Dustin v. Cowdry

23 Vt. 631
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJune 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 23 Vt. 631 (Dustin v. Cowdry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dustin v. Cowdry, 23 Vt. 631 (Vt. 1851).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Redfield, J.

We entertain no doubt, that such a principle of law, as that for which the defendants contend, and which is embraced in the charge of the court in this case, did exist in England from the time of the Norman Conqueror, until the statute of 5 Richard II, ch. 8, of Forcible Entry and Detainer, — a period of nearly three hundred years. And it might have existed prior to the Norman conquest, but I find no authentic account of its existence prior to that date, and it seems to us far more in accordance with the social polity of the Conqueror and his immediate descendants, than with any other, which ever obtained in that country. It is a principle more in conformity with a tenure of land of some superior, or over lord, whose mere will is the law of the tenure, converting the tenant into a mere menial, or dependent, than with the tenure of free and common socage, where the tenant is absolutely, as really and to all intents, as much a freeman, as the landlord, and where the rights of the humblest are as much respected, and as readily and as minutely vindicated by the authority of the state, both judicial and executive, as are those of the most powerful. And it is certain, we think, that such a mode of reducing rights of action to possession is more suited to the turbulence and violence of those early times, when no man, whose head was of much importance to the state, felt secure of retaining it upon his shoulders for an hour, than to the quiet and order and general harmony of the nineteenth century. But that such was the ancient common law of England we have the authority of Hawkins, vol. 1, ch. 64, sec. 1, and of many others.

But as men advanced towards equality, and claimed to have their rights respected and guarantied to them, and more carefully defined, this state of the law became intolerable, and was among the first to be abrogated by Parliament. The resistance of the English barons at Runymead extorted from King John the Magna Charta of Eng[636]*636lish and American liberty, and that of Wat Tyler and his associates, to Richard II, accomplished scarcely less for the peace, quiet, and good order of the realm, when it compelled the king and the extensive landholders to consent, in parliament, to the statute against all forcible entry into lands, even by those having good title, and, as a correlative, compelled those, whose titles had expired, to make summary surrender.

The language of Sergeant Hawkins shows the object and necessity for this statute; — “But this indulgence of the common law” [permitting forcible entries into lands, withheld from the rightful proprietors,] “ having been found, by experience, to be very prejudicial to the public peace, by giving an opportunity to powerful men, under the pretence of feigned titles, forcibly to eject their weaker neighbors, it was thought necessary, by severe laws, to restrain all persons from the use of such violent methods of doing themselves justice,” — referring to the statute 5 Richard II, against forcible entries, &c. But what would be the benefit of such a statute, if every one could disregard it without detriment to his civil rights l The redress, which a weak tenant would be likely to obtain against a powerful landlord, by a public prosecution, would prove a most tantalizing mockery.

„The very words of our statute, copied almost literally from the English statutes, show the sense of the legislature upon this subject; —“ No person shall make any entry into any lands, or other possessions, but where entry is given by law; and in such case, not with strong hand, or with multitude of people, but only in a peaceable manner;” and if any one do either, it is provided, that he shall be fined, restitution shall be made to the one thus thrust out of possession, and he shall be entitled to recover treble damages. All this is so explicit, as scarcely to admit of question; and it seems wonderful, that any doubt should ever have arisen, especially when we advert to the occasion and the object of passing the English statute upon this subject. And, as is said by Erskine, J., in Newton v. Harland, 1 Man. & Gr. 644, [39 E. C. L. 581,] “It seems remarkable, that a question so likely to arise should never have been directly brought before any court in banc, until that case” (1840.) We can only conjecture, that the reason must have been, that the very great explicitness of the statute, and the manifest absurdity of the [637]*637old common law rule upon the subject, as a rule of law, in regard to the title and possession of real estate in a free country, must have so commended itself to the minds of the English people, that no man was found to possess sufficient hardihood to attempt so bold an innovation until these days of speculation and experiment.

But if the point had never been decided by the English courts, it is certain, there was a very general concurrence and consent among all their law writers and judges upon this subject. In Regina v. Dyer, 6 Mod. 96, it was held, that one, who, without right, entered into land and expelled the possessor, by force, was liable to indictment, at common law, and so are all the subsequent cases. “ But,” say the court in that case, “ the statute forbids force in entering, or detaining, even where the entry is lawful.” This, it will be recollected, is as early as 2 Queen Anne, And Littleton, in Co. on Lit., book 2, chap. 49, § 431, takes the same view of the statute, if we understand the author’s meaning. The editor, having in mind some modern gloss perhaps, suggests, that Littleton may have misapprehended the true import of the statute. But in Fitzherbert’s Natura Brevium, which is one of the earliest commentaries upon the subject, it is said, “ If a man entereth with force into lands and tenements, to which he hath title and right of entry, and put the tenant of the freehold out of those lands, or tenements, now be who is so put out by force shall not maintain an action of forcible entry against him, who had title or right of entry, because that entry, at common law, or the statute of Richard II, is not any disseizin of him; but he may indict him for his entering by force, and by this indictment he shall be restored to his possession again; and this is by the statute 8 Hen. VI, ch. 9. And in this action of forcible entry, under the statute of Henry VI, the plaintiff shall recover treble damages, as well for the occupying of the lands, as for the first entry.” Lord Hare, in his note upon this passage, says, — “ He shall not maintain an action on the statute of Richard II, but may by the statute of Henry VI; for upon examination it will be found, that the statute of Richard II gave no action to the party aggrieved by being forcibly put out, and no power to the justices to make restitution, but only to fine the offender. And this difference, between the statute of Richard II and that of Henry VI, which Littleton and Fitzherbert do notice, and which Mr. Thomas did not advert to in his [638]*638note to Co. Litt., but which Lord Hale did in Fitzherbert, seems to have been the entering wedge to most of the modern blundering upon this subject, for we scarcely feel justified in calling it by a milder name. But this kind of spirit, when it has once entered into the law, is not easily cast out; since every successive writer is likely blindly to copy the same error, without examination, and thus give it the sanction of his own authority.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Vt. 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dustin-v-cowdry-vt-1851.