Stearns v. Sampson

59 Me. 568
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 59 Me. 568 (Stearns v. Sampson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stearns v. Sampson, 59 Me. 568 (Me. 1871).

Opinion

Appleton, C. J.

The writ in this Case contains three counts,— for trespass quare clausum, for an assault and battery upon the female plaintiff, and for taking and carrying away her goods.

The presiding justice, in his charge to the jury, assumed that the legal title to the premises upon which the alleged trespasses were committed, was in the defendant; that G-eorge B. Stearns had been a tenant therein; that the defendant had given him legal notice to quit; that his tenancy had been terminated, and that he thenceforth became a tenant at sufferance.

The defendant, these facts being unquestioned, after having given the plaintiff ample time in which to remove his goods and family, on the ninth of December entered into the premises in controversy, which had been and were then occupied by the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs’ witness, Mrs. Best, gives the following account of the defendant’s entry: “December ninth, as I was [571]*571passing through the entry, the bell rang. I opened the door. Being in my morning dress, I apologized. Mr. Owen Tras with Mr. Sampson ; he introduced him to mo. Without my asking him, he stepped in, and then into the parlor and asked for mother. I went and called her, and then went to my room to my baby. She soon called me. Mother said, Mr. Sampson has come to move the furniture. Owen went into the parlor. Mother was then in the parlor. Mr. Sampson said he had come to clear the house, and for ns to leave at once,” etc.

The defendant’s testimony on this point was as follows: “ On the 9th December, I went to the house with Mr. Owen, and rang the door-bell. Mrs. Best came to the door and invited Mr. Owen 'and myself into the house, and showed us into the south-west parlor. I asked for Mrs. Stearns, aild she called her. Mrs. Stearns came in five minutes perhaps, or a little more. I then said to her I had come to take possession of the house; that I had consulted Mr. Paine and Mr. Sewall, and that they had told me to come to the house and take possession of it. She remonstrated,” etc.

Now what, after this entry, were the relations of the parties ? The defendant had, without force or violence, entered into his own house, in which the plaintiffs, their tenancy having been legally terminated, still remained ? What were the respective rights and duties of the parties ? The plaintiffs without title, their tenancy duly terminated, were there without right. Their continued possession was wrongful. The defendant was there by right in the possession of his own estate, having entered peaceably and without resistance on the part of the wrong-doing tenant. Both cannot rightfully remain. One or the other should quit. Can there be any doubt whose duty it was to leave. If the defendant could rightfully remain, the continued occupation of the plaintiffs was wrongful; as the plaintiffs could not rightfully remain, and the defendant could, and as one should quit, if he failed to quit voluntarily, there remained only the right of removal.

That right would be the same as where any person, having entered a dwelling-house, refuses to quit when requested. If there [572]*572is not tbis right of removal, then any knave may enter, remain, and refuse to quit, and there is no mode of dispossession. It is true every man’s house is his castle. But his neighbor’s house, where he has no legal right to be, is not his castle. The owner, in his castle, may remain, for it is his castle. The trespasser, in his neighbor’s castle, must remove or be removed. If it be not so, the rights of the wrong-doer are equivalent to those of the owner, rightfully in possession of his own. (

Thq facts as to the entry on 9th December were not in dispute. Upon these facts, the presiding justice instructed the jury as follows : “ There is no controversy, that if he (the defendant) had obtained peaceful possession, he had a right to remain there, the property being his at the time. But what was the nature of his possession ? Did he go there for the purpose of deception, merely to call as a friend on a visit, or did he go there with the intention, after making such an entry, to forcibly expel the inmates ? If that was his design, then the entry would not be recognized, in law, to give him a peaceable possession.” As the defendant had a right to enter peaceably into his own house, and being there to remain, and to remove the tenant wrongfully remaining, it does not affect the rights of the parties, whether he disclosed or concealed his intention to remove his tenant. Nor is it material whether he entered with such intention, or formed such intention after his entry, if his entry was peaceable, and without force. “ It ¡is not necessary,” remarks Lord Tenterden, in Butcher v. Butcher, 7 B. & C. 399, 14 E. C. L. 59, “that the party, who makes the entry, should declare that he enters to take possession; it is sufficient, if he does any act to show his intention.” In the samé case, Bailey, J., says, “ I think that a party, having a right to the land, acquires by entry the lawful possession of it, and may maintain trespass against any person, who being in possession at the time of his entry, wrongfully continues upon the land.” The defendant might instantly bring trespass against the plaintiff, wrongfully remaining in his house, or he might remove her. As the law gave him a right to enter peaceably and remove his tenants and their goods, if it could be [573]*573done without a breach of the peace, the intention to do what the law authorizes, cannot make an entry with such intent wrongful.

The first branch of the instruction was correct. The verdict should be set aside as against law, the evidence on both sides showing the entry to have been peaceable.

If there is any evidence, to which the latter part of the instructions can apply, then the exceptions should be sustained; for a peaceable entry cannot be metamorphosed into a forcible one, by reason of an existing and concealed intention on the part of the party entering to do, after entry, wdiat by law he was legally authorized to do.

The court instructed the jury that the plaintiffs could not recover on the count for breaking and entering. The defendant entering upon premises wrongfully withheld by the tenant, could not be deemed a trespasser. But if he was not a trespasser in entering into his own house, whatever his purpose or intention, then, being there, he might remove doors or windows. If the plaintiffs could not maintain trespass quare clausum for his entry, neither could they for his acts after such entry. Meader v. Stone, 7 Pick. 147. “ The right of the plaintiffs to the possession of the house had terminated by their failure to pay rent, and the notice given to them by the defendant to quit the same. In this state of the facts,” observes Dewey, J., in Mugford v. Richardson, 6 Allen, 76, “ the defendant had the right to enter upon the premises and take out the windows of the same. . . . Being thus in peaceable possession of a portion of the tenement, the court properly instructed the jury that if the female plaintiff undertook to prevent him from taking out the windows, he had the right to use as much force as was necessary in order to overcome her resistance.” In Harris v. Gillingham, 6 N. H. 11, the owner of the land, after requesting his tenant to leave, upon his refusal entered, tore down the chimneys and put the building in an uninhabitable condition, fc>r doing which the tenant brought an action of trespass quare clausum.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Me. 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stearns-v-sampson-me-1871.