Maddran v. Mullendore

111 A.2d 608, 206 Md. 291
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 1, 1968
Docket[No. 68, October Term, 1954.]
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 111 A.2d 608 (Maddran v. Mullendore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maddran v. Mullendore, 111 A.2d 608, 206 Md. 291 (Md. 1968).

Opinion

*295 Delaplaine, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action in tort was instituted in the Circuit Court for Washington County by Mrs. Dora Maddran, of Boonsboro, to recover for injuries from an assault and battery allegedly made upon her by Thurston B. Mullendore, a Boonsboro grocer. Plaintiff claimed that she was assaulted in the three-foot alley between her house on St. Paul Street and Junior Order Hall, which stands at the corner of Main and St. Paul Streets.

Defendant, whose grocery and meat store is on Main Street next to Junior Order Hall, has a right of way through the alley to the rear of his property. He pleaded that he did not commit the wrong alleged, and that plaintiff was indebted to him, and filed a counterclaim for plaintiff’s interference with the user of his right of way, which caused him and his employees inconvenience and loss of time and money.

It was shown at the trial before a jury that from 1908 to 1918 all of the land now owned by plaintiff and defendant was owned by Samuel E. Young and wife. The property owned by defendant was conveyed by Young and wife to John J. Galor and wife in 1918. Included in the deed was a grant of a right of way “between the property known as Junior Order Hall and the property now tenanted by James E. Maddran.” In 1935 Galor and wife conveyed the property, including the right of way, to Thurston B. Mullendore and Gayle Mullendore. In 1946 Thurston B. Mullendore and wife and Gayle Mullendore and wife conveyed the property to a trustee, who thereupon reconveyed it to Thurston B. Mullendore and wife.

The property now owned by plaintiff was conveyed by Young and wife to James E. Maddran and wife in 1920. The grantees acquired title to one-half of the width of the alley, subject to the right of way granted to Galor and wife. Plaintiff acquired the property in 1946.

It was undisputed that the alley had been used by Galor and wife and afterwards by the Mullendores during a period of 36 years from 1918 until 1954. It was *296 also admitted that coal, kerosene, and other supplies were brought though the alley to the rear of the store. In the fall of 1958, when defendant was remodeling his store, the building materials were brought through the .alley. After the remodeling of the store was completed, defendant directed. that quarters of beef be brought through the alley, rather than through the Main Street entrance. Plaintiff, age 63, who had been living in the same house for nearly 50 years, and was now living alone, complained that blood sometimes dripped from the meat.

For at least 36 years there had,been a gate at the entrance to the alley, and a key had always been available to defendant. On February 14, 1954, plaintiff put a new padlock on the gate, and did not give defendant a key. Her action precipitated the alleged assault and •battery.

It appears from the record that on the morning of February 16, 1954, an employee of defendant named Summers arrived in a truck with a quarter of beef, which he. had been requested to carry through the alley. Finding the gate locked, he asked plaintiff for the key. Plaintiff refused. “Call the law,” she said defiantly, “and I will give it to you. Then we will know who has a right, and who don’t.”

Summers pulled the hasp from the gate and returned to the truck to get the meat, while plaintiff went into the house, brought a chair out of the kitchen, and carried it .into the alley and placed it against the wall of her house and sat on it. Defendant then walked into the alley. Plaintiff testified that she sat on .the chair because she “wanted him to prove that he had a right to go through.” Defendant pushed the chair and plaintiff out of the alley, while Summers went through with the quarter of beef. There was no evidence that either of the. men struck plaintiff, although the quarter of beef brushed against her right arm while her left elbow struck the. wall of the house.. Plaintiff was not aware of any injury to herself, although she. noticed that some dirt had rubbed off the wall onto her sweater. As soon as *297 she was out of the alley, she said to defendant: “Look what you have done to my sweater!”

Plaintiff testified that as defendant did not look at her, she tapped him on the shoulder, but he did nothing except give her “a mean look.” So she went back into the house, and the excitement was over.

Neither defendant nor Summers took the stand. When plaintiff’s testimony was concluded, defendant moved for a directed verdict, and the trial judge granted the motion. Thereupon defendant non-prossed his counterclaim, and judgment was entered in favor of defendant.

After plaintiff took her appeal from the judgment, the parties stipulated that if plaintiff should prosecute her appeal successfully, defendant’s counterclaim would be considered automatically refiled and restored to its original status.

Plaintiff contended that she was on her own foot and a half of the alley when she was sitting on the chair, and defendant had no right to push her out of the alley. She contended that, even if she was depriving defendant of any right, he should have applied to the Court for relief. In support of her contention she asserted: “If two men are permitted to forcibly eject an elderly woman from her property, we have departed from all of our concepts of modern civilized law and order and have reverted to the times when only the strong shall prevail.”

We have not been shown any justification for plaintiff’s attempt to block the passageway. It is axiomatic that the owner of a servient tenement cannot close or obstruct the easement against those who are entitled to its use in such manner as to prevent or interfere with their reasonable enjoyment. Just as the law has recognized the natural right of self-defense, for the reason that it considers the process of the courts an inadequate remedy for present injuries accompanied with force, it has likewise recognized the natural right to recover real or personal property by the mere act of the injured party, for the reason that legal process may be an inadequate remedy. In the language of Blackstone, “what *298 soever unlawfully annoys or doth damage to another is a nuisance; and such nuisance may be abated, that is, taken away or removed, by the party aggrieved thereby, so as he commits no riot in the doing of it.” Blaekstone’s Commentaries, book 3, chap. 1.

In the notes to Sharswood’s Blackstone, 1877 Ed., vol. 2, page 5, it is stated: “So, as the law allows retaking of the possession of land, it also sanctions the due defense of the possession thereof; and therefore, though if one enter into my ground I must request him to depart, before I can lay hands on him to turn him out, yet if he refuse I may then push him out, and if he enter with actual force I need not first request him to be gone, but may lay hands on him immediately. * * * And though a gate, illegally fastened, might have been opened without cutting it down, yet the cutting would be lawful. However,' it is a general rule that the abatement must be limited by its necessity, and no wanton or unnecessary, injury must be commited.”

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Bluebook (online)
111 A.2d 608, 206 Md. 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maddran-v-mullendore-md-1968.