State v. Carroll

2 N.W.2d 211, 239 Wis. 625, 141 A.L.R. 244, 1942 Wisc. LEXIS 43
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2 N.W.2d 211 (State v. Carroll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Carroll, 2 N.W.2d 211, 239 Wis. 625, 141 A.L.R. 244, 1942 Wisc. LEXIS 43 (Wis. 1942).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

The prosecutions which resulted in the judgment under review are the culmination of an unfortunate controversy between the defendant, J. H. Carroll, and Henry Kehring and his wife, Flattie Kehring, in relation to their occupancy of a dwelling house which is located on a forty-two and six-tenths-acre tract at Glidden, Wisconsin, and was owned and occupied for many years by the Kehrings. In 1937 forty acres of that tract were conveyed to' Carroll by a tax deed, and he believed that the house and other farm buildings were on the forty acres. Kehring claimed that part of the house extended beyond the north boundary of the forty *627 acres onto the two and six-tenths acres which he continued to own. Because oí that claim a dispute arose between the parties and the Kehrings had been refusing for three years to vacate the house, or else to purchase the forty acres from Carroll by reimbursing him for his expenditures since 1930 for the tax deed, tax certificates, and taxes. In May, 1938, the Kehrings went to' Upson, Wisconsin, where Kehring was temporarily employed. When they returned to Glidden they found padlocks on the entrance door of the house, and Carroll told them that they could not enter, but their attorney removed the padlocks, and they moved in without Carroll’s knowledge or consent. In December, 1939, Kehring obtained temporary employment at La Crosse and took his wife and daughter along, but left some of his furniture and personal property in the house, which he arranged to have occupied by Mrs. Eineichner during his absence. Carroll notified her to pay rent to him and he moved and placed part of Kehring’s furniture and personal property in a warehouse at Glidden. Mrs. Eineicher paid rent for only one month to Carroll, and on May 29, 1940, he gave her notice to pay or to vacate the house. Pursuant to this notice, she moved out and Carroll locked the door and took off the knob. On June 3, 1940, the Kehrings returned from La Crosse and again occupied the house. They were in peaceable possession thereof on June IS, 1940, when Carroll entered the house through the only outside entrance door, which, as was determined by a survey made subsequently, was entirely on his forty acres. He walked through a hall to a dining room and.saw Mrs. Kehring in a bedroom, which was off the dining room. The bedroom was in the northwest corner of the house and partly to the north of the boundary line between the forty acres to the south, and the two and six-tenths acres to the north thereof. Upon seeing Mrs. Kehring, Carroll said, “I moved you out a couple of times, what are you doing in here now?” She replied, “We think we own some of this.” He then ordered her out and upon her refusal *628 he, — according -to her testimony, — took a rocking chair, two kitchen chairs, a magazine stand, and some dishes and threw them out into the front yard, and then came back and grabbed her by one arm and jerked and pulled her out of the bedroom and across the dining room until she got hold of a door casing to- which she clung until her daughter entered the house and Carroll loosened his hold on her arm. The daughter ran to an uncle’s house for help and, before she returned with him, Carroll jerked down a heating stove and put it out on the front porch, where a tussle ensued between him and the uncle. Mrs. Kehring testified that she was bruised so as to require medical attention. Carroll denies in his testimony that he committed an assault and battery on Mrs. Kehring by the use of more force than was reasonably necessary to eject hel-as a trespasser. He also denies that he removed any personal property in such manner as to wilfully, maliciously, or wantonly injure or destroy it. Although there were conflicts in the evidence, it admits of the findings and conclusion stated by the court in its decision, which, in so far as here material, is as follows:

“I am satisfied from all the credible evidence that the defendant entered the house and committed an assault and battery on Mrs. Kehring. He grabbed her by the arm and left marks on her arm, and she went to a doctor for medical attention. ... I am also satisfied from the testimony that the assault took place in the portion of the house on the Kehring side of the line, and also in the portion of the house on the Carroll side of the line. I am of the opinion that the defendant used more force than was necessary under the circumstances, and for that reason is guilty of the offense charged in count one of the information or complaint. ... It is evident that he did not know where the line ran through the premises at the time the assault was committed for the reason he caused a survey to be made some months after this to determine where the line did run. Regarding the charge in the second count ... I am of the opinion that, according to the *629 evidence, he is guilty. It is true that the damage inflicted on the furniture was of a minor nature, but it doesn’t seem to- me that under the circumstances he was justified in removing or throwing the furniture out of the building in question. If he wanted this furniture removed he should have proceeded in a legal manner. It is apparent from the testimony that at the time the defendant threw out the furniture and committed an assault he was angry and evidently lost his temper. He was not justified in either committing the assault or throwing out the furniture in the manner in which he did, and I am of the opinion that he is guilty on both counts.”

In view of the fact found by the court that Carroll used more force than was necessary under the circumstances, his •contention on this appeal that he was not guilty of assault and battery under sec. 340.57, Stats., because he had a right to use a reasonable amount of force to eject Mrs. Kehring as a trespasser could not be sustained. However, even if the Kehrings’ re-entry on June 3, 1940, constituted a trespass, she clearly was in peaceable possession,on June 15, 1940, when Carroll attempted to forcibly eject her. Consequently, there is applicable to his conduct the rule that where one who is not in the actual possession of land, although lawfully entitled thereto, forcibly ejects another who is in peaceable possession thereof, he is criminally liable for the assault. 4 Am. Jur. p. 170, § 80. As the court said in Hickey v. United States (9th Cir.), 168 Fed. 536, 537, 22 L. R. A. (N. S.) 728, in sustaining a conviction for assault and battery committed by the defendant in attempting to remove persons from his mining claim, after he had applied previously, but without avail, to the district attorney’s office for assistance to have them removed,—

“There was manifestly a dispute between the parties about the right of possession as it respects the claim, and the defendant had no right to attempt to settle that dispute by undertaking to eject Powell and his men by physical force, after they had refused to vacate the premises, when so ordered. *630 Even if the defendant were the owner, with a perfect title, he had no legal right to oust trespassers in that way. The law provides peaceable methods for obtaining possession where wrongfully denied, and a resort h> force and violence, without pursuing the due course of law, is seldom excused. . . . There is no warrant of law for such a course of action. It would lead to riot and bloodshed, and make every man the judge of his own property rights and the executioner of his own judgments.

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.W.2d 211, 239 Wis. 625, 141 A.L.R. 244, 1942 Wisc. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carroll-wis-1942.