone’s Commentaries, and another from Swift’s Digest, in support of the proposition, that a person cannot enter the grounds of a third person to r.efake property, unless it is feloniously stolen. The case from Roll’s Reports, on which these dictum^ are founded, make this distinction» that, if property is feloniously stolen, the owner may pursue and take it wherever it is found, although the person in whose custody it is found, never consented to its being placed there. But, if it is taken, not feloniously, and put upon the land or enclosure of another, against his will and without his consent, he shall not be exposed to another trespass by the owner of the property. A distinction was made between a felony and a trespass, probably, because the owner of the cattle had no remedy against the felon, but had against the trepasser. But, in the latter case, if he consented to have the goods put into his possession, the right of the owner to enter • and retake them was recognized, and I have already remarked that the claim of property,by the present plaintiff, and his retaining the cattle after notice of the defendant’s right, was equivalent to a consent to receive the cattle from a wrong doer in the first place, or, at any rate, made the plaintiff himself a wrong doer. Judge Swift, in his Digest, recognizes this right of the owner to enter the land pf another and take his goods, not only when they are stolen, but, also, when they are put
Dissenting Opinion
— Dissenting.
I cannot but think that the charge of the court below, to the jury, was incorrect, as applied to the facts of this case.
But no such fact is avered in the notice, nor pretended to have existed, on trial. In the case of Higgins v. Andrews, 20 Viner. 506, it was held, upon demurrer, that if certain persons unknown, in a felonious manner, eradicate and pull up the fruit trees of A., in his garden, and carry them upon the premises of B., the owner cannot justify an entry to reclaim them. This was, of course, but a trespass upon the owner of the fruit, trees. Thé doctrine is well settled, if A. takes my horse, but not feloniously, and put him on the land of B., it is not lawful for me to enter upon the land and take him. 20 Viner. 506.
In Taylor v. Fisher, Cro. Eliz. 246, the' defendant had bought the goods of one J. B., who was the owner of them,
For aught that appears, these heifers were upon the premises of the plaintiff, through the default of the defendant. The parties may have owned adjoining lands and the defendant may have suffered that portion of the fence, which he was bound to have repaired, to have gone to decay, over which they may have escaped upon the lands of the plaintiff, and, in such case, he could, not justify an entry to drive them off. So if they escaped and came into the lands of the plaintiff, through the insufficiency of the fence which he was bound to repair, though the defendant might enter and retake them immediately after the escape, yet, if he suffered them to remain, after notice, they were then there through his default and he could not enter to retake them. They might be distrained damage feasant. This is settled law. Ham. N. P. 169. 2 Saund. R. 285, n. 4. 4 Comyn’s D. Pl. 3. (m. 29.) Edwards v. Hulinder, 2 Leon. 93.
In this case, the. defendant admitted the heifers had been upon the premises of the plaintiff one year before he entered to retake them, and if with his knowledge, (and this was a fact which should have been submitted to the jury to have found,) upon well established principles, they were there, at the time of the entry, through the default of the defendant,
The court say, “ the evidence, as to the right to the marc and colt, may be somewhat questionable, but the defendant below, was, at all events, guilty of a trespass in sending a person on the land of the plaintiff to take them aivay. The action was, therefore, technically supported, and where the evidence as to the true ownership of the property is so nearly balanced, the judgment ought not to be disturbed.” It is true, in neither of these cases does there appear to have been a plea, or a notice, justifying the,entry upon the close of the plaintiff, and whether, by the practice of the state of
In the latter case, the justice gave judgment for the plaintiff to recover the value of the mare and colt, and on the case coming before the supreme court, on the certiorari, they say, in substance, that the true ownership of the mare and colt is questionable, from the evidence, but inasmuch as the defendant below was, at all events, guilty of a trespass in sending a person on the lands of the plaintiff to take them away, the judgment ought not to be disturbed. This adjudication, I conceive, proceeds on the direct ground that the defendant could not have justified the entry, though it had been found that he was the owner of the mare and colt. Though these cases do not appear to have received a full investigation, yet, the court was of great respectability, and have,, I think, laid down the law as it is well established by authority. It does not, as I have before said, appear, that the cattle in question came on the premises of the plaintiff by his default or consent. It may have been lawfully, and we are not to presume the contrary.
If the defendant claims to justify the entry, on this ground, it was for him to aver and prove the manner in which the plaintiff’s possession of the cattle commenced. Until this is done, the case is to stand on the ground that it was through the default of the defendant. The question, whether the defendant’s having subsequently claimed these heifers as his own, and this being known to the plaintiff before he forbade him to enter on his premises, can place the plaintiff on the same ground as if he had been originally in the wrong, and justify the entry, may be worthy of some consideration.
The principle which allows the party injured to redress himself, upon his mere motion, by a recaption of the property,
There is no case, which, under such circumstances, justifies an entry upon the premises to seize the goods.
In Br. Trespass, Pl. 213 and 20 Viner, 507, Pl. 17, wc have this case. If A.’s boasts are in another’s land, damage feasant, he cannot justify an entry to drive them off.
The reason is, it would defeat the landholder of his right of distress. All that wc learn from the case now before us, is, that the defendant claimed to own the cattle and the plaintiff was apprized of this claim before he forbade his entry upon his premises, (probably, by a fair construction of the case,