10 S.E. 676 | N.C. | 1889
The jury returned the following special verdict:
"One Perry Bomer was the tenant occupying the house of T. T. Ballinger and others, and about 1 January, 1889, went to said Ballinger and told him that he was going to move, and that he (Ballinger) might come and take possession of the house. Ballinger went to the house, went in and began nailing down the windows. While he was thus engaged in the house the defendant W. E. Mills came, accompanied by an old negro man who carried some things Mills intended to put in the house. Mills came to the door of the house and said to Ballinger, `This is my house and I mean to take possession of it.' Ballinger forbade Mills to enter, but Mills went into the house. The reason Ballinger allowed Mills to go into the house was to avoid a difficulty. The defendant said that as *626 he entered the house one Garrison, from whom Ballinger and another had purchased the house, was or had acted a damned rascal; that it was his (defendant's) house, and he was going to have it. . . . Ballinger made no effort to keep Mills out except to forbid him, in a quiet way, to enter. The negro man accompanied Mills in, and Mills said to the negro, `Bring those things in here and throw them down,' and the negro did so. Mills did not curse Ballinger or threaten to use any violence — had no weapon. In reply to what Mills said about Garrison, Ballinger told him that `If there was any trouble between him and Garrison they could fight their own battles.' Ballinger then went away and left Mills in possession."
The court, being of opinion that upon the whole matter of the foregoing special verdict the defendant is not guilty, it is ordered by the court that a verdict of not guilty be entered, and it is adjudged that the defendant be discharged, and that the prosecutor pay the costs of (907) this indictment. State appealed.
To constitute the offense of forcible trespass there must be either actual violence used or such demonstration of force as was calculated to intimidate, or alarm, or involve, or tend to a breach of the peace. S. v.Pearman,
In S. v. Covington,
It is true that here defendant left to avoid a breach of the (908) peace, but the demonstration of force was not such as to give him reasonable ground for apprehension nor to intimidate him. The facts stated in the special verdict make only a bare civil trespass or, at most, an "entry upon land after being forbidden." The defendant would not be guilty of the latter if he entered under a reasonable bona fide belief that he had the right to do so. S. v. Winslow,
In S. v. Ross,
No error.
Cited: S. v. Davis,