32 N.C. 234 | N.C. | 1849
This is a prosecution against the defendants for a forcible trespass to the dwelling-house and yard of James Hunt. It is sometimes very difficult to distinguish between a civil and criminal trespass — between one which gives merely a civil action and one which amounts to a crime punishable by indictment. No such difficulty exists here; it is not denied but that the acts and conduct of the defendants, as set forth in the indictment, do constitute a criminal offense — that of a forcible trespass. The difficulty arises out of the fact that the indictment charges the presence of James Hunt when the acts complained of were perpetrated; the language is, "he, the said James Hunt, then and there, being therein, and forbidding, etc." The special verdict finds that James Hunt was not there, but was absent, and did not return until the day after the violence was committed. It was proper the indictment should have laid the possession of the house and yard in James Hunt, but it was not necessary, in order to constitute the offense intended to be charged, that he should have been present at the time. The possession of his family was his possession, but their presence was not his presence; a mere trespass to the dwelling-house of a man is not, of itself, indictable. To make it so, it must be done under such circumstances as amount to a breach of the public peace, or have an immediate tendency to provoke it. S. v. Fort,
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
Cited: S. v. Ward,
(237)