56 Vt. 474 | Vt. | 1884
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendant leased the plaintiff’s farm for one year ending on the 16th of March, 1883, “ at the halves or on shares.” The lease contained a stipulation that no property owned by them equally should be sold without the consent of both, and that all produce raised on said farm should be and
At the time of the sale the defendant was owing the plaintiff three hundred dollars in respect to the lease.
The only objection made to a recovery is that trespass will not lie; and this depends upon whether the plaintiff at the time the action was brought was entitled to the possession of the property. The general ownership of it was in the plaintiff;, it was made so by the terms of the lease, and the defendant had no right to sell it. It is true, he had the right to its possession so long as he kept within the terms of the lease. But when in violation of his contract he sold the property, without right, his acts became tortious, his rights were terminated, and the plaintiff became entitled to its immediate possession, and could maintain trespass to recover it. This was so ruled in1 Briggs v. Bennett, 26 Vt. 146, ana Gray v. Stevens et al., 28 Vt. 1. The case of Hurd v. Fleming, 34 Vt. 169, relied upon by the defendant’s counsel, is not in point. In that case the tenant had done nothing to forfeit his rights as bailee; and it was rightly held that the lessor could not maintain trespass against one attaching the property as that of the tenant, for the lessor was not entitled to the possession, the tenant not having forfeited it.
Judgments affirmed.