9 S.E. 409 | N.C. | 1889
The defendant was arrested upon a criminal warrant, and convicted before a justice of the peace of the offense of having unlawfully and wilfully entered upon the land of the prosecutrix, after having been forbidden by her so to do, and without a license, in violation of the statute (The Code, sec. 1120). Thereupon, he appealed to the Superior Court, and there pleaded formally not guilty. There was a verdict of guilty, and judgment thereupon against him, and he having excepted, appealed to this Court. On the trial, the evidence produced by the State tended strongly to prove the defendant's guilt. He "claimed to enter under a bona fide claim of right and title, and offered to show title to the land in himself, which the court excluded," and among other things not necessary to be reported here, it said to the jury, "that even if there was a parol license (which prosecutrix (354) denied), it could be revoked, and defendant could not justify under it, and after being forbidden, if the defendant had entered inside of the field of the prosecutrix, that she had held in actual possession and cultivation for thirteen years or more, and committed the acts testified to, he would be guilty; that if defendant had a bona fide claim of title, he was put to his civil action to assert it, and could not justify an attempt to assert it in this way." This is assigned as error.
If this were a prosecution for forcible entry, or forcible trespass on land, in that case the question of force, without regard to the claim of right or title to the land by the defendant, would become material, and it may be that the evidence produced on the trial would warrant a verdict of guilty. But the defendant is charged with a very different offense — that of simply going or entering upon the land of the prosecutrix after she had forbidden him, and without a license from her so to do in violation of the statute (The Code, sec. 1120), which makes such act a misdemeanor.
Just after the close of the late Civil War, it became a common grievance to the owners of land — and it still prevails to some extent — that idle, roving, aimless people, for purposes of mischief, and not infrequently other classes of people for purposes of sport, would go or enter, without force or the display of force, upon their lands, and do mischief, greatly to their annoyance, and sometimes to their substantial injury, leaving them remediless. The purpose of the statute — first enacted in *276
1866 — was to suppress such mischief and grievance. It was no part of its purpose to prevent any person, who has an honest claim or title to land, from going or entering upon and taking possession of it peaceably and quietly, when and if he could do so. It was not intended to apply when force was employed in going upon the land. That case had already been provided against. This court has repeatedly and uniformly (355) so, in effect, interpreted the statute's meaning. S. v. Crosset,
The defendant, therefore, had the right to prove, if he could, that he went upon the land in good faith, claiming to have, or having title thereto, and the court erred in refusing to allow him to produce evidence for that purpose. But such claim would not avail him, unless he should satisfy the jury, in the absence of title, that he made it in good faith, and he had reasonable ground to believe that his claim was well founded. A mere belief on his part that he had such claim would not be sufficient — he was bound to prove that he had reasonable ground for such belief, and the jury should so find under proper instructions from the court. S. v. Bryson,
The evidence went to prove that the defendant entered upon and took possession of the land by force. If he did so, then he ought to have been indicted for such forcible entry. S. v. Bryan, post, 436.
There is error. Let this opinion be certified to the Superior Court according to law.
Error. Venire de novo.
Cited: S. v. Boyce,
(356)