Butts v. Voorhees

13 N.J.L. 13
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 13 N.J.L. 13 (Butts v. Voorhees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butts v. Voorhees, 13 N.J.L. 13 (N.J. 1831).

Opinion

Ewing, C. J.

The plaintiff in certiorari was found guilty and judgment was rendered against him for the forcible entry and detainer of a strip of land, containing one fourth of an acre,, part of a larger field, not all arable and valuable chiefly for its. limestone,

The field adjoined a public road and was enclosed by a fence. The defendant entered from the road by taking down the fence,, and without the permission of either the complainant or his landlord, George Green. Three or four hands were with him, and. they went to -work in quarrying lime stone. While so engaged Green went to him and told him he was working on his land. Butts said if it was not his land he would have nothing to-do with it, and went away with his hands and tools. In ten days or two weeks, Butts returned with three hands, took down the-fence which Green in the mean time had put up, entered the lands, resumed the work of quarrying and took away some lime[17]*17stone. Green warned him off. Butts answered he thought it his own land and refused to go, and afterwards put up a fence about the strip or piece of land in question. Butts made no threats at any time. The hands who were with him made none, “ and there was no proof that the hands were used for the purpose of intimidation, or other circumstances to infer it from, except from the mere fact of their being at work with Butts.”

These matters are set forth in a statement prepared by the counsel of the parties in order to present the case before us; and in which, without leaving open for examination here any questions as to the opinions expressed by the justice at the trial on a motion for a non-suit, or in his charge to the jury, they have restricted and limited our enquiries by their agreement, that if certain evidence was improperly rejected, or if “ the entry of Butts with his hands without the permission of Voorhees or of George Green, and his quarrying and taking away limestone and erecting a fence around the lot,” are not sufficient evidence of force and strong hand to sustain the action, the judgment is to be reversed.

The facts, in this case, constitute in my opinion an ordinary trespass, remediable by an action of trespass quare clausum fregit, and do not amount to the offence of a forcible entry and detainer, either under the English authorities or according to our statute.

Hawkins says, “ A forcible entry ought to be accompanied with some circumstances of actual violence or terror.” 2 Hawk. 36, Book 1, ch. 64, sect. 25. And again, “The behavior or speech at the time of the entry, must be such as to give just cause of fear of bodily hurt. The speeches must be such as imply a purpose of using force against those who shall make any resistance, as if one say that he will keep possession in spite of all men.” Ibid. sect. 27. ' “ A threat to spoil another’s goods or destroy his cattle, or do him any other such harm, which is not personal, is not sufficient.” Ibid. sect. 28. And again, “A man ought not to be adjudged guilty of a forcible detainer for barely refusing to go out of an house and continuing therein, in despite of another.” Ibid. sect. 30. Hawkins draws his doctrines from Lambard and Dalton and the ancient cases, and is [18]*18himself followed by the late authors. Coke points out the distinction between a force implied in every trespass and disseissin, and an actual force, as with weapons, number of persons &c. and sax's an entry with such actual force is requisite. Co. Lit. 257, b. Comyns says “ it shall not be a forcible entry, if after entry he cuts corn, grass, &c.” Com. dig. tit, force. Ent. A. 3. Bacon says “ A forcible entry must be with strong hand, with unusual weapons, or with menace of life or limb.” The term “ strong hand ” is thus explained by Ryder, C. J. in Rex v. Bathurst, Sager 225. “ The words manu forti are understood to import something criminal in its nature, something more than is meant by the words vi et armis.1' And Rolle had previously said, Styles 135, “ these words distinguish this kind of entry from an ordinary trespass by entering into another’s land, which is not so violent as a forcible entry is supposed to be.” The like doctrine was-repeated by the court in The King v. Wilson, 8 D. and E. 361. In Rex v. Storr, 3 Burr. 1698, an indictment for unlawfully entering a yard and digging the ground and erecting a shed and unlawfully and with force putting out the oxvner from the possession and keeping him out, was quashed, the facts charged not amounting to a forcible .entry and detainer. A distinction xvas recognized between the entry into a dwelling house, and putting the tenant out of possession, as in Bex v. Bathurst, and the entry into an uninhabited enclosure. In Bex v. Balee and others, Ibid, 1731, an indictment against sixteen persons for forcible entry in breaking and entering with force and arms, a close, not a dwelling house, and unlawfully and unjustly expelling the prosecutors and keeping them out of possession, xvas quashed, on motion, for not shewing sufficient actual force, violence, unlawful assembly, riot or other circumstances.

The same doctrine is maintained in the American cases. In Pennsylvania v. Robinson, Add. 14, it was held that there must be at least such acts of violence, or such threats, menaces, or gestures as may give a man reason to apprehend personal injury ox-danger in standing in defence of his possession. In Pennsylvania v. Waddle, Add. 41, the court directed the jury, that if the meaning arid tendency of the words used by the defendant were to impress on the complainant a terror of personal harm, if he [19]*19should proceed to take possession, it was force, but if their meaning was only to signify that he would not give up his claim which he thought a just one, until by a legal trial it was declared unjust, this was not force. In Commonwealth v. Dudley, 10 Mass. rep. 403, it was held that “ there must be some apparent violence offered in deed or in word to the person of another, or the party must be furnished with unusual offensive weapons ox-attended by an unusual multitude of people, all which circumstances would tend to excite terror in the owner and prevent him from claiming or maintaining his rights.”

Our statute enacts that if any person shall enter upon or into any lands and detain or hold the same with force or strong hand, or with weapons, or by breaking open the doors, windows or other part of a house, whether any person be in it or not, or by any kind of violence whatsoever, or by threatening to kill, beat or maim the party in possession, or by. such words, circumstances or actions, as have a natural tendency to excite fear or apprehexxsion of danger, or by putting out of doors or carrying away the goods of the party in possession, or by entering peaceably and then turning by force or frightening by threats or other circuxnstances of terror, the party out of possession, every person so offending shall be guilty of a forcible entry and detainer. Rev. Laws, 349, sec. 1.

The offerxce iixtended to be here descx-ibed, having been long known antecedently to the enactment of this statute, the terms and phrases used, ought, in just construction, to be understood in accordance with their ancient acceptation, and if any of them had obtaixxed an interpretation from usage or judicial decision, it ought now to be understood in the same manner.

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Related

Miller's Appeal
3 Grant 247 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1859)
Pennsylvania v. Robison
1 Add. 14 (Westmoreland County Court of Common Pleas, 1791)
Pennsylvania v. Waddle
1 Add. 41 (Westmoreland County Court of Common Pleas, 1792)

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.J.L. 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butts-v-voorhees-nj-1831.