7 S.E. 905 | N.C. | 1888
J. W. Thomas, the prosecutor, testified "that some time in February, 1887, he forbid the defendant from going on his land, and the defendant agreed in writing to stay off said land." Pylandus Nelson testified for the State "that he was a tenant of J. W. Thomas, and that some time in May, 1877, he was working in his field when the defendant called to him to come to him, that he wanted to see him; that he then invited the defendant to come into the field, and the defendant then came to the fence, seven or eight feet over on the Thomas land, talked to him about what he wanted to see him on, and went away. This was six months before the finding of the bill in the Superior Court."
The defendant introduced no evidence, and asked the court to charge the jury "that Nelson being a tenant on Thomas' land, if he invited and permitted the defendant to enter on the lands cultivated by him, though belonging to Thomas, the defendant would not be guilty." The court declined to give this instruction, but charged the jury "that if the defendant knew where the line was, and intentionally, (718) not accidentally, entered on prosecutor's land, after being forbidden, he would be guilty, unless he had license to enter, and that the invitation or permission of the tenant would not protect him, the tenant's authority being subservient to the higher authority of the landlord."
There was a verdict of guilty, judgment, and appeal.
It was manifestly the purpose of the act under which the defendant was indicted to keep off intruders and to prevent wilful and unlawful trespasses upon land and to subject persons, who might so wilfully trespass after being forbidden to indictment for so doing, but, as was said in S. v.Hause,
No such invitation would protect a person from liability for a wilful and malicious trespass to the injury of the landlord if committed under the fraudulent pretense of such invitation. The evidence in this case shows no purpose to commit such a trespass, and there is error. S. v. Hanks,
Error.