Walsh v. Taylor

39 Md. 592, 1874 Md. LEXIS 36
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 3, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 39 Md. 592 (Walsh v. Taylor) 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
Walsh v. Taylor, 39 Md. 592, 1874 Md. LEXIS 36 (Md. 1874).

Opinion

Alvey, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action of trespass by the appellee against the appellant, for breaking and entering the dwelling house of the plaintiff, and making a noise and disturbance therein, and depriving the plaintiff of the use thereof, &e., and to which the defendant pleaded that he did not commit the wrongs alleged.

At the trial below, it was proved, on the part of the plaintiff, that she was keeping a boarding-house, and that she purchased of the defendant certain articles of furniture, and paid part of the price at the time, and agreed to pay the balance in weekly instalments of one dollar. That after the entire balance of the purchase money had fallen due, the defendant, having three men with him, entered the plaintiff’s house, and demanded payment of the money due, or a return of the furniture, and the plaintiff being unable to pay the money, and refusing to deliver up the furniture on the defendant’s demand, the latter called in one of his men to take the furniture away, and proceeded up stairs in search of it, and entered the rooms and examined the furniture therein, against the remonstrance of the plaintiff. That the defendant and those with him, remained on the premises twenty-five or thirty minutes, against the consent of the plaintiff, and while there the defendant indulged in loud and abusive language ; and that he entered the room of the plaintiff’s daughter with such violence as to terrify her. The plaintiff herself stated that her servant opened the front door on the ringing of the bell, when the defendant entered the house, and that he then told her, the plaintiff, [596]*596that he had come to take away the furniture, and she proposed to deliver up one of the articles in payment of che balance due, but that the defendant refused to accede to her proposition.

After this evidence on the part of the plaintiff, the defendant then offered in evidence the written contract, signed by both parties, whereby the articles of furniture were- sold, and by such contract it was stipulated and agreed, that the balance of the purchase money for the furniture should be paid in weekly instalments of one dollar, until the whole amount was paid, and that if, before full payment, the plaintiff should part with the possession of the goods, or if there should be default in the payment of any one of the weekly instalments, for three successive weeks, the defendant should have the right to reclaim and take possession of the goods, wherever the same might he found, it being understood that the sale was conditional only, and that, for the retaking possession, the defendant or his agent, should not be subject to any proceeding, criminal or civil. And it was further agreed that all payments of instalments should be regarded as forfeited, upon default by the plaintiff in making the weekly payments, as provided by the contract.

It was also proved, on the part of the defendant, that after default made by the plaintiff in complying with the contract, he, with three of his agents, called at the house of the plaintiff in regard to the furniture, and upon being tpld by the plaintiff that she was unable to pay the balance due, it was proposed that he should take back one of the articles purchased, and thus settle the matter.; that this proposition was acceded to by him, and he thereupon called in one of his agents to assist in removing the article, and proceeded up stairs to get it, where, as as he' was informed by the plaintiff, it was to be found ; though he did not find it, and left the house without it.

[597]*597Upon the evidence the plaintiff prayed for and obtained two instructions to the jury. The first was that if the jury believed from the evidence that the defendant entered on the premises of the plaintiff against her consent, or, having entered into the hall or passage of her house without her knowledge, afterwards, and against her consent, went into the rooms, chambers, or interior passages of her house, and inspected and handled the furniture therein, the said entrance was a trespass ah initio, and the jury could assess such damages for the trespass and injury to the property and personal rights and feelings of the plaintiff, as they might deem a just compensation for the wrong and injury sustained.

In granting this instruction we think the court below fell into error.

There was no plea of leave and license interposed by the defendant; but the contract, signed by the plaintiff, and about which there was no dispute, was admitted in evidence without objection. The instruction, as is perceived, makes no reference whatever to the pleadings in the cause. There was, therefore, no question raised by the instruction as to the pleadings, or the issues formed thereby ; it having been repeatedly decided by this Court that, on such an instruction, the only question presented is, whether the law be properly announced with reference to the facts of the case as they may be found by the jury. Stockton vs. Frey, 4 Gill, 406. And where the Court, as in this case, is called upon by the plaintiff to instruct the jury,, as to the right to recover upon an assumed state of facts, if the proof of the defendant would clearly establish any proposition or right inconsistent with the theory of the instruction asked by the plaintiff, based upon his own evidence, such instruction should not be granted, because it must assume or admit the truth of all the defendant’s proof on the subject. McTavish vs. Carroll, 7 Md., 352; Coates & Glenn vs. Sangston, 5 Md., 121.

[598]*598Now the instruction under consideration makes no reference whatever to the agreement in evidence, whereby the defendant was fully authorized to take the goods where-eVer found, in the event of default of payment by the plaintiff: and that she had made default was abundantly established by her own evidence. All the rights and authority of the defendant under the contract, were left out of view, by this instruction. The contract, the construction of which was for the Court, plainly gave the defendant an irrevocable license, or rather, a license coupled with an interest; and, as such, the plaintiff could not withdraw from it, and hold the defendant as a trespasser for doing what she had agreed he might do with impunity. The prayer states no act to have been done by the defendant that may not have been fully authorized by the agreement, in order to regain possession of the goods. Where, for instance, one sells personal chattels on his own premises, and before a reasonable time to remove them-, he forbids the purchaser to enter and take them, it has been held to be a license which he could not revoke within such reasonable time. Nettleton vs. Sikes, 8 Metc., 34; White vs. Elwell, 48 Me., 350. So here, having reference to the agreement, it could with no propriety be said that the simple entry into the house, even without the consent of the plaintiff, if no violence attended the act, constituted a trespass db initio. And the defendant having authority to enter the house for the purpose of retaking his goods, had authority to take such agents or assistants with him, as were necessary to accomplish the act authorized to be done. This was expressly decided in the case of Dennett vs. Grover, Wills Rep., 195.

In the case of Wood vs. Manley, 11 Adol. & Ell.,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Md. 592, 1874 Md. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-taylor-md-1874.